servant-http2-client

This package provides a way to generate HTTP2 client code from Servant API descriptions.

Please consider this package somewhat unstable. The author would appreciate feedbacks and benchmarks in real-world deployments.

Usage

The usage is pretty similar to servant-client but uses an HTTP2Client rather than a Manager. See also the section below to highlight differences between servant-client and servant-http2-client .

HTTP2 uses a flow-control mechanism, which http2-client exposes but servant-http2-client hides: as a client you have nothing to do and DATA-credit is immediately sent to the server. This mechanism is easy for the user but effectively disables flow control at the application level. Further, this easy-to-use mechanism may have some slight overhead for sending many small control frames. Future version of the library will expose more control points (at an increased cost).

You can find a full example at ./test/Spec.hs .

Differences with servant-client

The client leverages http2-client and hence behave slightly differently from servant-client , which uses http-client . Most notably, HTTP/2 uses a single TCP connection for performing concurrent requests, whereas HTTP/1.x at best pipelines request sequentially over a same connection.

The servant-client library uses a connection Manager to create new TCP connections or try re-using existing connections. This servant-http2-client makes no use of such a Manager. This difference is mostly important for load-balancing and unstable network environments. When targeting a load-balanced server, a servant-http2-client will always hit the same TCP-endpoint whereas a servant-client may hit different TCP-endpoint for each request. Also, after handling a connection error, a servant-client will open a new TCP connection without any decision from the programmer. Conversely, a broken servant-http2-client will be of no practical use and the programmer must create a new H2ClientEnv. A Manager abstraction may be added to http2-client later.

The servant-client package offers Cookies handling, whereas servant-http2-client has no such feature. Please consider opening a pull-request for adding the support.

Finally, it's always good to remember that HTTP2 allows concurrent queries, that is, many API calls may fail when a single TCP connection dies out.