Copyright | See LICENSE file |
---|---|
License | BSD |
Maintainer | Ganesh Sittampalam <ganesh@earth.li> |
Stability | experimental |
Portability | non-portable (not tested) |
Safe Haskell | None |
Language | Haskell98 |
The HTTP
module provides a simple interface for sending and
receiving content over HTTP in Haskell. Here's how to fetch a document from
a URL and return it as a String:
simpleHTTP (getRequest "http://www.haskell.org/") >>= fmap (take 100) . getResponseBody -- fetch document and return it (as a 'String'.)
Other functions let you control the submission and transfer of HTTP
Request
s and Response
s more carefully, letting you integrate the use
of HTTP
functionality into your application.
The module also exports the main types of the package, Request
and Response
,
along with Header
and functions for working with these.
The actual functionality is implemented by modules in the Network.HTTP.*
namespace, letting you either use the default implementation here
by importing Network.HTTP
or, for more specific uses, selectively
import the modules in Network.HTTP.*
. To wit, more than one kind of
representation of the bulk data that flows across a HTTP connection is
supported. (see Network.HTTP.HandleStream.)
NOTE: The Request
send actions will normalize the Request
prior to transmission.
Normalization such as having the request path be in the expected form and, possibly,
introduce a default Host:
header if one isn't already present.
Normalization also takes the "user:pass@"
portion out of the the URI,
if it was supplied, and converts it into Authorization: Basic$ header.
If you do not
want the requests tampered with, but sent as-is, please import and use the
the Network.HTTP.HandleStream or Network.HTTP.Stream modules instead. They
export the same functions, but leaves construction and any normalization of
Request@s to the user.
NOTE: This package only supports HTTP; it does not support HTTPS. Attempts to use HTTPS result in an error.
- module Network.HTTP.Base
- module Network.HTTP.Headers
- simpleHTTP :: HStream ty => Request ty -> IO (Result (Response ty))
- simpleHTTP_ :: HStream ty => HandleStream ty -> Request ty -> IO (Result (Response ty))
- sendHTTP :: HStream ty => HandleStream ty -> Request ty -> IO (Result (Response ty))
- sendHTTP_notify :: HStream ty => HandleStream ty -> Request ty -> IO () -> IO (Result (Response ty))
- receiveHTTP :: HStream ty => HandleStream ty -> IO (Result (Request ty))
- respondHTTP :: HStream ty => HandleStream ty -> Response ty -> IO ()
- module Network.TCP
- getRequest :: String -> Request_String
- headRequest :: String -> Request_String
- postRequest :: String -> Request_String
- postRequestWithBody :: String -> String -> String -> Request_String
- getResponseBody :: Result (Response ty) -> IO ty
- getResponseCode :: Result (Response ty) -> IO ResponseCode
Documentation
module Network.HTTP.Base
module Network.HTTP.Headers
simpleHTTP :: HStream ty => Request ty -> IO (Result (Response ty)) Source
simpleHTTP req
transmits the Request
req
by opening a direct, non-persistent
connection to the HTTP server that req
is destined for, followed by transmitting
it and gathering up the response as a Result
. Prior to sending the request,
it is normalized (via normalizeRequest
). If you have to mediate the request
via an HTTP proxy, you will have to normalize the request yourself. Or switch to
using Browser
instead.
Examples:
simpleHTTP (getRequest "http://hackage.haskell.org/") simpleHTTP (getRequest "http://hackage.haskell.org:8012/")
simpleHTTP_ :: HStream ty => HandleStream ty -> Request ty -> IO (Result (Response ty)) Source
Identical to simpleHTTP
, but acting on an already opened stream.
sendHTTP :: HStream ty => HandleStream ty -> Request ty -> IO (Result (Response ty)) Source
sendHTTP hStream httpRequest
transmits httpRequest
(after normalization) over
hStream
, but does not alter the status of the connection, nor request it to be
closed upon receiving the response.
sendHTTP_notify :: HStream ty => HandleStream ty -> Request ty -> IO () -> IO (Result (Response ty)) Source
sendHTTP_notify hStream httpRequest action
behaves like sendHTTP
, but
lets you supply an IO action
to execute once the request has been successfully
transmitted over the connection. Useful when you want to set up tracing of
request transmission and its performance.
receiveHTTP :: HStream ty => HandleStream ty -> IO (Result (Request ty)) Source
receiveHTTP hStream
reads a Request
from the HandleStream
hStream
respondHTTP :: HStream ty => HandleStream ty -> Response ty -> IO () Source
respondHTTP hStream httpResponse
transmits an HTTP Response
over
the HandleStream
hStream
. It could be used to implement simple web
server interactions, performing the dual role to sendHTTP
.
module Network.TCP
:: String | URL to fetch |
-> Request_String | The constructed request |
A convenience constructor for a GET Request
.
If the URL isn't syntactically valid, the function raises an error.
:: String | URL to fetch |
-> Request_String | The constructed request |
A convenience constructor for a HEAD Request
.
If the URL isn't syntactically valid, the function raises an error.
:: String | URL to POST to |
-> Request_String | The constructed request |
A convenience constructor for a POST Request
.
If the URL isn't syntactically valid, the function raises an error.
:: String | URL to POST to |
-> String | Content-Type of body |
-> String | The body of the request |
-> Request_String | The constructed request |
A convenience constructor for a POST Request
.
It constructs a request and sets the body as well as the Content-Type and Content-Length headers. The contents of the body are forced to calculate the value for the Content-Length header.
If the URL isn't syntactically valid, the function raises an error.
getResponseBody :: Result (Response ty) -> IO ty Source
getResponseBody response
takes the response of a HTTP requesting action and
tries to extricate the body of the Response
response
. If the request action
returned an error, an IO exception is raised.
getResponseCode :: Result (Response ty) -> IO ResponseCode Source
getResponseBody response
takes the response of a HTTP requesting action and
tries to extricate the status code of the Response
response
. If the request action
returned an error, an IO exception is raised.