HTTP client for Elixir, based on HTTPotion (documentation).
HTTPoison uses hackney to execute HTTP requests instead of ibrowse. I like hackney 👍
Using hackney we work only with binaries instead of string lists.
First, add HTTPoison to your mix.exs
dependencies:
def deps do
[{:httpoison, "~> 0.7.2"}]
end
and run $ mix deps.get
. Now, list the :httpoison
application as your
application dependency:
def application do
[applications: [:httpoison]]
end
Make sure you have erlang-dev
installed before using httpoison
.
You can do so by running:
apt-get install erlang-dev
iex> HTTPoison.start
iex> HTTPoison.get! "http://httparrot.herokuapp.com/get"
%HTTPoison.Response{
body: "{\n \"args\": {},\n \"headers\": {} ...",
headers: headers: [{"Connection", "keep-alive"}, {"Server", "Cowboy"},
{"Date", "Sat, 06 Jun 2015 03:52:13 GMT"}, {"Content-Length", "495"},
{"Content-Type", "application/json"}, {"Via", "1.1 vegur"}],
status_code: 200
}
iex> HTTPoison.get! "http://localhost:1"
** (HTTPoison.Error) :econnrefused
iex> HTTPoison.get "http://localhost:1"
{:error, %HTTPoison.Error{id: nil, reason: :econnrefused}}
You can also easily pattern match on the HTTPoison.Response
struct:
case HTTPoison.get(url) do
{:ok, %HTTPoison.Response{status_code: 200, body: body}} ->
IO.puts body
{:ok, %HTTPoison.Response{status_code: 404}} ->
IO.puts "Not found :("
{:error, %HTTPoison.Error{reason: reason}} ->
IO.inspect reason
end
You can also use the HTTPoison.Base
module in your modules in order to make
cool API clients or something. The following example wraps HTTPoison.Base
in
order to build a client for the GitHub API
(Poison is used for JSON decoding):
defmodule GitHub do
use HTTPoison.Base
@expected_fields ~w(
login id avatar_url gravatar_id url html_url followers_url
following_url gists_url starred_url subscriptions_url
organizations_url repos_url events_url received_events_url type
site_admin name company blog location email hireable bio
public_repos public_gists followers following created_at updated_at
)
def process_url(url) do
"https://api.github.com" <> url
end
def process_response_body(body) do
body
|> Poison.decode!
|> Dict.take(@expected_fields)
|> Enum.map(fn({k, v}) -> {String.to_atom(k), v} end)
end
end
iex> GitHub.start
iex> GitHub.get!("/users/myfreeweb").body[:public_repos]
37
It's possible to extend the functions listed below:
defp process_request_body(body), do: body
defp process_response_body(body), do: body
defp process_request_headers(headers) when is_map(headers) do
Enum.into(headers, [])
end
defp process_request_headers(headers), do: headers
defp process_response_chunk(chunk), do: chunk
defp process_headers(headers), do: headers
defp process_status_code(status_code), do: status_code
HTTPoison now comes with async requests!
iex> HTTPoison.get! "http://floatboth.com", %{}, stream_to: self
%HTTPoison.AsyncResponse{id: #Reference<0.0.0.1654>}
iex> flush
%HTTPoison.AsyncStatus{code: 200, id: #Reference<0.0.0.1654>}
%HTTPoison.AsyncHeaders{headers: %{"Connection" => "keep-alive", ...}, id: #Reference<0.0.0.1654>}
%HTTPoison.AsyncChunk{chunk: "<!DOCTYPE html>...", id: #Reference<0.0.0.1654>}
%HTTPoison.AsyncEnd{id: #Reference<0.0.0.1654>}
:ok
You can see more usage examples in the test files (located in the
test/
) directory.
Copyright © 2013-2014 Eduardo Gurgel <[email protected]>
This work is free. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
terms of the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for more details.