I don't like blindly retrying in the Monero library. The amount of errors,
which weren't present with reqwest (well, the error rate was the same, yet due
to a distinct bug this code fixed), demand we do *something* though.
The trace log shows hyper is erroring with 0 bytes of the response read. My
guess is it's somehow a closed connection? A connection pool would detect this
and have created a new connection (as this does, except once finding out
there's an issue).
While we should be able to detect this with `ready()`, we do call ready and it
claims no error. We also can successfully write which makes this... a mess.
Hopefully, it either actually works as intended, yet it at least requires two
consecutive errors which should be much less frequent.
The prior system spawned a new connection per request to enable parallelism,
yet kept hitting hyper::IncompleteMessages I couldn't track down. This
attempts to resolve those by a long-lived socket.
Halves the amount of requests per-authenticated RPC call, and accordingly is
likely still better overall.
I don't believe this is resolved yet but this is still worth pushing.
It *looks like* hyper will drop the connection once its request sender is
dropped, regardless of if the last request hasn't had its response completed.
This attempts to resolve some spurious connection errors.
The lack of locking the connection when making an authenticated request, which
is actually two sequential requests, risked another caller making a request in
between, invalidating the state.
Now, only unauthenticated connections share a connection object.
* Move monero-serai from std to std-shims, where possible
* no-std fixes
* Make the HttpRpc its own feature, thiserror only on std
* Drop monero-rs's epee for a homegrown one
We only need it for a single function. While I tried jeffro's, it didn't work
out of the box, had three unimplemented!s, and is no where near viable for
no_std.
Fixes#182, though should be further tested.
* no-std monero-serai
* Allow base58-monero via git
* cargo fmt