View Source Req.Request (req v0.3.6)

The low-level API and the request struct.

Req is composed of three main pieces:

  • Req - the high-level API

  • Req.Request - the low-level API and the request struct (you're here!)

  • Req.Steps - the collection of built-in steps

The low-level API and the request struct is the foundation of Req's extensibility. Virtually all of the functionality is broken down into individual pieces - steps. Req works by running the request struct through these steps. You can easily reuse or rearrange built-in steps or write new ones.

To make using custom steps by others even easier, they can be packaged up into plugins. See "Writing Plugins" section for more information.

the-low-level-api

The Low-level API

Most Req users would use it like this:

Req.get!("https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir").body["description"]
#=> "Elixir is a dynamic, functional language designed for building scalable and maintainable applications"

Here is the equivalent using the low-level API:

url = "https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir"

req =
  %Req.Request{method: :get, url: url}
  |> Req.Request.append_request_steps(
    put_user_agent: &Req.Steps.put_user_agent/1,
    # ...
  )
  |> Req.Request.append_response_steps(
    # ...
    decompress_body: &Req.Steps.decompress_body/1,
    decode_body: &Req.Steps.decode_body/1,
    # ...
  )
  |> Req.Request.append_error_steps(
    retry: &Req.Steps.retry/1,
    # ...
  )

Req.Request.run!(req).body["description"]
#=> "Elixir is a dynamic, functional language designed for building scalable and maintainable applications"

By putting the request pipeline yourself you have precise control of exactly what is running and in what order.

the-request-struct

The Request Struct

  • :method - the HTTP request method

  • :url - the HTTP request URL

  • :headers - the HTTP request headers

  • :body - the HTTP request body

  • :options - the options to be used by steps. See "Options" section below for more information.

  • :halted - whether the request pipeline is halted. See halt/1

  • :adapter - a request step that makes the actual HTTP request. Defaults to Req.Steps.run_finch/1. See "Adapter" section below for more information.

  • :request_steps - the list of request steps

  • :response_steps - the list of response steps

  • :error_steps - the list of error steps

  • :private - a map reserved for libraries and frameworks to use. Prefix the keys with the name of your project to avoid any future conflicts. Only accepts atom/0 keys.

steps

Steps

Req has three types of steps: request, response, and error.

Request steps are used to refine the data that will be sent to the server.

After making the actual HTTP request, we'll either get a HTTP response or an error. The request, along with the response or error, will go through response or error steps, respectively.

Nothing is actually executed until we run the pipeline with Req.Request.run/1.

request-steps

Request steps

A request step is a function that accepts a request and returns one of the following:

  • A request

  • A {request, response_or_error} tuple. In that case no further request steps are executed and the return value goes through response or error steps

Examples:

def put_default_headers(request) do
  update_in(request.headers, &[{"user-agent", "req"} | &1])
end

def read_from_cache(request) do
  case ResponseCache.fetch(request) do
    {:ok, response} -> {request, response}
    :error -> request
  end
end

response-and-error-steps

Response and error steps

A response step is a function that accepts a {request, response} tuple and returns one of the following:

  • A {request, response} tuple

  • A {request, exception} tuple. In that case, no further response steps are executed but the exception goes through error steps

Similarly, an error step is a function that accepts a {request, exception} tuple and returns one of the following:

  • A {request, exception} tuple

  • A {request, response} tuple. In that case, no further error steps are executed but the response goes through response steps

Examples:

def decode({request, response}) do
  case List.keyfind(response.headers, "content-type", 0) do
    {_, "application/json" <> _} ->
      {request, update_in(response.body, &Jason.decode!/1)}

    _ ->
      {request, response}
  end
end

def log_error({request, exception}) do
  Logger.error(["#{request.method} #{request.uri}: ", Exception.message(exception)])
  {request, exception}
end

halting

Halting

Any step can call halt/1 to halt the pipeline. This will prevent any further steps from being invoked.

Examples:

def circuit_breaker(request) do
  if CircuitBreaker.open?() do
    {Req.Request.halt(request), RuntimeError.exception("circuit breaker is open")}
  else
    request
  end
end

writing-plugins

Writing Plugins

Custom steps can be packaged into plugins so that they are even easier to use by others.

Here's an example plugin:

defmodule PrintHeaders do
  @doc """
  Prints request and response headers.

  ## Request Options

    * `:print_headers` - if `true`, prints the headers. Defaults to `false`.
  """
  def attach(%Req.Request{} = request, options \\ []) do
    request
    |> Req.Request.register_options([:print_headers])
    |> Req.Request.merge_options(options)
    |> Req.Request.append_request_steps(print_headers: &print_request_headers/1)
    |> Req.Request.prepend_response_steps(print_headers: &print_response_headers/1)
  end

  defp print_request_headers(request) do
    if request.options[:print_headers] do
      print_headers("> ", request.headers)
    end

    request
  end

  defp print_response_headers({request, response}) do
    if request.options[:print_headers] do
      print_headers("< ", response.headers)
    end

    {request, response}
  end

  defp print_headers(prefix, headers) do
    for {name, value} <- headers do
      IO.puts([prefix, name, ": ", value])
    end
  end
end

And here is how we can use it:

req = Req.new() |> PrintHeaders.attach()

Req.get!(req, url: "https://httpbin.org/json").status
200

Req.get!(req, url: "https://httpbin.org/json", print_headers: true).status
# Outputs:
# > accept-encoding: br, gzip, deflate
# > user-agent: req/0.3.0-dev
# < date: Wed, 11 May 2022 11:10:47 GMT
# < content-type: application/json
# ...
200

req = Req.new() |> PrintHeaders.attach(print_headers: true)
Req.get!(req, url: "https://httpbin.org/json").status
# Outputs:
# > accept-encoding: br, gzip, deflate
# ...
200

As you can see a plugin is simply a module. While this is not enforced, the plugin should follow these conventions:

  • It should export an attach/1 function that takes and returns the request struct

  • The attach functions mostly just adds steps and it is the steps that do the actual work

  • A user should be able to attach your plugin alongside other plugins. For this reason, plugin functionality should usually only happen on a specific "trigger": on a specific option, on a specific URL scheme or host, etc. This is especially important for plugins that perform authentication; you don't want to accidentally expose a token from service A when a user makes request to service B.

  • If your plugin supports custom options, register them with register_options/2

  • Sometimes it is useful to pass options when attaching the plugin. For that, export an attach/2 function and call merge_options/2. Remember to first register options before merging!

adapter

Adapter

As noted in the "Request steps" section, a request step besides returning the request, might also return {request, response} or {request, exception}, thus invoking either response or error steps next. This is exactly how Req makes the underlying HTTP call, by invoking a request step that follows this contract.

The default adapter is using Finch via the Req.Steps.run_finch/1 step.

Here is a mock adapter that always returns a successful response:

adapter = fn request ->
  response = %Req.Response{status: 200, body: "it works!"}
  {request, response}
end

Req.request!(url: "http://example", adapter: adapter).body
#=> "it works!"

Here is another one that uses the Req.Response.json/2 function to conveniently return a JSON response:

adapter = fn request ->
  response = Req.Response.json(%{hello: 42})
  {request, response}
end

resp = Req.request!(url: "http://example", adapter: adapter)
resp.headers
#=> [{"content-type", "application/json"}]
resp.body
#=> %{"hello" => 42}

And here is a naive Hackney-based adapter:

hackney = fn request ->
  case :hackney.request(
         request.method,
         URI.to_string(request.url),
         request.headers,
         request.body,
         [:with_body]
       ) do
    {:ok, status, headers, body} ->
      headers = for {name, value} <- headers, do: {String.downcase(name), value}
      response = %Req.Response{status: status, headers: headers, body: body}
      {request, response}

    {:error, reason} ->
      {request, RuntimeError.exception(inspect(reason))}
  end
end

Req.get!("https://api.github.com/repos/elixir-lang/elixir", adapter: hackney).body["description"]
"Elixir is a dynamic, functional language designed for building scalable and maintainable applications"

Link to this section Summary

Functions

Appends error steps.

Appends request steps.

Appends response steps.

Returns the values of the header specified by key.

Gets the value for a specific private key.

Halts the request pipeline preventing any further steps from executing.

Merges given options into the request.

Prepends error steps.

Prepends request steps.

Prepends response steps.

Adds a new request header (key) if not present, otherwise replaces the previous value of that header with value.

Adds (or replaces) multiple request headers.

Adds a request header (key) unless already present.

Assigns a private key to value.

Registers options to be used by a custom steps.

Runs a request pipeline.

Runs a request pipeline and returns a response or raises an error.

Updates private key with the given function.

Link to this section Types

@type t() :: %Req.Request{
  adapter: request_step(),
  body: iodata() | nil,
  current_request_steps: term(),
  error_steps: [{name :: atom(), error_step()}],
  halted: boolean(),
  headers: [{binary(), binary()}],
  method: atom(),
  options: map(),
  private: map(),
  registered_options: MapSet.t(),
  request_steps: [{name :: atom(), request_step()}],
  response_steps: [{name :: atom(), response_step()}],
  url: URI.t()
}

Link to this section Functions

Link to this function

append_error_steps(request, steps)

View Source

Appends error steps.

examples

Examples

Req.Request.append_error_steps(request,
  noop: fn {request, exception} -> {request, exception} end,
  inspect: &IO.inspect/1
)
Link to this function

append_request_steps(request, steps)

View Source

Appends request steps.

examples

Examples

Req.Request.append_request_steps(request,
  noop: fn request -> request end,
  inspect: &IO.inspect/1
)
Link to this function

append_response_steps(request, steps)

View Source

Appends response steps.

examples

Examples

Req.Request.append_response_steps(request,
  noop: fn {request, response} -> {request, response} end,
  inspect: &IO.inspect/1
)
Link to this function

get_header(request, key)

View Source
@spec get_header(t(), binary()) :: [binary()]

Returns the values of the header specified by key.

examples

Examples

iex> req = Req.new(headers: [{"accept", "application/json"}])
iex> Req.Request.get_header(req, "accept")
["application/json"]
Link to this function

get_private(request, key, default \\ nil)

View Source

Gets the value for a specific private key.

Halts the request pipeline preventing any further steps from executing.

Link to this function

merge_options(request, options)

View Source
@spec merge_options(
  t(),
  keyword()
) :: t()

Merges given options into the request.

examples

Examples

iex> req = Req.new(auth: {"alice", "secret"}, http_errors: :raise)
iex> req = Req.Request.merge_options(req, auth: {:bearer, "abcd"}, base_url: "https://example.com")
iex> req.options
%{auth: {:bearer, "abcd"}, base_url: "https://example.com", http_errors: :raise}
Link to this function

prepend_error_steps(request, steps)

View Source

Prepends error steps.

examples

Examples

Req.Request.prepend_error_steps(request,
  noop: fn {request, exception} -> {request, exception} end,
  inspect: &IO.inspect/1
)
Link to this function

prepend_request_steps(request, steps)

View Source

Prepends request steps.

examples

Examples

Req.Request.prepend_request_steps(request,
  noop: fn request -> request end,
  inspect: &IO.inspect/1
)
Link to this function

prepend_response_steps(request, steps)

View Source

Prepends response steps.

examples

Examples

Req.Request.prepend_response_steps(request,
  noop: fn {request, response} -> {request, response} end,
  inspect: &IO.inspect/1
)
Link to this function

put_header(request, key, value)

View Source
@spec put_header(t(), binary(), binary()) :: t()

Adds a new request header (key) if not present, otherwise replaces the previous value of that header with value.

Because header keys are case-insensitive in both HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2, it is recommended for header keys to be in lowercase, to avoid sending duplicate keys in a request.

Additionally, requests with mixed-case headers served over HTTP/2 are not considered valid by common clients, resulting in dropped requests.

examples

Examples

iex> req = Req.new()
iex> req = Req.Request.put_header(req, "accept", "application/json")
iex> req.headers
[{"accept", "application/json"}]
Link to this function

put_headers(request, headers)

View Source
@spec put_headers(t(), [{binary(), binary()}]) :: t()

Adds (or replaces) multiple request headers.

See put_header/3 for more information.

examples

Examples

iex> req = Req.new()
iex> req = Req.Request.put_headers(req, [{"accept", "text/html"}, {"accept-encoding", "gzip"}])
iex> req.headers
[{"accept", "text/html"}, {"accept-encoding", "gzip"}]
Link to this function

put_new_header(request, key, value)

View Source
@spec put_new_header(t(), binary(), binary()) :: t()

Adds a request header (key) unless already present.

See put_header/3 for more information.

examples

Examples

iex> req =
...>   Req.new()
...>   |> Req.Request.put_new_header("accept", "application/json")
...>   |> Req.Request.put_new_header("accept", "application/html")
iex> req.headers
[{"accept", "application/json"}]
Link to this function

put_private(request, key, value)

View Source

Assigns a private key to value.

Link to this function

register_options(request, options)

View Source

Registers options to be used by a custom steps.

Req ensures that all used options were previously registered which helps finding accidentally mistyped option names. If you're adding custom steps that are accepting options, call this function to register them.

examples

Examples

iex> Req.request!(urll: "https://httpbin.org")
** (ArgumentError) unknown option :urll. Did you mean :url?

iex> Req.new(bas_url: "https://httpbin.org")
** (ArgumentError) unknown option :bas_url. Did you mean :base_url?

req =
  Req.new(base_url: "https://httpbin.org")
  |> Req.Request.register_options([:foo])

Req.get!(req, url: "/status/201", foo: :bar).status
#=> 201

Runs a request pipeline.

Returns {:ok, response} or {:error, exception}.

Runs a request pipeline and returns a response or raises an error.

See run/1 for more information.

Link to this function

update_private(request, key, default, fun)

View Source

Updates private key with the given function.

If key is present in request private map then the existing value is passed to fun and its result is used as the updated value of key. If key is not present, default is inserted as the value of key. The default value will not be passed through the update function.

examples

Examples

iex> req = %Req.Request{private: %{a: 1}}
iex> Req.Request.update_private(req, :a, 11, & &1 + 1).private
%{a: 2}
iex> Req.Request.update_private(req, :b, 11, & &1 + 1).private
%{a: 1, b: 11}