This commit introduces the PartEvent API. PartEvents are either
- FormPartEvents, representing a form field, or
- FilePartEvents, representing a file upload.
The PartEventHttpMessageReader is a HttpMessageReader that splits
multipart data into a stream of PartEvents. Form fields generate one
FormPartEvent; file uploads produce at least one FilePartEvent. The last
element that makes up a particular part will have isLast set to true.
The PartEventHttpMessageWriter is a HttpMessageWriter that writes a
Publisher<PartEvent> to a outgoing HTTP message. This writer is
particularly useful for relaying a multipart request on the server.
Closes gh-28006
This commit fixes a regression that added the Accept-Ranges header on
both client and server. Accept-Ranges is response header, so we now make
sure it only appears on the server side.
See gh-28291
This commit contains changes made because of the introduction of
HttpStatusCode. In general, methods that used to return a HttpStatus
now return HttpStatusCode instead, and methods that returned raw status
codes are now deprecated.
See gh-28214
SocketUtils was introduced in Spring Framework 4.0, primarily to assist
in writing integration tests which start an external server on an
available random port. However, these utilities make no guarantee about
the subsequent availability of a given port and are therefore
unreliable. Instead of using SocketUtils to find an available local
port for a server, it is recommended that users rely on a server's
ability to start on a random port that it selects or is assigned by the
operating system. To interact with that server, the user should query
the server for the port it is currently using.
SocketUtils is now deprecated in 5.3.16 and will be removed in 6.0.
Closes gh-28052
This commit refactors HttpMethod from a Java enum into a class. The
underlying reason being that HTTP methods are not enumerable, but
instead an open range and not limited to the predefined values in the
specifications.
Closes gh-27697
This commit makes several changes to MimeType and MediaType
related to the topic of specificity.
This commit deprecates the MimeType and MediaType Comparators.
Comparators require a transitive relationship, and the desired order for
these types is not transitive (see #27488).
Instead, this commit introduces two new MimeType methods: isMoreSpecific
and isLessSpecific, both of which return booleans. MediaType overrides
these methods to include the quality factor (q) in the comparison.
All MediaType sorting methods have been deprecated in favor of
MimeTypeUtils::sortBySpecificity. This sorting method now uses
MimeType::isLessSpecific in combination a bubble sort algorithm (which
does not require a transitive compare function).
Closes gh-27580
This commit ensures that only HTML references of length <
MAX_REFERENCE_SIZE are considered as potential references. This check is
possible because reference longer than 10 digits are out of bounds for
Integers.
Closes gh-1249