This adds shims which provide FromXml and IntoXml implementations to
*all* macro-generated types in `xmpp_parsers`. Mind that this does not
cover all types in `xmpp_parsers`, but a good share of them.
This is another first step toward real, fully streamed parsing.
This allows constructs like:
```rust
let residual = match Iq::try_from(stanza) {
Ok(iq) => return handle_iq(..),
Err(Error::TypeMismatch(_, _, v)) => v,
Err(other) => return handle_parse_error(..),
};
let residual = match Message::try_from(stanza) {
..
};
let residual = ..
log::warn!("unhandled object: {:?}", residual);
```
The interesting part of this is that this could be used in a loop over a
Vec<Box<dyn FnMut(Element) -> ControlFlow<SomeResult, Element>>, i.e. in
a parsing loop for a generic XML/XMPP stream.
The advantage is that the stanza.is() check runs only once (in
check_self!) and doesn't need to be duplicated outside, and it reduces
the use of magic strings.
That one accepts both uppercase and lowercase hexadecimal input, and
outputs in lowercase.
It requires no separator between bytes, unlike ColonSeparatedHex.
Version 0.21 replaced base64::decode() with an Engine trait and multiple
structs implementing it for various alphabets, various performance
profiles, etc. It is slightly longer to import but in the end does the
very same thing.
Since Rust 1.32.0 (so basically forever ago) we can use the $(…)?
construct in macros to mean one or zero times this chunk of tokens.
This allows making the last comma optional in lists of things.