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Ever wondered what HTTP requests the Ruby gem you are using to connect to a third party API is making? Use HTTP Spy to see what is going on behind the scenes

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About

Ever wondered what HTTP requests the Ruby gem you are using to connect to a third party API is making? Use HTTP Spy to see what is going on behind the scenes.

Installation

sudo gem install martinbtt-net-http-spy

Example Usage

require 'rubygems'
require 'twitter'
gem 'net-http-spy'
require 'net-http-spy'

Twitter::Search.new('httparty').each { |r| r }
# Outputs...
-- : CONNECT: ["search.twitter.com", 80]
-- : GET /search.json?q=httparty
-- : BODY: Net::HTTPOK

See the examples folder for more.

Further Options

Show the call trace to the originating line of code in the third party gem

Net::HTTP.http_logger_options = {:trace => true}

Output the body of the request

Net::HTTP.http_logger_options = {:body => true}

Show the full raw HTTP output

Net::HTTP.http_logger_options = {:verbose => true}

Change the logger. By default HTTP spy logs to STDOUT

Net::HTTP.http_logger = Logger.new('twitter.log')

Bonus Points

Use it to grab sample data for FakeWeb = testing goodness.

Notes

This is a pretty early release. I'm sure there is plenty that can be done to improve compatibility as several libraries call Net::HTTP in a slightly different way. Feel free to fork and send in pull requests/patches.

Find Me

Martin Sadler (martin -- at -- beyondthetype.com)

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Ever wondered what HTTP requests the Ruby gem you are using to connect to a third party API is making? Use HTTP Spy to see what is going on behind the scenes

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