It sounds like your question is "where is the code in library L that does X?". I don't know whether that is considered on-topic for Stack Overflow by the majority of users. My opinion: It sounds to me like it could be acceptable, if it is narrowly scoped enough.
"How do I do X?" is also an acceptable question, if you have specified the problem clearly enough (the requirements and criteria for evaluating proposed answers are clear to all) and done sufficient research. But this is different.
"What library should I use to do X?" is not an acceptable question here. See https://stackoverflow.com/help/on-topic, Why was my "shopping list" question closed?, and What exactly is a recommendation question? for more explanations of why and further elaboration.
I know the latter two might sound like an unimportant distinction, but we have found that it is a useful distinction to draw, based on past experience with these types of questions.
If you are asking, please be very clear about which you are asking. In your communication so far there has been some confusion about which of these you are intending. Giving the backstory that you were wondering how to do X seems to just cause confusion; I would suggest omitting that. Instead, ask where is the code in the library that does X. Show your research so far and what progress you've made in tracking the control flow. Make sure that you have scoped X narrowly and are asking about only one thing.
Just saying "serialize and de-serialize HTTP request and response objects from the Rust library http
" is most likely not a detailed enough problem specification. As the comments indicate, people are not finding it clear exactly what you're trying to achieve and what are the criteria for an answer to count as acceptable. Also, that is asking about two separate functionality, so should be asked in two separate questions.
Beware that if you ask "How do I do X?", answers might not be in the form of a library recommendation. One perfectly acceptable answer is to say "use API Y in library L", but another perfectly acceptable answer is a short snippet of code showing how to achieve it (without a special library).