Migration Guide between Akka HTTP 2.4.x and 10.0.x

General notes

Please note that Akka HTTP consists of a number of modules, most notably akka-http-core which is stable and won’t be breaking compatibility without a proper deprecation cycle, and akka-http which contains the routing DSLs which is experimental still.

The following migration guide explains migration steps to be made between breaking versions of the experimental part of Akka HTTP.

Note

Please note that experimental modules are allowed (and are expected to) break compatibility in search of the best API we can offer, before the API is frozen in a stable release.

Please read Binary Compatibility Rules to understand in depth what bin-compat rules are, and where they are applied.

Akka HTTP 2.4.7 -> 2.4.8

SecurityDirectives#challengeFor has moved

The challengeFor directive was actually more like a factory for HttpChallenge, thus it was moved to become such. It is now available as akka.http.javadsl.model.headers.HttpChallenge#create[Basic|OAuth2] for JavaDSL and akka.http.scaladsl.model.headers.HttpChallenges#[basic|oAuth2] for ScalaDSL.

Akka HTTP 2.4.8 -> 2.4.9

Java DSL Package structure changes

We have aligned the package structure of the Java based DSL with the Scala based DSL and moved classes that were in the wrong or unexpected places around a bit. This means that Java DSL users must update their imports as follows:

Classes dealing with unmarshalling and marshalling used to reside in akka.http.javadsl.server, but are now available from the packages akka.http.javadsl.unmarshalling and akka.http.javadsl.marshalling.

akka.http.javadsl.server.Coder is now akka.http.javadsl.coding.Coder.

akka.http.javadsl.server.RegexConverters is now akka.http.javadsl.common.RegexConverters.

Akka HTTP 2.4.11 -> 10.0.0

Java DSL PathDirectives used Scala Function type

The Java DSL for the following directives pathPrefixText, rawPathPrefixTest, rawPathPrefix, pathSuffix accidentally used the Scala function type instead of the java.util.function.Function functional interface, making them not usable in Java (unless compiled with Scala 2.12, which we’re not yet shipping).

These directives now accept the proper Java types. If you worked around this issue before, please remove your workaround and upgrade. Simply passing in a lambda expression will properly be expanded into the functional interface in these directives.

The source code for this page can be found here.