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Revision: 1.20
Committed: Tue May 10 12:33:51 2011 UTC (13 years ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rel-2_11
Changes since 1.19: +3 -0 lines
Log Message:
2.11

File Contents

# Content
1 NAME
2 AnyEvent::HTTP - simple but non-blocking HTTP/HTTPS client
3
4 SYNOPSIS
5 use AnyEvent::HTTP;
6
7 http_get "http://www.nethype.de/", sub { print $_[1] };
8
9 # ... do something else here
10
11 DESCRIPTION
12 This module is an AnyEvent user, you need to make sure that you use and
13 run a supported event loop.
14
15 This module implements a simple, stateless and non-blocking HTTP client.
16 It supports GET, POST and other request methods, cookies and more, all
17 on a very low level. It can follow redirects, supports proxies, and
18 automatically limits the number of connections to the values specified
19 in the RFC.
20
21 It should generally be a "good client" that is enough for most HTTP
22 tasks. Simple tasks should be simple, but complex tasks should still be
23 possible as the user retains control over request and response headers.
24
25 The caller is responsible for authentication management, cookies (if the
26 simplistic implementation in this module doesn't suffice), referer and
27 other high-level protocol details for which this module offers only
28 limited support.
29
30 METHODS
31 http_get $url, key => value..., $cb->($data, $headers)
32 Executes an HTTP-GET request. See the http_request function for
33 details on additional parameters and the return value.
34
35 http_head $url, key => value..., $cb->($data, $headers)
36 Executes an HTTP-HEAD request. See the http_request function for
37 details on additional parameters and the return value.
38
39 http_post $url, $body, key => value..., $cb->($data, $headers)
40 Executes an HTTP-POST request with a request body of $body. See the
41 http_request function for details on additional parameters and the
42 return value.
43
44 http_request $method => $url, key => value..., $cb->($data, $headers)
45 Executes a HTTP request of type $method (e.g. "GET", "POST"). The
46 URL must be an absolute http or https URL.
47
48 When called in void context, nothing is returned. In other contexts,
49 "http_request" returns a "cancellation guard" - you have to keep the
50 object at least alive until the callback get called. If the object
51 gets destroyed before the callback is called, the request will be
52 cancelled.
53
54 The callback will be called with the response body data as first
55 argument (or "undef" if an error occured), and a hash-ref with
56 response headers (and trailers) as second argument.
57
58 All the headers in that hash are lowercased. In addition to the
59 response headers, the "pseudo-headers" (uppercase to avoid clashing
60 with possible response headers) "HTTPVersion", "Status" and "Reason"
61 contain the three parts of the HTTP Status-Line of the same name. If
62 an error occurs during the body phase of a request, then the
63 original "Status" and "Reason" values from the header are available
64 as "OrigStatus" and "OrigReason".
65
66 The pseudo-header "URL" contains the actual URL (which can differ
67 from the requested URL when following redirects - for example, you
68 might get an error that your URL scheme is not supported even though
69 your URL is a valid http URL because it redirected to an ftp URL, in
70 which case you can look at the URL pseudo header).
71
72 The pseudo-header "Redirect" only exists when the request was a
73 result of an internal redirect. In that case it is an array
74 reference with the "($data, $headers)" from the redirect response.
75 Note that this response could in turn be the result of a redirect
76 itself, and "$headers->{Redirect}[1]{Redirect}" will then contain
77 the original response, and so on.
78
79 If the server sends a header multiple times, then their contents
80 will be joined together with a comma (","), as per the HTTP spec.
81
82 If an internal error occurs, such as not being able to resolve a
83 hostname, then $data will be "undef", "$headers->{Status}" will be
84 590-599 and the "Reason" pseudo-header will contain an error
85 message. Currently the following status codes are used:
86
87 595 - errors during connection etsbalishment, proxy handshake.
88 596 - errors during TLS negotiation, request sending and header
89 processing.
90 597 - errors during body receiving or processing.
91 598 - user aborted request via "on_header" or "on_body".
92 599 - other, usually nonretryable, errors (garbled URL etc.).
93
94 A typical callback might look like this:
95
96 sub {
97 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
98
99 if ($hdr->{Status} =~ /^2/) {
100 ... everything should be ok
101 } else {
102 print "error, $hdr->{Status} $hdr->{Reason}\n";
103 }
104 }
105
106 Additional parameters are key-value pairs, and are fully optional.
107 They include:
108
109 recurse => $count (default: $MAX_RECURSE)
110 Whether to recurse requests or not, e.g. on redirects,
111 authentication retries and so on, and how often to do so.
112
113 headers => hashref
114 The request headers to use. Currently, "http_request" may
115 provide its own "Host:", "Content-Length:", "Connection:" and
116 "Cookie:" headers and will provide defaults at least for "TE:",
117 "Referer:" and "User-Agent:" (this can be suppressed by using
118 "undef" for these headers in which case they won't be sent at
119 all).
120
121 You really should provide your own "User-Agent:" header value
122 that is appropriate for your program - I wouldn't be surprised
123 if the default AnyEvent string gets blocked by webservers sooner
124 or later.
125
126 Also, make sure that your headers names and values do not
127 contain any embedded newlines.
128
129 timeout => $seconds
130 The time-out to use for various stages - each connect attempt
131 will reset the timeout, as will read or write activity, i.e.
132 this is not an overall timeout.
133
134 Default timeout is 5 minutes.
135
136 proxy => [$host, $port[, $scheme]] or undef
137 Use the given http proxy for all requests, or no proxy if
138 "undef" is used.
139
140 $scheme must be either missing or must be "http" for HTTP.
141
142 If not specified, then the default proxy is used (see
143 "AnyEvent::HTTP::set_proxy").
144
145 body => $string
146 The request body, usually empty. Will be sent as-is (future
147 versions of this module might offer more options).
148
149 cookie_jar => $hash_ref
150 Passing this parameter enables (simplified) cookie-processing,
151 loosely based on the original netscape specification.
152
153 The $hash_ref must be an (initially empty) hash reference which
154 will get updated automatically. It is possible to save the
155 cookie jar to persistent storage with something like JSON or
156 Storable - see the "AnyEvent::HTTP::cookie_jar_expire" function
157 if you wish to remove expired or session-only cookies, and also
158 for documentation on the format of the cookie jar.
159
160 Note that this cookie implementation is not meant to be
161 complete. If you want complete cookie management you have to do
162 that on your own. "cookie_jar" is meant as a quick fix to get
163 most cookie-using sites working. Cookies are a privacy disaster,
164 do not use them unless required to.
165
166 When cookie processing is enabled, the "Cookie:" and
167 "Set-Cookie:" headers will be set and handled by this module,
168 otherwise they will be left untouched.
169
170 tls_ctx => $scheme | $tls_ctx
171 Specifies the AnyEvent::TLS context to be used for https
172 connections. This parameter follows the same rules as the
173 "tls_ctx" parameter to AnyEvent::Handle, but additionally, the
174 two strings "low" or "high" can be specified, which give you a
175 predefined low-security (no verification, highest compatibility)
176 and high-security (CA and common-name verification) TLS context.
177
178 The default for this option is "low", which could be interpreted
179 as "give me the page, no matter what".
180
181 See also the "sessionid" parameter.
182
183 session => $string
184 The module might reuse connections to the same host internally.
185 Sometimes (e.g. when using TLS), you do not want to reuse
186 connections from other sessions. This can be achieved by setting
187 this parameter to some unique ID (such as the address of an
188 object storing your state data, or the TLS context) - only
189 connections using the same unique ID will be reused.
190
191 on_prepare => $callback->($fh)
192 In rare cases you need to "tune" the socket before it is used to
193 connect (for exmaple, to bind it on a given IP address). This
194 parameter overrides the prepare callback passed to
195 "AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect" and behaves exactly the same way
196 (e.g. it has to provide a timeout). See the description for the
197 $prepare_cb argument of "AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect" for
198 details.
199
200 tcp_connect => $callback->($host, $service, $connect_cb,
201 $prepare_cb)
202 In even rarer cases you want total control over how
203 AnyEvent::HTTP establishes connections. Normally it uses
204 AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect to do this, but you can provide
205 your own "tcp_connect" function - obviously, it has to follow
206 the same calling conventions, except that it may always return a
207 connection guard object.
208
209 There are probably lots of weird uses for this function,
210 starting from tracing the hosts "http_request" actually tries to
211 connect, to (inexact but fast) host => IP address caching or
212 even socks protocol support.
213
214 on_header => $callback->($headers)
215 When specified, this callback will be called with the header
216 hash as soon as headers have been successfully received from the
217 remote server (not on locally-generated errors).
218
219 It has to return either true (in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will
220 continue), or false, in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will cancel
221 the download (and call the finish callback with an error code of
222 598).
223
224 This callback is useful, among other things, to quickly reject
225 unwanted content, which, if it is supposed to be rare, can be
226 faster than first doing a "HEAD" request.
227
228 The downside is that cancelling the request makes it impossible
229 to re-use the connection. Also, the "on_header" callback will
230 not receive any trailer (headers sent after the response body).
231
232 Example: cancel the request unless the content-type is
233 "text/html".
234
235 on_header => sub {
236 $_[0]{"content-type"} =~ /^text\/html\s*(?:;|$)/
237 },
238
239 on_body => $callback->($partial_body, $headers)
240 When specified, all body data will be passed to this callback
241 instead of to the completion callback. The completion callback
242 will get the empty string instead of the body data.
243
244 It has to return either true (in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will
245 continue), or false, in which case AnyEvent::HTTP will cancel
246 the download (and call the completion callback with an error
247 code of 598).
248
249 The downside to cancelling the request is that it makes it
250 impossible to re-use the connection.
251
252 This callback is useful when the data is too large to be held in
253 memory (so the callback writes it to a file) or when only some
254 information should be extracted, or when the body should be
255 processed incrementally.
256
257 It is usually preferred over doing your own body handling via
258 "want_body_handle", but in case of streaming APIs, where HTTP is
259 only used to create a connection, "want_body_handle" is the
260 better alternative, as it allows you to install your own event
261 handler, reducing resource usage.
262
263 want_body_handle => $enable
264 When enabled (default is disabled), the behaviour of
265 AnyEvent::HTTP changes considerably: after parsing the headers,
266 and instead of downloading the body (if any), the completion
267 callback will be called. Instead of the $body argument
268 containing the body data, the callback will receive the
269 AnyEvent::Handle object associated with the connection. In error
270 cases, "undef" will be passed. When there is no body (e.g.
271 status 304), the empty string will be passed.
272
273 The handle object might or might not be in TLS mode, might be
274 connected to a proxy, be a persistent connection, use chunked
275 transfer encoding etc., and configured in unspecified ways. The
276 user is responsible for this handle (it will not be used by this
277 module anymore).
278
279 This is useful with some push-type services, where, after the
280 initial headers, an interactive protocol is used (typical
281 example would be the push-style twitter API which starts a
282 JSON/XML stream).
283
284 If you think you need this, first have a look at "on_body", to
285 see if that doesn't solve your problem in a better way.
286
287 persistent => $boolean
288 Try to create/reuse a persistent connection. When this flag is
289 set (default: true for idempotent requests, false for all
290 others), then "http_request" tries to re-use an existing
291 (previously-created) persistent connection to the host and,
292 failing that, tries to create a new one.
293
294 Requests failing in certain ways will be automatically retried
295 once, which is dangerous for non-idempotent requests, which is
296 why it defaults to off for them. The reason for this is because
297 the bozos who designed HTTP/1.1 made it impossible to
298 distinguish between a fatal error and a normal connection
299 timeout, so you never know whether there was a problem with your
300 request or not.
301
302 When reusing an existent connection, many parameters (such as
303 TLS context) will be ignored. See the "session" parameter for a
304 workaround.
305
306 keepalive => $boolean
307 Only used when "persistent" is also true. This parameter decides
308 whether "http_request" tries to handshake a HTTP/1.0-style
309 keep-alive connection (as opposed to only a HTTP/1.1 persistent
310 connection).
311
312 The default is true, except when using a proxy, in which case it
313 defaults to false, as HTTP/1.0 proxies cannot support this in a
314 meaningful way.
315
316 handle_params => { key => value ... }
317 The key-value pairs in this hash will be passed to any
318 AnyEvent::Handle constructor that is called - not all requests
319 will create a handle, and sometimes more than one is created, so
320 this parameter is only good for setting hints.
321
322 Example: set the maximum read size to 4096, to potentially
323 conserve memory at the cost of speed.
324
325 handle_params => {
326 max_read_size => 4096,
327 },
328
329 Example: do a simple HTTP GET request for http://www.nethype.de/ and
330 print the response body.
331
332 http_request GET => "http://www.nethype.de/", sub {
333 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
334 print "$body\n";
335 };
336
337 Example: do a HTTP HEAD request on https://www.google.com/, use a
338 timeout of 30 seconds.
339
340 http_request
341 GET => "https://www.google.com",
342 headers => { "user-agent" => "MySearchClient 1.0" },
343 timeout => 30,
344 sub {
345 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
346 use Data::Dumper;
347 print Dumper $hdr;
348 }
349 ;
350
351 Example: do another simple HTTP GET request, but immediately try to
352 cancel it.
353
354 my $request = http_request GET => "http://www.nethype.de/", sub {
355 my ($body, $hdr) = @_;
356 print "$body\n";
357 };
358
359 undef $request;
360
361 DNS CACHING
362 AnyEvent::HTTP uses the AnyEvent::Socket::tcp_connect function for the
363 actual connection, which in turn uses AnyEvent::DNS to resolve
364 hostnames. The latter is a simple stub resolver and does no caching on
365 its own. If you want DNS caching, you currently have to provide your own
366 default resolver (by storing a suitable resolver object in
367 $AnyEvent::DNS::RESOLVER) or your own "tcp_connect" callback.
368
369 GLOBAL FUNCTIONS AND VARIABLES
370 AnyEvent::HTTP::set_proxy "proxy-url"
371 Sets the default proxy server to use. The proxy-url must begin with
372 a string of the form "http://host:port", croaks otherwise.
373
374 To clear an already-set proxy, use "undef".
375
376 When AnyEvent::HTTP is laoded for the first time it will query the
377 default proxy from the operating system, currently by looking at
378 "$ENV{http_proxy"}.
379
380 AnyEvent::HTTP::cookie_jar_expire $jar[, $session_end]
381 Remove all cookies from the cookie jar that have been expired. If
382 $session_end is given and true, then additionally remove all session
383 cookies.
384
385 You should call this function (with a true $session_end) before you
386 save cookies to disk, and you should call this function after
387 loading them again. If you have a long-running program you can
388 additonally call this function from time to time.
389
390 A cookie jar is initially an empty hash-reference that is managed by
391 this module. It's format is subject to change, but currently it is
392 like this:
393
394 The key "version" has to contain 1, otherwise the hash gets emptied.
395 All other keys are hostnames or IP addresses pointing to
396 hash-references. The key for these inner hash references is the
397 server path for which this cookie is meant, and the values are again
398 hash-references. The keys of those hash-references is the cookie
399 name, and the value, you guessed it, is another hash-reference, this
400 time with the key-value pairs from the cookie, except for "expires"
401 and "max-age", which have been replaced by a "_expires" key that
402 contains the cookie expiry timestamp.
403
404 Here is an example of a cookie jar with a single cookie, so you have
405 a chance of understanding the above paragraph:
406
407 {
408 version => 1,
409 "10.0.0.1" => {
410 "/" => {
411 "mythweb_id" => {
412 _expires => 1293917923,
413 value => "ooRung9dThee3ooyXooM1Ohm",
414 },
415 },
416 },
417 }
418
419 $date = AnyEvent::HTTP::format_date $timestamp
420 Takes a POSIX timestamp (seconds since the epoch) and formats it as
421 a HTTP Date (RFC 2616).
422
423 $timestamp = AnyEvent::HTTP::parse_date $date
424 Takes a HTTP Date (RFC 2616) or a Cookie date (netscape cookie spec)
425 or a bunch of minor variations of those, and returns the
426 corresponding POSIX timestamp, or "undef" if the date cannot be
427 parsed.
428
429 $AnyEvent::HTTP::MAX_RECURSE
430 The default value for the "recurse" request parameter (default: 10).
431
432 $AnyEvent::HTTP::TIMEOUT
433 The default timeout for conenction operations (default: 300).
434
435 $AnyEvent::HTTP::USERAGENT
436 The default value for the "User-Agent" header (the default is
437 "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; U; AnyEvent-HTTP/$VERSION;
438 +http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/AnyEvent)").
439
440 $AnyEvent::HTTP::MAX_PER_HOST
441 The maximum number of concurrent connections to the same host
442 (identified by the hostname). If the limit is exceeded, then the
443 additional requests are queued until previous connections are
444 closed. Both persistent and non-persistent connections are counted
445 in this limit.
446
447 The default value for this is 4, and it is highly advisable to not
448 increase it much.
449
450 For comparison: the RFC's recommend 4 non-persistent or 2 persistent
451 connections, older browsers used 2, newers (such as firefox 3)
452 typically use 6, and Opera uses 8 because like, they have the
453 fastest browser and give a shit for everybody else on the planet.
454
455 $AnyEvent::HTTP::PERSISTENT_TIMEOUT
456 The time after which idle persistent conenctions get closed by
457 AnyEvent::HTTP (default: 3).
458
459 $AnyEvent::HTTP::ACTIVE
460 The number of active connections. This is not the number of
461 currently running requests, but the number of currently open and
462 non-idle TCP connections. This number can be useful for
463 load-leveling.
464
465 SHOWCASE
466 This section contaisn some more elaborate "real-world" examples or code
467 snippets.
468
469 HTTP/1.1 FILE DOWNLOAD
470 Downloading files with HTTP can be quite tricky, especially when
471 something goes wrong and you want to resume.
472
473 Here is a function that initiates and resumes a download. It uses the
474 last modified time to check for file content changes, and works with
475 many HTTP/1.0 servers as well, and usually falls back to a complete
476 re-download on older servers.
477
478 It calls the completion callback with either "undef", which means a
479 nonretryable error occured, 0 when the download was partial and should
480 be retried, and 1 if it was successful.
481
482 use AnyEvent::HTTP;
483
484 sub download($$$) {
485 my ($url, $file, $cb) = @_;
486
487 open my $fh, "+<", $file
488 or die "$file: $!";
489
490 my %hdr;
491 my $ofs = 0;
492
493 warn stat $fh;
494 warn -s _;
495 if (stat $fh and -s _) {
496 $ofs = -s _;
497 warn "-s is ", $ofs;#d#
498 $hdr{"if-unmodified-since"} = AnyEvent::HTTP::format_date +(stat _)[9];
499 $hdr{"range"} = "bytes=$ofs-";
500 }
501
502 http_get $url,
503 headers => \%hdr,
504 on_header => sub {
505 my ($hdr) = @_;
506
507 if ($hdr->{Status} == 200 && $ofs) {
508 # resume failed
509 truncate $fh, $ofs = 0;
510 }
511
512 sysseek $fh, $ofs, 0;
513
514 1
515 },
516 on_body => sub {
517 my ($data, $hdr) = @_;
518
519 if ($hdr->{Status} =~ /^2/) {
520 length $data == syswrite $fh, $data
521 or return; # abort on write errors
522 }
523
524 1
525 },
526 sub {
527 my (undef, $hdr) = @_;
528
529 my $status = $hdr->{Status};
530
531 if (my $time = AnyEvent::HTTP::parse_date $hdr->{"last-modified"}) {
532 utime $fh, $time, $time;
533 }
534
535 if ($status == 200 || $status == 206 || $status == 416) {
536 # download ok || resume ok || file already fully downloaded
537 $cb->(1, $hdr);
538
539 } elsif ($status == 412) {
540 # file has changed while resuming, delete and retry
541 unlink $file;
542 $cb->(0, $hdr);
543
544 } elsif ($status == 500 or $status == 503 or $status =~ /^59/) {
545 # retry later
546 $cb->(0, $hdr);
547
548 } else {
549 $cb->(undef, $hdr);
550 }
551 }
552 ;
553 }
554
555 download "http://server/somelargefile", "/tmp/somelargefile", sub {
556 if ($_[0]) {
557 print "OK!\n";
558 } elsif (defined $_[0]) {
559 print "please retry later\n";
560 } else {
561 print "ERROR\n";
562 }
563 };
564
565 SOCKS PROXIES
566 Socks proxies are not directly supported by AnyEvent::HTTP. You can
567 compile your perl to support socks, or use an external program such as
568 socksify (dante) or tsocks to make your program use a socks proxy
569 transparently.
570
571 Alternatively, for AnyEvent::HTTP only, you can use your own
572 "tcp_connect" function that does the proxy handshake - here is an
573 example that works with socks4a proxies:
574
575 use Errno;
576 use AnyEvent::Util;
577 use AnyEvent::Socket;
578 use AnyEvent::Handle;
579
580 # host, port and username of/for your socks4a proxy
581 my $socks_host = "10.0.0.23";
582 my $socks_port = 9050;
583 my $socks_user = "";
584
585 sub socks4a_connect {
586 my ($host, $port, $connect_cb, $prepare_cb) = @_;
587
588 my $hdl = new AnyEvent::Handle
589 connect => [$socks_host, $socks_port],
590 on_prepare => sub { $prepare_cb->($_[0]{fh}) },
591 on_error => sub { $connect_cb->() },
592 ;
593
594 $hdl->push_write (pack "CCnNZ*Z*", 4, 1, $port, 1, $socks_user, $host);
595
596 $hdl->push_read (chunk => 8, sub {
597 my ($hdl, $chunk) = @_;
598 my ($status, $port, $ipn) = unpack "xCna4", $chunk;
599
600 if ($status == 0x5a) {
601 $connect_cb->($hdl->{fh}, (format_address $ipn) . ":$port");
602 } else {
603 $! = Errno::ENXIO; $connect_cb->();
604 }
605 });
606
607 $hdl
608 }
609
610 Use "socks4a_connect" instead of "tcp_connect" when doing
611 "http_request"s, possibly after switching off other proxy types:
612
613 AnyEvent::HTTP::set_proxy undef; # usually you do not want other proxies
614
615 http_get 'http://www.google.com', tcp_connect => \&socks4a_connect, sub {
616 my ($data, $headers) = @_;
617 ...
618 };
619
620 SEE ALSO
621 AnyEvent.
622
623 AUTHOR
624 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
625 http://home.schmorp.de/
626
627 With many thanks to Дмитрий Шалашов, who provided
628 countless testcases and bugreports.
629