Warning
This application no longer works as of bodhi-server 8.0.0 due to breaking changes to / removal of the OpenID authentication endpoint.
This crate contains rust bindings for the bodhi REST API as documented by the official API docs.
The crate is based on the fedora crate for authenticated session support,
which uses the reqwest
crate under the hood for making network
calls, and serde
for (de)serializing JSON and x-www-urlencoded
data.
The code makes some assumptions around the behaviour of bodhi servers. If those assumptions turn out to be wrong (either because the implementation is wrong, or because the server behaviour has changed), then that is considered a bug. Also, there have been instances where the schemas of responses and accepted requests has changed. If that's the case, then that's also a bug. If you encounter (de)serialization issues, please open a bug noting the bodhi server version, and paste the failure message (which should contain the reason for the (de)serialization failure, e.g. missing / renamed fields).
This library tries to do error handling where reasonable, but passes server- or network-related errors through to the caller. For example, when a bodhi server is under heavy load, it sometimes returns garbage responses with empty bodies. On the other hand, there might just be a persistent network issue that makes a server request fail or time out. These are not handled by the library, but are transparently wrapped and returned. If necessary, the request can be retried by the caller. This library only implements a simple retry logic for transient failures, not for persistent client or server issues.
However, the BodhiClient
only takes queries by reference, so retrying a query
does not even involve copying data, so this is very cheap.
- All
GET
requests are implemented, and all actual API responses should successfully deserialize. - All
POST
requests are implemented for creating and editing items, except for creating and editing releases.
Tests should pass for every commit that gets pushed to git. However, currently some tests either require internet access to check some assumptions for server behaviour, or require test data which is too big to be committed into git.
For this reason, the following feature flags determine which tests are compiled and run:
offline-tests
: tests able to run offline, without prerequisites (enabled by default)online-tests
: tests that require internet access (for checking bodhi server behavior)data-tests
: tests that require data files (data is not part of the git repository or published crates and needs to be downloaded separately, but the tests themselves can run offline)
The examples
directory contains a few example applications to test and
showcase some of the crate's functionality.