//! A small example of a server that accepts TCP connections and writes out //! `Hello!` to them, afterwards closing the connection. //! //! You can test this out by running: //! //! cargo run --example hello //! //! and then in another terminal executing //! //! cargo run --example connect 127.0.0.1:8080 //! //! You should see `Hello!` printed out and then the `nc` program will exit. extern crate env_logger; extern crate futures; extern crate tokio; extern crate tokio_io; use std::env; use std::net::SocketAddr; use futures::prelude::*; use tokio::net::TcpListener; fn main() { env_logger::init().unwrap(); let addr = env::args().nth(1).unwrap_or("127.0.0.1:8080".to_string()); let addr = addr.parse::().unwrap(); let listener = TcpListener::bind(&addr).unwrap(); let addr = listener.local_addr().unwrap(); println!("Listening for connections on {}", addr); let clients = listener.incoming(); let welcomes = clients.and_then(|socket| { tokio_io::io::write_all(socket, b"Hello!\n") }); let server = welcomes.for_each(|(_socket, _welcome)| { Ok(()) }); server.wait().unwrap(); }