Protocol
Net::HTTP provides a rich library which can be used to build HTTP user-agents. For more details about HTTP see [RFC2616](www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2616.txt)
Net::HTTP is designed to work closely with URI. URI::HTTP#host, URI::HTTP#port and URI::HTTP#request_uri are designed to work with Net::HTTP.
If you are only performing a few GET requests you should try OpenURI.
All examples assume you have loaded Net::HTTP with:
require 'net/http'
This will also require ‘uri’ so you don’t need to require it separately.
The Net::HTTP methods in the following section do not persist connections. They are not recommended if you are performing many HTTP requests.
Net::HTTP.get('example.com', '/index.html') # => String
uri = URI('http://example.com/index.html?count=10')
Net::HTTP.get(uri) # => String
uri = URI('http://example.com/index.html')
params = { :limit => 10, :page => 3 }
uri.query = URI.encode_www_form(params)
res = Net::HTTP.get_response(uri)
puts res.body if res.is_a?(Net::HTTPSuccess)
uri = URI('http://www.example.com/search.cgi')
res = Net::HTTP.post_form(uri, 'q' => 'ruby', 'max' => '50')
puts res.body
uri = URI('http://www.example.com/search.cgi')
res = Net::HTTP.post_form(uri, 'q' => ['ruby', 'perl'], 'max' => '50')
puts res.body
The following example code can be used as the basis of a HTTP user-agent which can perform a variety of request types using persistent connections.
uri = URI('http://example.com/some_path?query=string')
Net::HTTP.start(uri.host, uri.port) do |http|
request = Net::HTTP::Get.new uri.request_uri
response = http.request request # Net::HTTPResponse object
end
Net::HTTP::start immediately creates a connection to an HTTP server which is kept open for the duration of the block. The connection will remain open for multiple requests in the block if the server indicates it supports persistent connections.
The request types Net::HTTP supports are listed below in the section “HTTP Request Classes”.
If you wish to re-use a connection across multiple HTTP requests without automatically closing it you can use ::new instead of ::start. request will automatically open a connection to the server if one is not currently open. You can manually close the connection with finish.
uri = URI('http://example.com/index.html')
res = Net::HTTP.get_response(uri)
# Headers
res['Set-Cookie'] # => String
res.get_fields('set-cookie') # => Array
res.to_hash['set-cookie'] # => Array
puts "Headers: #{res.to_hash.inspect}"
# Status
puts res.code # => '200'
puts res.message # => 'OK'
puts res.class.name # => 'HTTPOK'
# Body
puts res.body if res.response_body_permitted?
Each Net::HTTPResponse object belongs to a class for its response code.
For example, all 2XX responses are instances of a Net::HTTPSuccess subclass, a 3XX response is an instance of a Net::HTTPRedirection subclass and a 200 response is an instance of the Net::HTTPOK class. For details of response classes, see the section “HTTP Response Classes” below.
Using a case statement you can handle various types of responses properly:
def fetch(uri_str, limit = 10)
# You should choose a better exception.
raise ArgumentError, 'too many HTTP redirects' if limit == 0
response = Net::HTTP.get_response(URI(uri_str))
case response
when Net::HTTPSuccess then
response
when Net::HTTPRedirection then
location = response['location']
warn "redirected to #{location}"
fetch(location, limit - 1)
else
response.value
end
end
print fetch('http://www.ruby-lang.org')
A POST can be made using the Net::HTTP::Post request class. This example creates a urlencoded POST body:
uri = URI('http://www.example.com/todo.cgi')
req = Net::HTTP::Post.new(uri.path)
req.set_form_data('from' => '2005-01-01', 'to' => '2005-03-31')
res = Net::HTTP.start(uri.hostname, uri.port) do |http|
http.request(req)
end
case res
when Net::HTTPSuccess, Net::HTTPRedirection
# OK
else
res.value
end
At this time Net::HTTP does not support multipart/form-data. To send multipart/form-data use Net::HTTPRequest#body= and Net::HTTPRequest#content_type=:
req = Net::HTTP::Post.new(uri.path) req.body = multipart_data req.content_type = 'multipart/form-data'
Other requests that can contain a body such as PUT can be created in the same way using the corresponding request class (Net::HTTP::Put).
The following example performs a conditional GET using the If-Modified-Since header. If the files has not been modified since the time in the header a Not Modified response will be returned. See RFC 2616 section 9.3 for further details.
uri = URI('http://example.com/cached_response')
file = File.stat 'cached_response'
req = Net::HTTP::Get.new(uri.request_uri)
req['If-Modified-Since'] = file.mtime.rfc2822
res = Net::HTTP.start(uri.hostname, uri.port) {|http|
http.request(req)
}
open 'cached_response', 'w' do |io|
io.write res.body
end if res.is_a?(Net::HTTPSuccess)
Basic authentication is performed according to [RFC2617](www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2617.txt)
uri = URI('http://example.com/index.html?key=value')
req = Net::HTTP::Get.new(uri.request_uri)
req.basic_auth 'user', 'pass'
res = Net::HTTP.start(uri.hostname, uri.port) {|http|
http.request(req)
}
puts res.body
By default Net::HTTP reads an entire response into memory. If you are handling large files or wish to implement a progress bar you can instead stream the body directly to an IO.
uri = URI('http://example.com/large_file')
Net::HTTP.start(uri.host, uri.port) do |http|
request = Net::HTTP::Get.new uri.request_uri
http.request request do |response|
open 'large_file', 'w' do |io|
response.read_body do |chunk|
io.write chunk
end
end
end
end
HTTPS is enabled for an HTTP connection by Net::HTTP#use_ssl=.
uri = URI('https://secure.example.com/some_path?query=string')
Net::HTTP.start(uri.host, uri.port,
:use_ssl => uri.scheme == 'https').start do |http|
request = Net::HTTP::Get.new uri.request_uri
response = http.request request # Net::HTTPResponse object
end
In previous versions of ruby you would need to require ‘net/https’ to use HTTPS. This is no longer true.
Net::HTTP::Proxy has the same methods as Net::HTTP but its instances always connect via the proxy instead of directly to the given host.
proxy_addr = 'your.proxy.host'
proxy_port = 8080
Net::HTTP::Proxy(proxy_addr, proxy_port).start('www.example.com') {|http|
# always connect to your.proxy.addr:8080
}
Net::HTTP::Proxy returns a Net::HTTP instance when proxy_addr is nil so there is no need for conditional code.
See Net::HTTP::Proxy for further details and examples such as proxies that require a username and password.
Here is the HTTP request class hierarchy.
Here is HTTP response class hierarchy. All classes are defined in Net module and are subclasses of Net::HTTPResponse.
HTTPUnknownResponse |
For unhandled HTTP extensions |
HTTPInformation |
1xx |
HTTPContinue |
100 |
HTTPSwitchProtocol |
101 |
HTTPSuccess |
2xx |
HTTPOK |
200 |
HTTPCreated |
201 |
HTTPAccepted |
202 |
HTTPNonAuthoritativeInformation |
203 |
HTTPNoContent |
204 |
HTTPResetContent |
205 |
HTTPPartialContent |
206 |
HTTPRedirection |
3xx |
HTTPMultipleChoice |
300 |
HTTPMovedPermanently |
301 |
HTTPFound |
302 |
HTTPSeeOther |
303 |
HTTPNotModified |
304 |
HTTPUseProxy |
305 |
HTTPTemporaryRedirect |
307 |
HTTPClientError |
4xx |
HTTPBadRequest |
400 |
HTTPUnauthorized |
401 |
HTTPPaymentRequired |
402 |
HTTPForbidden |
403 |
HTTPNotFound |
404 |
HTTPMethodNotAllowed |
405 |
HTTPNotAcceptable |
406 |
HTTPProxyAuthenticationRequired |
407 |
HTTPRequestTimeOut |
408 |
HTTPConflict |
409 |
HTTPGone |
410 |
HTTPLengthRequired |
411 |
HTTPPreconditionFailed |
412 |
HTTPRequestEntityTooLarge |
413 |
HTTPRequestURITooLong |
414 |
HTTPUnsupportedMediaType |
415 |
HTTPRequestedRangeNotSatisfiable |
416 |
HTTPExpectationFailed |
417 |
HTTPServerError |
5xx |
HTTPInternalServerError |
500 |
HTTPNotImplemented |
501 |
HTTPBadGateway |
502 |
HTTPServiceUnavailable |
503 |
HTTPGatewayTimeOut |
504 |
HTTPVersionNotSupported |
505 |
There is also the Net::HTTPBadResponse exception which is raised when there is a protocol error.
Sets path of a CA certification file in PEM format.
The file can contain several CA certificates.
Sets an OpenSSL::X509::Certificate object as client certificate. (This method is appeared in Michal Rokos’s OpenSSL extension).
Seconds to wait for 100 Continue response. If the HTTP object does not receive a response in this many seconds it sends the request body.
Sets an OpenSSL::PKey::RSA or OpenSSL::PKey::DSA object. (This method is appeared in Michal Rokos’s OpenSSL extension.)
Number of seconds to wait for the connection to open. Any number may be used, including Floats for fractional seconds. If the HTTP object cannot open a connection in this many seconds, it raises a TimeoutError exception.
Creates an HTTP proxy class which behaves like Net::HTTP, but performs all access via the specified proxy.
The arguments are the DNS name or IP address of the proxy host, the port to use to access the proxy, and a username and password if authorization is required to use the proxy.
You can replace any use of the Net::HTTP class with use of the proxy class created.
If p_addr is nil, this method returns self (a Net::HTTP object).
# Example
proxy_class = Net::HTTP::Proxy('proxy.example.com', 8080)
proxy_class.start('www.ruby-lang.org') {|http|
# connecting proxy.foo.org:8080
}
You may use them to work with authorization-enabled proxies:
proxy_host = 'your.proxy.example'
proxy_port = 8080
proxy_user = 'user'
proxy_pass = 'pass'
proxy = Net::HTTP::Proxy(proxy_host, proxy_port, proxy_user, proxy_pass)
proxy.start('www.example.com') { |http|
# always connect to your.proxy.example:8080 using specified username
# and password
}
Note that net/http does not use the HTTP_PROXY environment variable. If you want to use a proxy, you must set it explicitly.
# File net/http.rb, line 879
def HTTP.Proxy(p_addr, p_port = nil, p_user = nil, p_pass = nil)
return self unless p_addr
delta = ProxyDelta
proxyclass = Class.new(self)
proxyclass.module_eval {
include delta
# with proxy
@is_proxy_class = true
@proxy_address = p_addr
@proxy_port = p_port || default_port()
@proxy_user = p_user
@proxy_pass = p_pass
}
proxyclass
end
The default port to use for HTTP requests; defaults to 80.
# File net/http.rb, line 492
def HTTP.default_port
http_default_port()
end
Sends a GET request to the target and returns the HTTP response as a string. The target can either be specified as (uri), or as (host, path, port = 80); so:
print Net::HTTP.get(URI('http://www.example.com/index.html'))
or:
print Net::HTTP.get('www.example.com', '/index.html')
# File net/http.rb, line 430
def HTTP.get(uri_or_host, path = nil, port = nil)
get_response(uri_or_host, path, port).body
end
Gets the body text from the target and outputs it to $stdout. The target can either be specified as (uri), or as (host, path, port = 80); so:
Net::HTTP.get_print URI('http://www.example.com/index.html')
or:
Net::HTTP.get_print 'www.example.com', '/index.html'
# File net/http.rb, line 411
def HTTP.get_print(uri_or_host, path = nil, port = nil)
get_response(uri_or_host, path, port) {|res|
res.read_body do |chunk|
$stdout.print chunk
end
}
nil
end
Sends a GET request to the target and returns the HTTP response as a Net::HTTPResponse object. The target can either be specified as (uri), or as (host, path, port = 80); so:
res = Net::HTTP.get_response(URI('http://www.example.com/index.html'))
print res.body
or:
res = Net::HTTP.get_response('www.example.com', '/index.html')
print res.body
# File net/http.rb, line 446
def HTTP.get_response(uri_or_host, path = nil, port = nil, &block)
if path
host = uri_or_host
new(host, port || HTTP.default_port).start {|http|
return http.request_get(path, &block)
}
else
uri = uri_or_host
new(uri.hostname, uri.port).start {|http|
return http.request_get(uri.request_uri, &block)
}
end
end
The default port to use for HTTP requests; defaults to 80.
# File net/http.rb, line 497
def HTTP.http_default_port
80
end
The default port to use for HTTPS requests; defaults to 443.
# File net/http.rb, line 502
def HTTP.https_default_port
443
end
Creates a new Net::HTTP object without opening a TCP connection or HTTP session. The address should be a DNS hostname or IP address. If p_addr is given, creates a Net::HTTP object with proxy support.
# File net/http.rb, line 568
def HTTP.new(address, port = nil, p_addr = nil, p_port = nil, p_user = nil, p_pass = nil)
Proxy(p_addr, p_port, p_user, p_pass).newobj(address, port)
end
Creates a new Net::HTTP object for the specified server address, without opening the TCP connection or initializing the HTTP session. The address should be a DNS hostname or IP address.
# File net/http.rb, line 575
def initialize(address, port = nil)
@address = address
@port = (port || HTTP.default_port)
@curr_http_version = HTTPVersion
@no_keepalive_server = false
@close_on_empty_response = false
@socket = nil
@started = false
@open_timeout = nil
@read_timeout = 60
@continue_timeout = nil
@debug_output = nil
@use_ssl = false
@ssl_context = nil
@enable_post_connection_check = true
@compression = nil
@sspi_enabled = false
if defined?(SSL_ATTRIBUTES)
SSL_ATTRIBUTES.each do |name|
instance_variable_set "@#{name}", nil
end
end
end
Posts HTML form data to the specified URI object. The form data must be provided as a Hash mapping from String to String. Example:
{ "cmd" => "search", "q" => "ruby", "max" => "50" }
This method also does Basic Authentication iff url.user exists. But userinfo for authentication is deprecated (RFC3986). So this feature will be removed.
Example:
require 'net/http'
require 'uri'
HTTP.post_form URI('http://www.example.com/search.cgi'),
{ "q" => "ruby", "max" => "50" }
# File net/http.rb, line 478
def HTTP.post_form(url, params)
req = Post.new(url.request_uri)
req.form_data = params
req.basic_auth url.user, url.password if url.user
new(url.hostname, url.port).start {|http|
http.request(req)
}
end
returns true if self is a class which was created by HTTP::Proxy.
# File net/http.rb, line 897
def proxy_class?
@is_proxy_class
end
Creates a new Net::HTTP object, then additionally opens the TCP connection and HTTP session.
Arguments are the following:
address |
hostname or IP address of the server |
port |
port of the server |
p_addr |
address of proxy |
p_port |
port of proxy |
p_user |
user of proxy |
p_pass |
pass of proxy |
opt |
optional hash |
opt sets following values by its accessor. The keys are ca_file, ca_path, cert, cert_store, ciphers, close_on_empty_response, key, open_timeout, read_timeout, ssl_timeout, ssl_version, use_ssl, verify_callback, verify_depth and verify_mode. If you set :use_ssl as true, you can use https and default value of verify_mode is set as OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_PEER.
If the optional block is given, the newly created Net::HTTP object is passed to it and closed when the block finishes. In this case, the return value of this method is the return value of the block. If no block is given, the return value of this method is the newly created Net::HTTP object itself, and the caller is responsible for closing it upon completion using the finish() method.
# File net/http.rb, line 540
def HTTP.start(address, *arg, &block) # :yield: +http+
arg.pop if opt = Hash.try_convert(arg[-1])
port, p_addr, p_port, p_user, p_pass = *arg
port = https_default_port if !port && opt && opt[:use_ssl]
http = new(address, port, p_addr, p_port, p_user, p_pass)
if opt
if opt[:use_ssl]
opt = {verify_mode: OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_PEER}.update(opt)
end
http.methods.grep(/\A(\w+)=\z/) do |meth|
key = $1.to_sym
opt.key?(key) or next
http.__send__(meth, opt[key])
end
end
http.start(&block)
end
Turns on net/http 1.2 (ruby 1.8) features. Defaults to ON in ruby 1.8 or later.
# File net/http.rb, line 377
def HTTP.version_1_2
true
end
Returns true if net/http is in version 1.2 mode. Defaults to true.
# File net/http.rb, line 383
def HTTP.version_1_2?
true
end
Setter for the continue_timeout attribute.
# File net/http.rb, line 646
def continue_timeout=(sec)
@socket.continue_timeout = sec if @socket
@continue_timeout = sec
end
Sends a COPY request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1153
def copy(path, initheader = nil)
request(Copy.new(path, initheader))
end
Sends a DELETE request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1141
def delete(path, initheader = {'Depth' => 'Infinity'})
request(Delete.new(path, initheader))
end
Finishes the HTTP session and closes the TCP connection. Raises IOError if the session has not been started.
# File net/http.rb, line 819
def finish
raise IOError, 'HTTP session not yet started' unless started?
do_finish
end
Gets data from path on the connected-to host. initheader must be a Hash like { ‘Accept’ => ‘/’, … }, and it defaults to an empty hash. If initheader doesn’t have the key ‘accept-encoding’, then a value of “gzip;q=1.0,deflate;q=0.6,identity;q=0.3” is used, so that gzip compression is used in preference to deflate compression, which is used in preference to no compression. Ruby doesn’t have libraries to support the compress (Lempel-Ziv) compression, so that is not supported. The intent of this is to reduce bandwidth by default. If this routine sets up compression, then it does the decompression also, removing the header as well to prevent confusion. Otherwise it leaves the body as it found it.
This method returns a Net::HTTPResponse object.
If called with a block, yields each fragment of the entity body in turn as a string as it is read from the socket. Note that in this case, the returned response object will not contain a (meaningful) body.
dest argument is obsolete. It still works but you must not use it.
This method never raises an exception.
response = http.get('/index.html')
# using block
File.open('result.txt', 'w') {|f|
http.get('/~foo/') do |str|
f.write str
end
}
# File net/http.rb, line 1016
def get(path, initheader = {}, dest = nil, &block) # :yield: +body_segment+
res = nil
if HAVE_ZLIB
unless initheader.keys.any?{|k| k.downcase == "accept-encoding"}
initheader = initheader.merge({
"accept-encoding" => "gzip;q=1.0,deflate;q=0.6,identity;q=0.3"
})
@compression = true
end
end
request(Get.new(path, initheader)) {|r|
if r.key?("content-encoding") and @compression
@compression = nil # Clear it till next set.
the_body = r.read_body dest, &block
case r["content-encoding"]
when "gzip"
r.body= Zlib::GzipReader.new(StringIO.new(the_body), encoding: "ASCII-8BIT").read
r.delete("content-encoding")
when "deflate"
r.body= Zlib::Inflate.inflate(the_body);
r.delete("content-encoding")
when "identity"
; # nothing needed
else
; # Don't do anything dramatic, unless we need to later
end
else
r.read_body dest, &block
end
res = r
}
res
end
Gets only the header from path on the connected-to host. header is a Hash like { ‘Accept’ => ‘/’, … }.
This method returns a Net::HTTPResponse object.
This method never raises an exception.
response = nil
Net::HTTP.start('some.www.server', 80) {|http|
response = http.head('/index.html')
}
p response['content-type']
# File net/http.rb, line 1063
def head(path, initheader = nil)
request(Head.new(path, initheader))
end
# File net/http.rb, line 599
def inspect
"#<#{self.class} #{@address}:#{@port} open=#{started?}>"
end
Sends a LOCK request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1117
def lock(path, body, initheader = nil)
request(Lock.new(path, initheader), body)
end
Sends a MKCOL request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1159
def mkcol(path, body = nil, initheader = nil)
request(Mkcol.new(path, initheader), body)
end
Sends a MOVE request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1147
def move(path, initheader = nil)
request(Move.new(path, initheader))
end
Sends a OPTIONS request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1129
def options(path, initheader = nil)
request(Options.new(path, initheader))
end
Sends a PATCH request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1101
def patch(path, data, initheader = nil, dest = nil, &block) # :yield: +body_segment+
send_entity(path, data, initheader, dest, Patch, &block)
end
Returns the X.509 certificates the server presented.
# File net/http.rb, line 724
def peer_cert
if not use_ssl? or not @socket
return nil
end
@socket.io.peer_cert
end
Posts data (must be a String) to path. header must be a Hash like { ‘Accept’ => ‘/’, … }.
This method returns a Net::HTTPResponse object.
If called with a block, yields each fragment of the entity body in turn as a string as it is read from the socket. Note that in this case, the returned response object will not contain a (meaningful) body.
dest argument is obsolete. It still works but you must not use it.
This method never raises exception.
response = http.post('/cgi-bin/search.rb', 'query=foo')
# using block
File.open('result.txt', 'w') {|f|
http.post('/cgi-bin/search.rb', 'query=foo') do |str|
f.write str
end
}
You should set Content-Type: header field for POST. If no Content-Type: field given, this method uses “application/x-www-form-urlencoded” by default.
# File net/http.rb, line 1095
def post(path, data, initheader = nil, dest = nil, &block) # :yield: +body_segment+
send_entity(path, data, initheader, dest, Post, &block)
end
Sends a PROPFIND request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1135
def propfind(path, body = nil, initheader = {'Depth' => '0'})
request(Propfind.new(path, initheader), body)
end
Sends a PROPPATCH request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1111
def proppatch(path, body, initheader = nil)
request(Proppatch.new(path, initheader), body)
end
True if self is a HTTP proxy class.
# File net/http.rb, line 916
def proxy?
self.class.proxy_class?
end
A convenience method for accessing value of proxy_address from Net::HTTP.
# File net/http.rb, line 921
def proxy_address
self.class.proxy_address
end
A convenience method for accessing value of proxy_pass from Net::HTTP.
# File net/http.rb, line 936
def proxy_pass
self.class.proxy_pass
end
A convenience method for accessing value of proxy_port from Net::HTTP.
# File net/http.rb, line 926
def proxy_port
self.class.proxy_port
end
A convenience method for accessing value of proxy_user from Net::HTTP.
# File net/http.rb, line 931
def proxy_user
self.class.proxy_user
end
Setter for the read_timeout attribute.
# File net/http.rb, line 636
def read_timeout=(sec)
@socket.read_timeout = sec if @socket
@read_timeout = sec
end
Sends an HTTPRequest object req to the HTTP server.
If req is a Net::HTTP::Post or Net::HTTP::Put request containing data, the data is also sent. Providing data for a Net::HTTP::Head or Net::HTTP::Get request results in an ArgumentError.
Returns an HTTPResponse object.
When called with a block, passes an HTTPResponse object to the block. The body of the response will not have been read yet; the block can process it using HTTPResponse#read_body, if desired.
This method never raises Net::* exceptions.
# File net/http.rb, line 1282
def request(req, body = nil, &block) # :yield: +response+
unless started?
start {
req['connection'] ||= 'close'
return request(req, body, &block)
}
end
if proxy_user()
req.proxy_basic_auth proxy_user(), proxy_pass() unless use_ssl?
end
req.set_body_internal body
res = transport_request(req, &block)
if sspi_auth?(res)
sspi_auth(req)
res = transport_request(req, &block)
end
res
end
Sends a GET request to the path. Returns the response as a Net::HTTPResponse object.
When called with a block, passes an HTTPResponse object to the block. The body of the response will not have been read yet; the block can process it using HTTPResponse#read_body, if desired.
Returns the response.
This method never raises Net::* exceptions.
response = http.request_get('/index.html')
# The entity body is already read in this case.
p response['content-type']
puts response.body
# Using a block
http.request_get('/index.html') {|response|
p response['content-type']
response.read_body do |str| # read body now
print str
end
}
# File net/http.rb, line 1194
def request_get(path, initheader = nil, &block) # :yield: +response+
request(Get.new(path, initheader), &block)
end
Sends a HEAD request to the path and returns the response as a Net::HTTPResponse object.
Returns the response.
This method never raises Net::* exceptions.
response = http.request_head('/index.html')
p response['content-type']
# File net/http.rb, line 1208
def request_head(path, initheader = nil, &block)
request(Head.new(path, initheader), &block)
end
Sends a POST request to the path.
Returns the response as a Net::HTTPResponse object.
When called with a block, the block is passed an HTTPResponse object. The body of that response will not have been read yet; the block can process it using HTTPResponse#read_body, if desired.
Returns the response.
This method never raises Net::* exceptions.
# example
response = http.request_post('/cgi-bin/nice.rb', 'datadatadata...')
p response.status
puts response.body # body is already read in this case
# using block
http.request_post('/cgi-bin/nice.rb', 'datadatadata...') {|response|
p response.status
p response['content-type']
response.read_body do |str| # read body now
print str
end
}
# File net/http.rb, line 1238
def request_post(path, data, initheader = nil, &block) # :yield: +response+
request Post.new(path, initheader), data, &block
end
Sends an HTTP request to the HTTP server. Also sends a DATA string if data is given.
Returns a Net::HTTPResponse object.
This method never raises Net::* exceptions.
response = http.send_request('GET', '/index.html')
puts response.body
# File net/http.rb, line 1262
def send_request(name, path, data = nil, header = nil)
r = HTTPGenericRequest.new(name,(data ? true : false),true,path,header)
request r, data
end
WARNING This method opens a serious security hole. Never use this method in production code.
Sets an output stream for debugging.
http = Net::HTTP.new
http.set_debug_output $stderr
http.start { .... }
# File net/http.rb, line 612
def set_debug_output(output)
warn 'Net::HTTP#set_debug_output called after HTTP started' if started?
@debug_output = output
end
Opens a TCP connection and HTTP session.
When this method is called with a block, it passes the Net::HTTP object to the block, and closes the TCP connection and HTTP session after the block has been executed.
When called with a block, it returns the return value of the block; otherwise, it returns self.
# File net/http.rb, line 740
def start # :yield: http
raise IOError, 'HTTP session already opened' if @started
if block_given?
begin
do_start
return yield(self)
ensure
do_finish
end
end
do_start
self
end
Returns true if the HTTP session has been started.
# File net/http.rb, line 652
def started?
@started
end
Sends a TRACE request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1165
def trace(path, initheader = nil)
request(Trace.new(path, initheader))
end
Sends a UNLOCK request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.
# File net/http.rb, line 1123
def unlock(path, body, initheader = nil)
request(Unlock.new(path, initheader), body)
end
Turn on/off SSL. This flag must be set before starting session. If you change use_ssl value after session started, a Net::HTTP object raises IOError.
# File net/http.rb, line 669
def use_ssl=(flag)
flag = flag ? true : false
if started? and @use_ssl != flag
raise IOError, "use_ssl value changed, but session already started"
end
@use_ssl = flag
end