A simple HTTP and REST client for Ruby, inspired by the Sinatra’s microframework style of specifying actions: get, put, post, delete.
This fork is a initiative for the health of the project, since it seems to be ignored by the mantainer.
Some tests isn’t passing in Ruby 1.9 and Ruby 1.8. Pull requests are welcome.
Dependency Status <img src=“https://gemnasium.com/endel/rest-client.png?travis”/>¶ ↑
require 'rest_client' RestClient.get 'https://example.com/resource' RestClient.get 'https://example.com/resource', {:params => {:id => 50, 'foo' => 'bar'}} RestClient.get 'https://user:[email protected]/private/resource', {:accept => :json} RestClient.post 'https://example.com/resource', :param1 => 'one', :nested => { :param2 => 'two' } RestClient.post "https://example.com/resource", { 'x' => 1 }.to_json, :content_type => :json, :accept => :json RestClient.delete 'https://example.com/resource' response = RestClient.get 'https://example.com/resource' response.code ➔ 200 response.cookies ➔ {"Foo"=>"BAR", "QUUX"=>"QUUUUX"} response.headers ➔ {:content_type=>"text/html; charset=utf-8", :cache_control=>"private" ... response.to_str ➔ \n<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC \"-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN\"\n \"https://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd\">\n\n<html .... RestClient.post( url, { :transfer => { :path => '/foo/bar', :owner => 'that_guy', :group => 'those_guys' }, :upload => { :file => File.new(path, 'rb') } })
Yeah, that’s right! This does multipart sends for you!
RestClient.post '/data', :myfile => File.new("/path/to/image.jpg", 'rb')
This does two things for you:
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Auto-detects that you have a File value sends it as multipart
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Auto-detects the mime of the file and sets it in the HEAD of the payload for each entry
If you are sending params that do not contain a File object but the payload needs to be multipart then:
RestClient.post '/data', {:foo => 'bar', :multipart => true}
resource = RestClient::Resource.new 'https://example.com/resource' resource.get private_resource = RestClient::Resource.new 'https://example.com/private/resource', 'user', 'pass' private_resource.put File.read('pic.jpg'), :content_type => 'image/jpg'
See RestClient::Resource module docs for details.
site = RestClient::Resource.new('https://example.com') site['posts/1/comments'].post 'Good article.', :content_type => 'text/plain'
See RestClient::Resource docs for details.
Exceptions (see www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html)¶ ↑
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for results code between 200 and 207 a RestClient::Response will be returned
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for results code 301, 302 or 307 the redirection will be followed if the request is a get or a head
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for result code 303 the redirection will be followed and the request transformed into a get
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for other cases a RestClient::Exception holding the Response will be raised, a specific exception class will be thrown for know error codes
RestClient.get 'https://example.com/resource' ➔ RestClient::ResourceNotFound: RestClient::ResourceNotFound begin RestClient.get 'https://example.com/resource' rescue => e e.response end ➔ 404 Resource Not Found | text/html 282 bytes
A block can be passed to the RestClient method, this block will then be called with the Response. Response.return! can be called to invoke the default response’s behavior.
# Don't raise exceptions but return the response RestClient.get('https://example.com/resource'){|response, request, result| response } ➔ 404 Resource Not Found | text/html 282 bytes # Manage a specific error code RestClient.get('https://my-rest-service.com/resource'){ |response, request, result, &block| case response.code when 200 p "It worked !" response when 423 raise SomeCustomExceptionIfYouWant else response.return!(request, result, &block) end } # Follow redirections for all request types and not only for get and head # RFC : "If the 301, 302 or 307 status code is received in response to a request other than GET or HEAD, # the user agent MUST NOT automatically redirect the request unless it can be confirmed by the user, # since this might change the conditions under which the request was issued." RestClient.get('https://my-rest-service.com/resource'){ |response, request, result, &block| if [301, 302, 307].include? response.code response.follow_redirection(request, result, &block) else response.return!(request, result, &block) end }
If you want to use non-normalized URIs, you can normalize them with the addressable gem (addressable.rubyforge.org/api/).
require 'addressable/uri' RestClient.get(Addressable::URI.parse("https://www.詹姆斯.com/").normalize.to_str)
For cases not covered by the general API, you can use the RestClient::Request class which provide a lower-level API.
You can:
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specify ssl parameters
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override cookies
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manually handle the response (so you can operate on the response stream than reading it fully in memory)
see the class’ rdoc for more information.
The restclient shell command gives an IRB session with RestClient already loaded:
$ restclient >> RestClient.get 'https://example.com'
Specify a URL argument for get/post/put/delete on that resource:
$ restclient https://example.com >> put '/resource', 'data'
Add a user and password for authenticated resources:
$ restclient https://example.com user pass >> delete '/private/resource'
Create ~/.restclient for named sessions:
sinatra: url: https://localhost:4567 rack: url: https://localhost:9292 private_site: url: https://example.com username: user password: pass
Then invoke:
$ restclient private_site
Use as a one-off, curl-style:
$ restclient get https://example.com/resource > output_body $ restclient put https://example.com/resource < input_body
To enable logging you can
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set RestClient.log with a ruby Logger
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or set an environment variable to avoid modifying the code (in this case you can use a file name, “stdout” or “stderr”):
$ RESTCLIENT_LOG=stdout path/to/my/program
Either produces logs like this:
RestClient.get "https://some/resource" # => 200 OK | text/html 250 bytes RestClient.put "https://some/resource", "payload" # => 401 Unauthorized | application/xml 340 bytes
Note that these logs are valid Ruby, so you can paste them into the restclient shell or a script to replay your sequence of rest calls.
All calls to RestClient, including Resources, will use the proxy specified by RestClient.proxy:
RestClient.proxy = "https://proxy.example.com/" RestClient.get "https://some/resource" # => response from some/resource as proxied through proxy.example.com
Often the proxy url is set in an environment variable, so you can do this to use whatever proxy the system is configured to use:
RestClient.proxy = ENV['http_proxy']
Request objects know about query parameters and will automatically add them to the url for GET, HEAD and DELETE requests and escape the keys and values as needed:
RestClient.get 'https://example.com/resource', :params => {:foo => 'bar', :baz => 'qux'} # will GET https://example.com/resource?foo=bar&baz=qux
Request and Response objects know about HTTP cookies, and will automatically extract and set headers for them as needed:
response = RestClient.get 'https://example.com/action_which_sets_session_id' response.cookies # => {"_applicatioN_session_id" => "1234"} response2 = RestClient.post( 'https://localhost:3000/', {:param1 => "foo"}, {:cookies => {:session_id => "1234"}} ) # ...response body
RestClient::Resource.new( 'https://example.com', :ssl_client_cert => OpenSSL::X509::Certificate.new(File.read("cert.pem")), :ssl_client_key => OpenSSL::PKey::RSA.new(File.read("key.pem"), "passphrase, if any"), :ssl_ca_file => "ca_certificate.pem", :verify_ssl => OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_PEER ).get
Self-signed certificates can be generated with the openssl command-line tool.
RestClient.add_before_execution_proc add a Proc to be called before each execution, it’s handy if you need a direct access to the http request.
Example:
# Add oath support using the oauth gem require 'oauth' access_token = ... RestClient.add_before_execution_proc do |req, params| access_token.sign! req end RestClient.get 'https://example.com'
Need caching, more advanced logging or any ability provided by a rack middleware ?
Have a look at rest-client-components github.com/crohr/rest-client-components
Written by Adam Wiggins, major modifications by Blake Mizerany, maintained by Julien Kirch
Patches contributed by many, including Chris Anderson, Greg Borenstein, Ardekantur, Pedro Belo, Rafael Souza, Rick Olson, Aman Gupta, François Beausoleil and Nick Plante.
Released under the MIT License: opensource.org/licenses/MIT