httpstat visualizes curl(1)
statistics in a way of beauty and clarity.
It is a single file🌟 Python script that has no dependency👏 and is compatible with Python 3🍻.
There are three ways to get httpstat
:
-
Download the script directly:
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/reorx/httpstat/master/httpstat.py
-
Through pip:
pip install httpstat
-
Through homebrew (macOS only):
brew install httpstat
For Windows users, @davecheney's Go version is suggested. → download link
Simply:
python httpstat.py httpbin.org/get
If installed through pip or brew, you can use httpstat
as a command:
httpstat httpbin.org/get
Because httpstat
is a wrapper of cURL, you can pass any cURL supported option after the url (except for -w
, -D
, -o
, -s
, -S
which are already used by httpstat
):
httpstat httpbin.org/post -X POST --data-urlencode "a=b" -v
httpstat
has a bunch of environment variables to control its behavior.
Here are some usage demos, you can also run httpstat --help
to see full explanation.
-
HTTPSTAT_SHOW_BODY
Set to
true
to show response body in the output, note that body length is limited to 1023 bytes, will be truncated if exceeds. Default isfalse
. -
HTTPSTAT_SHOW_IP
By default httpstat shows remote and local IP/port address. Set to
false
to disable this feature. Default istrue
. -
HTTPSTAT_SHOW_SPEED
Set to
true
to show download and upload speed. Default isfalse
.HTTPSTAT_SHOW_SPEED=true httpstat http://cachefly.cachefly.net/10mb.test ... speed_download: 3193.3 KiB/s, speed_upload: 0.0 KiB/s
-
HTTPSTAT_SAVE_BODY
By default httpstat stores body in a tmp file, set to
false
to disable this feature. Default istrue
-
HTTPSTAT_CURL_BIN
Indicate the cURL bin path to use. Default is
curl
from current shell $PATH.This exampe uses brew installed cURL to make HTTP2 request:
HTTPSTAT_CURL_BIN=/usr/local/Cellar/curl/7.50.3/bin/curl httpstat https://http2.akamai.com/ --http2 HTTP/2 200 ...
cURL must be compiled with nghttp2 to enable http2 feature (#12).
-
HTTPSTAT_METRICS_ONLY
If set to
true
, httpstat will only output metrics in json format, this is useful if you want to parse the data instead of reading it. -
HTTPSTAT_DEBUG
Set to
true
to see debugging logs. Default isfalse
For convenience, you can export these environments in your .zshrc
or .bashrc
,
example:
export HTTPSTAT_SHOW_IP=false
export HTTPSTAT_SHOW_SPEED=true
export HTTPSTAT_SAVE_BODY=false
Here are some implementations in various languages:
-
This is the Go alternative of httpstat, it's written in pure Go and relies no external programs. Choose it if you like solid binary executions (actually I do).
-
Go (library): tcnksm/go-httpstat
Other than being a cli tool, this project is used as library to help debugging latency of HTTP requests in Go code, very thoughtful and useful, see more in this article
-
Bash: b4b4r07/httpstat
This is what exactly I want to do at the very beginning, but gave up due to not confident in my bash skill, good job!
-
Node: yosuke-furukawa/httpstat
b4b4r07 mentioned this in his article, could be used as a HTTP client also.
-
The PHP implementation by @talhasch
Some code blocks in httpstat
are copied from other projects of mine, have a look:
-
reorx/python-terminal-color Drop-in single file library for printing terminal color.
-
reorx/getenv Environment variable definition with type.