Packages
req
0.4.5
0.6.3
0.6.2
0.6.1
0.6.0
0.5.18
0.5.17
0.5.16
0.5.15
0.5.14
0.5.13
0.5.12
0.5.11
0.5.10
0.5.9
0.5.8
0.5.7
0.5.6
0.5.5
0.5.4
0.5.3
0.5.2
0.5.1
0.5.0
0.4.14
0.4.13
0.4.12
0.4.11
0.4.10
0.4.9
0.4.8
0.4.7
0.4.6
0.4.5
0.4.4
0.4.3
0.4.2
0.4.1
0.4.0
0.3.12
0.3.11
0.3.10
0.3.9
0.3.8
0.3.7
0.3.6
0.3.5
0.3.4
0.3.3
0.3.2
0.3.1
0.3.0
0.2.2
0.2.1
0.2.0
0.1.2
0.1.1
0.1.0
Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir.
Security advisory:
This version has known vulnerabilities.
View advisories
Current section
Files
Jump to
Current section
Files
lib/req.ex
defmodule Req do
@moduledoc ~S"""
The high-level API.
Req is composed of three main pieces:
* `Req` - the high-level API (you're here!)
* `Req.Request` - the low-level API and the request struct
* `Req.Steps` - the collection of built-in steps
The high-level API is what most users of Req will use most of the time.
## Examples
Making a GET request with `Req.get!/1`:
iex> Req.get!("https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req").body["description"]
"Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
Same, but by explicitly building request struct first:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://api.github.com")
iex> Req.get!(req, url: "/repos/wojtekmach/req").body["description"]
"Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
Making a POST request with `Req.post!/2`:
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/post", form: [comments: "hello!"]).body["form"]
%{"comments" => "hello!"}
Stream request body:
iex> stream = Stream.duplicate("foo", 3)
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/post", body: stream).body["data"]
"foofoofoo"
Stream response body using a callback:
iex> resp =
...> Req.get!("http://httpbin.org/stream/2", into: fn {:data, data}, {req, resp} ->
...> IO.puts(data)
...> {:cont, {req, resp}}
...> end)
# output: {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ...}
# output: {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ...}
iex> resp.status
200
iex> resp.body
""
Stream response body into a `Collectable`:
iex> resp = Req.get!("http://httpbin.org/stream/2", into: IO.stream())
# output: {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ...}
# output: {"url": "http://httpbin.org/stream/2", ...}
iex> resp.status
200
iex> resp.body
%IO.Stream{}
## Header Names
The HTTP specification requires that header names should be case-insensitive.
Req allows two ways to access the headers; using functions and by accessing
the data directly:
iex> Req.Response.get_header(response, "content-type")
["text/html"]
iex> response.headers["content-type"]
["text/html"]
While we can ensure case-insensitive handling in the former case, we can't
in the latter. For this reason, Req made the following design choices:
* header names are stored as downcased
* functions like `Req.Request.get_header/2`, `Req.Request.put_header/3`,
`Req.Response.get_header/2`, `Req.Response.put_header/3`, etc
automatically downcase the given header name.
"""
# TODO: Wait for Finch 0.17
# Response streaming to caller:
#
# iex> {req, resp} = Req.async_request!("http://httpbin.org/stream/2")
# iex> resp.status
# 200
# iex> resp.body
# ""
# iex> Req.parse_message(req, receive do message -> message end)
# [{:data, "{\"url\": \"http://httpbin.org/stream/2\"" <> ...}]
# iex> Req.parse_message(req, receive do message -> message end)
# [{:data, "{\"url\": \"http://httpbin.org/stream/2\"" <> ...}]
# iex> Req.parse_message(req, receive do message -> message end)
# [:done]
# ""
@type url() :: URI.t() | String.t()
@doc """
Returns a new request struct with built-in steps.
See `Req.Request` module documentation for more information on the underlying request struct.
## Options
Basic request options:
* `:method` - the request method, defaults to `:get`.
* `:url` - the request URL.
* `:headers` - the request headers as a `{key, value}` enumerable (e.g. map, keyword list).
The header names should be downcased.
The headers are automatically encoded using these rules:
* atom header names are turned into strings, replacing `_` with `-`. For example,
`:user_agent` becomes `"user-agent"`.
* string header names are downcased.
* `%DateTime{}` header values are encoded as "HTTP date".
* other header values are encoded with `String.Chars.to_string/1`.
If you set `:headers` options both in `Req.new/1` and `request/2`, the header lists are merged.
See also "Header Names" section in the module documentation.
* `:body` - the request body.
Can be one of:
* `iodata` - send request body eagerly
* `enumerable` - stream `enumerable` as request body
Additional URL options:
* `:base_url` - if set, the request URL is prepended with this base URL (via
[`put_base_url`](`Req.Steps.put_base_url/1`) step.)
* `:params` - if set, appends parameters to the request query string (via
[`put_params`](`Req.Steps.put_params/1`) step.)
* `:path_params` - if set, uses a templated request path (via
[`put_path_params`](`Req.Steps.put_path_params/1`) step.)
Authentication options:
* `:auth` - sets request authentication (via [`auth`](`Req.Steps.auth/1`) step.)
Can be one of:
* `{:basic, userinfo}` - uses Basic HTTP authentication.
* `{:bearer, token}` - uses Bearer HTTP authentication.
* `:netrc` - load credentials from the default .netrc file.
* `{:netrc, path}` - load credentials from `path`.
* `string` - sets to this value.
* `:redact_auth` - if set to `true`, when `Req.Request` struct is inspected, authentication credentials
are redacted. Defaults to `true`.
Request body options:
* `:form` - if set, encodes the request body as form data ([`encode_body`](`Req.Steps.encode_body/1`) step.)
* `:json` - if set, encodes the request body as JSON ([`encode_body`](`Req.Steps.encode_body/1`) step.)
* `:compress_body` - if set to `true`, compresses the request body using gzip (via [`compress_body`](`Req.Steps.compress_body/1`) step.)
Defaults to `false`.
Response body options:
* `:compressed` - if set to `true`, asks the server to return compressed response.
(via [`compressed`](`Req.Steps.compressed/1`) step.) Defaults to `true`.
* `:raw` - if set to `true`, disables automatic body decompression
([`decompress_body`](`Req.Steps.decompress_body/1`) step) and decoding
([`decode_body`](`Req.Steps.decode_body/1`) step.) Defaults to `false`.
* `:decode_body` - if set to `false`, disables automatic response body decoding.
Defaults to `true`.
* `:decode_json` - options to pass to `Jason.decode!/2`, defaults to `[]`.
* `:into` - where to send the response body. It can be one of:
* `nil` - (default) read the whole response body and store it in the `response.body`
field.
* `fun` - stream response body using a function. The first argument is a `{:data, data}`
tuple containing the chunk of the response body. The second argument is a
`{request, response}` tuple. For example:
into: fn {:data, data}, {req, resp} ->
IO.puts(data)
{:cont, {req, resp}}
end
* `collectable` - stream response body into a `t:Collectable.t/0`.
Response redirect options ([`redirect`](`Req.Steps.redirect/1`) step):
* `:redirect` - if set to `false`, disables automatic response redirects. Defaults to `true`.
* `:redirect_trusted` - by default, authorization credentials are only sent on redirects
with the same host, scheme and port. If `:redirect_trusted` is set to `true`, credentials
will be sent to any host.
* `:max_redirects` - the maximum number of redirects, defaults to `10`.
Retry options ([`retry`](`Req.Steps.retry/1`) step):
* `:retry` - can be one of the following:
* `:safe_transient` (default) - retry safe (GET/HEAD) requests on HTTP 408/429/500/502/503/504 responses
or exceptions with `reason` field set to `:timeout`/`:econnrefused`.
* `:transient` - same as `:safe_transient` except retries all HTTP methods (POST, DELETE, etc.)
* `fun` - a 2-arity function that accepts a `Req.Request` and either a `Req.Response` or an exception struct
and returns one of the following:
* `true` - retry with the default delay controller by default delay option described below.
* `{:delay, milliseconds}` - retry with the given delay.
* `false/nil` - don't retry.
* `false` - don't retry.
* `:retry_delay` - if not set, which is the default, the retry delay is determined by
the value of `retry-delay` header on HTTP 429/503 responses. If the header is not set,
the default delay follows a simple exponential backoff: 1s, 2s, 4s, 8s, ...
`:retry_delay` can be set to a function that receives the retry count (starting at 0)
and returns the delay, the number of milliseconds to sleep before making another attempt.
* `:retry_log_level` - the log level to emit retry logs at. Can also be set to `false` to disable
logging these messsages. Defaults to `:error`.
* `:max_retries` - maximum number of retry attempts, defaults to `3` (for a total of `4`
requests to the server, including the initial one.)
Caching options ([`cache`](`Req.Steps.cache/1`) step):
* `:cache` - if `true`, performs HTTP caching. Defaults to `false`.
* `:cache_dir` - the directory to store the cache, defaults to `<user_cache_dir>/req`
(see: `:filename.basedir/3`)
Request adapters:
* `:adapter` - adapter to use to make the actual HTTP request. See `:adapter` field description
in the `Req.Request` module documentation for more information. Defaults to calling [`run_finch`](`Req.Steps.run_finch/1`).
* `:plug` - if set, calls the given Plug instead of making an HTTP request over the network (via [`put_plug`](`Req.Steps.put_plug/1`) step).
Finch options ([`run_finch`](`Req.Steps.run_finch/1`) step)
* `:finch` - the Finch pool to use. Defaults to pool automatically started by `Req`.
* `:connect_options` - dynamically starts (or re-uses already started) Finch pool with
the given connection options:
* `:timeout` - socket connect timeout in milliseconds, defaults to `30_000`.
* `:protocol` - the HTTP protocol to use, defaults to `:http1`.
* `:hostname` - Mint explicit hostname.
* `:transport_opts` - Mint transport options.
* `:proxy_headers` - Mint proxy headers.
* `:proxy` - Mint HTTP/1 proxy settings, a `{schema, address, port, options}` tuple.
* `:client_settings` - Mint HTTP/2 client settings.
* `:inet6` - if set to true, uses IPv6. Defaults to `false`.
* `:pool_timeout` - pool checkout timeout in milliseconds, defaults to `5000`.
* `:receive_timeout` - socket receive timeout in milliseconds, defaults to `15_000`.
* `:unix_socket` - if set, connect through the given UNIX domain socket.
* `:finch_private` - a map or keyword list of private metadata to add to the Finch request. May be useful
for adding custom data when handling telemetry with `Finch.Telemetry`.
* `:finch_request` - a function that executes the Finch request, defaults to using `Finch.request/3`.
## Examples
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://elixir-lang.org")
iex> req.method
:get
iex> URI.to_string(req.url)
"https://elixir-lang.org"
Fake adapter:
iex> fake = fn request ->
...> {request, Req.Response.new(status: 200, body: "it works!")}
...> end
iex>
iex> req = Req.new(adapter: fake)
iex> Req.get!(req).body
"it works!"
"""
@spec new(options :: keyword()) :: Req.Request.t()
def new(options \\ []) do
options = Keyword.merge(default_options(), options)
{plugins, options} = Keyword.pop(options, :plugins, [])
%Req.Request{
registered_options:
MapSet.new([
:user_agent,
:compressed,
:range,
:http_errors,
:base_url,
:params,
:path_params,
:auth,
:form,
:json,
:compress_body,
:compressed,
:raw,
:decode_body,
:decode_json,
:redirect,
:redirect_trusted,
:redirect_log_level,
:max_redirects,
:retry,
:retry_delay,
:retry_log_level,
:max_retries,
:cache,
:cache_dir,
:plug,
:finch,
:finch_request,
:finch_private,
:connect_options,
:inet6,
:receive_timeout,
:pool_timeout,
:unix_socket,
:redact_auth,
# TODO: Remove on Req 1.0
:output,
:follow_redirects,
:location_trusted
])
}
|> update(options)
|> Req.Request.prepend_request_steps(
put_user_agent: &Req.Steps.put_user_agent/1,
compressed: &Req.Steps.compressed/1,
encode_body: &Req.Steps.encode_body/1,
put_base_url: &Req.Steps.put_base_url/1,
auth: &Req.Steps.auth/1,
put_params: &Req.Steps.put_params/1,
put_path_params: &Req.Steps.put_path_params/1,
put_range: &Req.Steps.put_range/1,
cache: &Req.Steps.cache/1,
put_plug: &Req.Steps.put_plug/1,
compress_body: &Req.Steps.compress_body/1
)
|> Req.Request.prepend_response_steps(
retry: &Req.Steps.retry/1,
redirect: &Req.Steps.redirect/1,
decompress_body: &Req.Steps.decompress_body/1,
decode_body: &Req.Steps.decode_body/1,
handle_http_errors: &Req.Steps.handle_http_errors/1,
output: &Req.Steps.output/1
)
|> Req.Request.prepend_error_steps(retry: &Req.Steps.retry/1)
|> run_plugins(plugins)
end
defp new(%Req.Request{} = request, options) when is_list(options) do
Req.update(request, options)
end
defp new(options1, options2) when is_list(options1) and is_list(options2) do
new(options1 ++ options2)
end
defp new(url, options) when (is_binary(url) or is_struct(url, URI)) and is_list(options) do
new([url: url] ++ options)
end
defp new(request, options) when is_list(options) do
raise ArgumentError,
"expected 1st argument to be a request, got: #{inspect(request)}"
end
defp new(_request, options) do
raise ArgumentError,
"expected 2nd argument to be an options keywords list, got: #{inspect(options)}"
end
@doc """
Updates a request struct.
See `new/1` for a list of available options. Also see `Req.Request` module documentation
for more information on the underlying request struct.
## Examples
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://httpbin.org")
iex> req = Req.update(req, auth: {:basic, "alice:secret"})
iex> req.options[:base_url]
"https://httpbin.org"
iex> req.options[:auth]
{:basic, "alice:secret"}
Passing `:headers` will automatically encode and merge them:
iex> req = Req.new(headers: %{point_x: 1})
iex> req = Req.update(req, headers: %{point_y: 2})
iex> req.headers
%{"point-x" => ["1"], "point-y" => ["2"]}
The same header names are overwritten however:
iex> req = Req.new(headers: %{authorization: "bearer foo"})
iex> req = Req.update(req, headers: %{authorization: "bearer bar"})
iex> req.headers
%{"authorization" => ["bearer bar"]}
Similarly to headers, `:params` are merged too:
req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", params: [a: 1, b: 1])
req = Req.update(req, params: [a: 2])
Req.get!(req).body["args"]
#=> %{"a" => "2", "b" => "1"}
"""
@spec update(Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Request.t()
def update(%Req.Request{} = request, options) when is_list(options) do
request_option_names = [:method, :url, :headers, :body, :adapter, :into]
{request_options, options} = Keyword.split(options, request_option_names)
if options[:output] && unquote(!System.get_env("REQ_NOWARN_OUTPUT")) do
IO.warn("setting `output: path` is deprecated in favour of `into: File.stream!(path)`")
end
registered =
MapSet.union(
request.registered_options,
MapSet.new(request_option_names)
)
Req.Request.validate_options(options, registered)
request =
Enum.reduce(request_options, request, fn
{:url, url}, acc ->
put_in(acc.url, URI.parse(url))
{:headers, new_headers}, acc ->
update_in(acc.headers, fn old_headers ->
if unquote(Req.MixProject.legacy_headers_as_lists?()) do
new_headers = encode_headers(new_headers)
new_header_names = Enum.map(new_headers, &elem(&1, 0))
Enum.reject(old_headers, &(elem(&1, 0) in new_header_names)) ++ new_headers
else
Map.merge(old_headers, encode_headers(new_headers))
end
end)
{name, value}, acc ->
%{acc | name => value}
end)
update_in(
request.options,
&Map.merge(&1, Map.new(options), fn
:params, old, new ->
Keyword.merge(old, new)
_, _, new ->
new
end)
)
end
@doc """
Makes a GET request and returns a response or an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.get("https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req")
iex> resp.body["description"]
"Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.get!(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req")
iex> resp.status
200
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://api.github.com")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.get(req, url: "/repos/elixir-lang/elixir")
iex> resp.status
200
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec get(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) ::
{:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
def get(request, options \\ []) do
request(%{new(request, options) | method: :get})
end
@doc """
Makes a GET request and returns a response or raises an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.get!("https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req").body["description"]
"Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
With options:
iex> Req.get!(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req").status
200
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://api.github.com")
iex> Req.get!(req, url: "/repos/elixir-lang/elixir").status
200
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec get!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
def get!(request, options \\ []) do
request!(%{new(request, options) | method: :get})
end
@doc """
Makes a HEAD request and returns a response or an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.head("https://httpbin.org/status/201")
iex> resp.status
201
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.head(url: "https://httpbin.org/status/201")
iex> resp.status
201
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://httpbin.org")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.head(req, url: "/status/201")
iex> resp.status
201
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec head(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
def head(request, options \\ []) do
request(%{new(request, options) | method: :head})
end
@doc """
Makes a HEAD request and returns a response or raises an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.head!("https://httpbin.org/status/201").status
201
With options:
iex> Req.head!(url: "https://httpbin.org/status/201").status
201
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(base_url: "https://httpbin.org")
iex> Req.head!(req, url: "/status/201").status
201
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec head!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
def head!(request, options \\ []) do
request!(%{new(request, options) | method: :head})
end
@doc """
Makes a POST request and returns a response or an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.post("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.post("https://httpbin.org/anything", form: [x: 1])
iex> resp.body["form"]
%{"x" => "1"}
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.post("https://httpbin.org/anything", json: %{x: 2})
iex> resp.body["json"]
%{"x" => 2}
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.post(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.post(req, body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec post(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) ::
{:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
def post(request, options \\ []) do
request(%{new(request, options) | method: :post})
end
@doc """
Makes a POST request and returns a response or raises an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/anything", form: [x: 1]).body["form"]
%{"x" => "1"}
iex> Req.post!("https://httpbin.org/anything", json: %{x: 2}).body["json"]
%{"x" => 2}
With options:
iex> Req.post!(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> Req.post!(req, body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec post!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
def post!(request, options \\ []) do
request!(%{new(request, options) | method: :post})
end
@doc """
Makes a PUT request and returns a response or an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.put("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.put(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.put(req, body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec put(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) ::
{:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
def put(request, options \\ []) do
request(%{new(request, options) | method: :put})
end
@doc """
Makes a PUT request and returns a response or raises an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.put!("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
With options:
iex> Req.put!(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> Req.put!(req, body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec put!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
def put!(request, options \\ []) do
request!(%{new(request, options) | method: :put})
end
@doc """
Makes a PATCH request and returns a response or an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.patch("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.patch(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.patch(req, body: "hello!")
iex> resp.body["data"]
"hello!"
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec patch(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) ::
{:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
def patch(request, options \\ []) do
request(%{new(request, options) | method: :patch})
end
@doc """
Makes a PATCH request and returns a response or raises an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.patch!("https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
With options:
iex> Req.patch!(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything", body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> Req.patch!(req, body: "hello!").body["data"]
"hello!"
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec patch!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
def patch!(request, options \\ []) do
request!(%{new(request, options) | method: :patch})
end
@doc """
Makes a DELETE request and returns a response or an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.delete("https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> resp.body["method"]
"DELETE"
With options:
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.delete(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> resp.body["method"]
"DELETE"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> {:ok, resp} = Req.delete(req)
iex> resp.body["method"]
"DELETE"
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec delete(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) ::
{:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
def delete(request, options \\ []) do
request(%{new(request, options) | method: :delete})
end
@doc """
Makes a DELETE request and returns a response or raises an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `String` or `URI`;
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With URL:
iex> Req.delete!("https://httpbin.org/anything").body["method"]
"DELETE"
With options:
iex> Req.delete!(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything").body["method"]
"DELETE"
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://httpbin.org/anything")
iex> Req.delete!(req).body["method"]
"DELETE"
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec delete!(url() | keyword() | Req.Request.t(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
def delete!(request, options \\ []) do
request!(%{new(request, options) | method: :delete})
end
@doc """
Makes an HTTP request and returns a response or an error.
`request` can be one of:
* a `Keyword` options;
* a `Req.Request` struct
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With options keywords list:
iex> {:ok, response} = Req.request(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/wojtekmach/req")
iex> response.status
200
iex> response.body["description"]
"Req is a batteries-included HTTP client for Elixir."
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir")
iex> {:ok, response} = Req.request(req)
iex> response.status
200
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec request(request :: Req.Request.t() | keyword(), options :: keyword()) ::
{:ok, Req.Response.t()} | {:error, Exception.t()}
def request(request, options \\ []) do
Req.Request.run(new(request, options))
end
@doc """
Makes an HTTP request and returns a response or raises an error.
See `new/1` for a list of available options.
## Examples
With options keywords list:
iex> Req.request!(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir").status
200
With request struct:
iex> req = Req.new(url: "https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir")
iex> Req.request!(req).status
200
"""
@doc type: :request
@spec request!(request :: Req.Request.t() | keyword(), options :: keyword()) :: Req.Response.t()
def request!(request, options \\ []) do
case request(request, options) do
{:ok, response} -> response
{:error, exception} -> raise exception
end
end
# TODO: Wait for Finch 0.17
@doc false
def async_request(request, options \\ []) do
Req.Request.run_request(%{new(request, options) | into: :self})
end
# TODO: Wait for Finch 0.17
@doc false
def async_request!(request, options \\ []) do
case async_request(request, options) do
{request, %Req.Response{} = response} ->
{request, response}
{_request, exception} ->
raise exception
end
end
# TODO: Wait for Finch 0.17
@doc false
def parse_message(%Req.Request{} = request, message) do
request.async.stream_fun.(request.async.ref, message)
end
# TODO: Wait for Finch 0.17
@doc false
def cancel_async_request(%Req.Request{} = request) do
request.async.cancel_fun.(request.async.ref)
end
# TODO: Req.run/2?
# defp run_request(request, options \\ []) do
# request
# |> Req.update(options)
# |> Req.Request.run_request()
# end
# defp run_request!(request, options \\ []) do
# case run_request(request, options) do
# {request, %Req.Response{} = response} ->
# {request, response}
# {_request, exception} ->
# raise exception
# end
# end
@doc """
Returns default options.
See `default_options/1` for more information.
"""
@spec default_options() :: keyword()
def default_options() do
Application.get_env(:req, :default_options, [])
end
@doc """
Sets default options for `Req.new/1`.
Avoid setting default options in libraries as they are global.
## Examples
iex> Req.default_options(base_url: "https://httpbin.org")
iex> Req.get!("/statuses/201").status
201
iex> Req.new() |> Req.get!(url: "/statuses/201").status
201
"""
@spec default_options(keyword()) :: :ok
def default_options(options) do
Application.put_env(:req, :default_options, options)
end
if Req.MixProject.legacy_headers_as_lists?() do
defp encode_headers(headers) do
for {name, value} <- headers do
{encode_header_name(name), encode_header_value(value)}
end
end
else
defp encode_headers(headers) do
Enum.reduce(headers, %{}, fn {name, value}, acc ->
Map.update(
acc,
encode_header_name(name),
encode_header_values(List.wrap(value)),
&(&1 ++ encode_header_values(List.wrap(value)))
)
end)
end
defp encode_header_values([value | rest]) do
[encode_header_value(value) | encode_header_values(rest)]
end
defp encode_header_values([]) do
[]
end
end
defp encode_header_name(name) when is_atom(name) do
name |> Atom.to_string() |> String.replace("_", "-") |> __ensure_header_downcase__()
end
defp encode_header_name(name) when is_binary(name) do
__ensure_header_downcase__(name)
end
defp encode_header_value(%DateTime{} = datetime) do
datetime |> DateTime.shift_zone!("Etc/UTC") |> Req.Steps.format_http_datetime()
end
defp encode_header_value(%NaiveDateTime{} = datetime) do
IO.warn("setting header to %NaiveDateTime{} is deprecated, use %DateTime{} instead")
Req.Steps.format_http_datetime(datetime)
end
defp encode_header_value(value) do
String.Chars.to_string(value)
end
# Plugins support is experimental, undocumented, and likely won't make the new release.
defp run_plugins(request, [plugin | rest]) when is_atom(plugin) do
run_plugins(plugin.attach(request), rest)
end
defp run_plugins(request, [plugin | rest]) when is_function(plugin, 1) do
run_plugins(plugin.(request), rest)
end
defp run_plugins(request, []) do
request
end
@doc false
@deprecated "Manually build Req.Request struct instead"
def build(method, url, options \\ []) do
%Req.Request{
method: method,
url: URI.parse(url),
headers: Keyword.get(options, :headers, []),
body: Keyword.get(options, :body, "")
}
end
def __ensure_header_downcase__(name) do
String.downcase(name, :ascii)
end
end