Quicsilver
HTTP/3 server and client for Ruby with Rack support.
Features
- HTTP/3 server — serve any Rack app over QUIC/HTTP/3
- HTTP/3 client — make requests with automatic connection pooling
- Rack integration —
rackup -s quicsilverworks with Rails, Sinatra, any Rack app - Streaming — dispatch on HEADERS, stream body chunks as they arrive
- Extensible Priorities (RFC 9218) — CSS before images, server respects client priority hints
- Trailers (RFC 9114 §4.1) — send/receive trailing headers after the body
- GREASE (RFC 9297) — extensibility testing on settings, frames, and streams
- GOAWAY (RFC 9114 §7.2.6) — graceful connection draining with validation
- 0-RTT — fast reconnection with replay protection
- Connection pooling — client reuses connections automatically
- protocol-http integration — works with Falcon and protocol-http ecosystem
Installation
git clone https://github.com/hahmed/quicsilver
cd quicsilver
bundle install
rake compile
Quick Start
Server
require "quicsilver"
app = ->(env) {
[200, {"content-type" => "text/plain"}, ["Hello HTTP/3!"]]
}
server = Quicsilver::Server.new(4433, app: app)
server.start
Client
require "quicsilver"
# Class-level API with automatic connection pooling
response = Quicsilver::Client.get("127.0.0.1", 4433, "/")
puts response[:status] # => 200
puts response[:body] # => "Hello HTTP/3!"
# POST with body
response = Quicsilver::Client.post("127.0.0.1", 4433, "/api/users",
body: '{"name": "alice"}',
headers: { "content-type" => "application/json" })
# Instance-level for more control
client = Quicsilver::Client.new("127.0.0.1", 4433, unsecure: true)
response = client.get("/")
client.disconnect
Rails
rackup -s quicsilver -p 4433
curl
curl --http3-only https://localhost:4433/
Configuration
config = Quicsilver::Transport::Configuration.new(
"certificates/server.crt",
"certificates/server.key",
idle_timeout_ms: 10_000,
max_concurrent_requests: 100,
max_body_size: 10 * 1024 * 1024, # 10MB body limit (optional)
max_header_size: 64 * 1024, # 64KB header limit (optional)
max_header_count: 128, # Header count limit (optional)
stream_receive_window: 262_144, # 256KB per stream
connection_flow_control_window: 16_777_216 # 16MB per connection
)
server = Quicsilver::Server.new(4433, app: app, server_configuration: config)
server.start
Priorities
Browsers send priority hints on requests. Quicsilver parses them and tells MsQuic to schedule high-priority streams first.
GET /style.css → priority: u=0 → sent first (highest urgency)
GET /app.js → priority: u=1 → sent second
GET /hero.png → priority: u=5 → sent later
No configuration needed — it works automatically.
Trailers
Send headers after the body — useful for checksums, streaming status, and gRPC.
# Trailers work with protocol-http's Headers#trailer! API
headers = Protocol::HTTP::Headers.new
headers.add("content-type", "text/plain")
headers.trailer!
headers.add("x-checksum", "abc123")
Protocol-HTTP Mode
For integration with Falcon and the protocol-http ecosystem:
config = Quicsilver::Transport::Configuration.new(
"certificates/server.crt",
"certificates/server.key",
mode: :protocol_http
)
server = Quicsilver::Server.new(4433, app: app, server_configuration: config)
server.start
| Mode | Body Handling | Use Case |
|---|---|---|
:rack (default) |
Buffered | Standard Rack apps |
:protocol_http |
Streaming | Falcon, protocol-http apps |
Development
rake compile # Build C extension (macOS: uses Apple clang automatically)
rake test # Run tests
License
MIT License