- The long polling transport simulates a persistent connection
over multiple http requests. In order to expose common http request
properties, we need to copy them to a fake http context on the first poll
and set that as the HttpContext exposed via the IHttpContextFeature.
- This PR attempts to move things where they are needed instead of where they
happened to be used. As a result we should now have Sockets.Abstractions and
Sockets down to the minimal set of things required to make them run.
Sockets.Abstractions should go away in favor of Protocol.Abstractions and
Sockets contains the EndPoint abstraction and related types.
- Moved ConnectionManager and friends to
Sockets.Http.
-Removed Sockets and moved everything into Sockets.Abstractions.
- Moved DefaultConnection and put it in Sockets.Abstractions.
* Tackling some low hanging performance fruit
- Use native Memory/Span APIs on Stream and WebSocket in .NET Core 2.1
- Remove double copying in formatters
- Implemented custom HttpContent over ReadOnlyBuffer<byte>
* Re-layer the .NET Client into Http and non-Http
- Moved IConnection to Sockets.Abstractions and removed
HttpConnection and TransportType dependency.
- Renamed Sockets.Client to Sockets.Client.Http
- Renamed Sockets.Common to Sockets.Common.Http
- Renamed Connection to HttpConnection
- Removed HTTP dependency from HubConnection
- Removed tests that were testing connection logic in HubConnection
#518
* Merge transport and hub protocols
- This change merges the transport and hub protocols into a single protocol. The
idea being that sockets in a purely streaming layer that sends frames from the underlying
transport. This makes things like TCP possible and doesn't impose a framing layer at the lowest
level. This will make it possible to build servers like kestrel on top of the TCP layer.
- The Message was removed from the lowest layer of the stack and pushed into the hubs layer. Hub invocations
are framed with what was before the transport protocol. Connections also need to state upfront if they support
binary or not. This will determine how data will be serialized to the specific connection.
- Changed the SSE parser and writer to be strictly SSE without any of the transport protocol specific
information.
- To ensure we aren't using types in the wrong layers
- Moved protocol logic into SignalR
- Socket.Abstractions is now the root of the universe, Sockets.Common will likely be removed
or turned into Sockets.Common.Http.
- Move SSE parser to Sockets.Client and SSE writer into Sockets.Http
- Moved tests into the appropriate test projects
- Updated the spec
* Split http and non-http layers
- This change introduces Microsoft.AspNetCore.SignalR.Http
and Microsoft.AspNetCore.Sockets.Http which expose extension methods
on IAppBuilder for wiring up a sockets and signalr pipeline.