Copyright (c) 2012-2014 Benoît Chesneau.
Version: 1.0.5
hackney is an HTTP client library for Erlang.
Main features:
- no message passing (except for asynchronous responses): response is
directly streamed to the current process and state is kept in a
#client{}
record. - binary streams
- SSL support
- Keepalive handling
- basic authentication
- stream the response and the requests
- fetch a response asynchronously
- multipart support (streamed or not)
- chunked encoding support
- Can send files using the sendfile API
- Optional socket pool
- REST syntax:
hackney:Method(URL)
(where a method can be get, post, put, delete, ...)
Supported versions of Erlang are R16B03-1, 17.3.4 and above. It is reported to work with R14B04 and R15B03-1.
WARNING: Erlang 17.3 and 17.3.1 have a broken SSL module which prevents the usage of SSL connection with some servers. You must upgrade in that case to Erlang 17.3.4 or superior.
Note: This is a work in progress, see the TODO for more information on what still needs to be done.
-
hackney
: main module. It contains all HTTP client functions. -
hackney_http
: HTTP parser in pure Erlang. This parser is able to parse HTTP responses and requests in a streaming fashion. If not set it will be autodetected if it's a request or a response that's needed. -
hackney_headers
Module to manipulate HTTP headers. -
hackney_cookie
: Module to manipulate cookies. -
hackney_multipart
: Module to encode/decode multipart. -
hackney_url
: Module to parse and create URIs. -
hackney_date
: Module to parse HTTP dates.
Read the NEWS file to get the last changelog.
Download the sources from our Github repository
To build the application simply run 'make'. This should build .beam, .app files and documentation.
To run tests run 'make test'. To generate doc, run 'make doc'.
Or add it to your rebar config
{deps, [
....
{hackney, ".*", {git, "git://github.com/benoitc/hackney.git", {branch, "master"}}}
]}.
The basic usage of hackney is:
hackney is an OTP application. You have to start it first before using any of the functions. The hackney application will start the default socket pool for you.
To start in the console run:
$ erl -pa ebin -pa deps/*/ebin
1>> hackney:start().
ok
It will start hackney and all of the application it depends on:
application:start(crypto),
application:start(public_key),
application:start(ssl),
application:start(hackney).
Or add hackney to the applications property of your .app in a release
Do a simple request that will return a client state:
Method = get,
URL = <<"https://friendpaste.com">>,
Headers = [],
Payload = <<>>,
Options = [],
{ok, StatusCode, RespHeaders, ClientRef} = hackney:request(Method, URL,
Headers, Payload,
Options).
The request method returns the tuple {ok, StatusCode, Headers, ClientRef}
or {error, Reason}
. A ClientRef
is simply a reference to the current
request that you can reuse.
If you prefer the REST syntax, you can also do:
hackney:Method(URL, Headers, Payload, Options)
where Method
, can be any HTTP method in lowercase.
{ok, Body} = hackney:body(Client).
hackney:body/1
fetch the body. To fetch it by chunk you can use the
hackney:stream_body/1
function:
read_body(MaxLength, Ref, Acc) when MaxLength > byte_size(Acc) ->
case stream_body(Ref) of
{ok, Data} ->
read_body(MaxLength, Ref, << Acc/binary, Data/binary >>);
done ->
{ok, Acc};
{error, Reason} ->
{error, Reason}
end.
Note: you can also fetch a multipart response using the functions
hackney:stream_multipart/1
andhackney:skip_multipart/1
.
By default all connections are created and closed dynamically by hackney but sometimes you may want to reuse the same reference for your connections. It's especially useful if you just want to handle serially a couple of requests.
A closed connection will automatically be reconnected.
Transport = hackney_tcp_transport,
Host = << "https://friendpaste.com" >>,
Port = 443,
Options = [],
{ok, ConnRef} = hackney:connect(Transport, Host, Port, Options)
To create a connection that will use an HTTP proxy use
hackney_http_proxy:connect_proxy/5
instead.
Once you created a connection use the hackney:send_request/2
function
to make a request:
ReqBody = << "{ \"snippet\": \"some snippet\" }" >>,
ReqHeaders = [{<<"Content-Type">>, <<"application/json">>}],
NextPath = <<"/">>,
NextMethod = post,
NextReq = {NextMethod, NextPath, ReqHeaders, ReqBody}
{ok, _, _, ConnRef} = hackney:send_request(ConnRef, NextReq).
{ok, Body1} = hackney:body(ConnRef),
Here we are posting a JSON payload to '/' on the friendpaste service to create a paste. Then we close the client connection.
If your connection supports keepalive the connection will be simply :
hackney helps you send different payloads by passing different terms as the request body:
{form, PropList}
: To send a form{multipart, Parts}
: to send you body using the multipart API. Parts follow this format:eof
: end the multipart request{file, Path}
: to stream a file{file, Path, ExtraHeaders}
: to stream a file{Name, Content}
: to send a full part{Name, Content, ExtraHeaders}
: to send a full part{mp_mixed, Name, MixedBoundary}
: To notify we start a part with a a mixed multipart content{mp_mixed_eof, MixedBoundary}
: To notify we end a part with a a mixed multipart content
{file, File}
: To send a file- Bin: To send a binary or an iolist
Note: to send a chunked request, just add the
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
header to your headers. Binary and Iolist bodies will be then sent using the chunked encoding.
While the default is to directly send the request and fetch the status
and headers, if the body is set as the atom stream
the request and
send_request function will return {ok, Client}. Then you can use the
function hackney:send_body/2
to stream the request body and
hackney:start_response/1
to initialize the response.
Note: The function
hackney:start_response/1
will only accept a Client that is waiting for a response (with a response state equal to the atomwaiting
).
Ex:
ReqBody = << "{
\"id\": \"some_paste_id2\",
\"rev\": \"some_revision_id\",
\"changeset\": \"changeset in unidiff format\"
}" >>,
ReqHeaders = [{<<"Content-Type">>, <<"application/json">>}],
Path = <<"https://friendpaste.com/">>,
Method = post,
{ok, ClientRef} = hackney:request(Method, Path, ReqHeaders, stream, []),
ok = hackney:send_body(ClientRef, ReqBody),
{ok, _Status, _Headers, ClientRef} = hackney:start_response(ClientRef),
{ok, Body} = hackney:body(ClientRef),
Note: to send a multipart body in a streaming fashion use the
hackney:sen_multipart_body/2
function.
Since the 0.6 version, hackney is able to fetch the response
asynchronously using the async
option:
Url = <<"https://friendpaste.com/_all_languages">>,
Opts = [async],
LoopFun = fun(Loop, Ref) ->
receive
{hackney_response, Ref, {status, StatusInt, Reason}} ->
io:format("got status: ~p with reason ~p~n", [StatusInt,
Reason]),
Loop(Loop, Ref);
{hackney_response, Ref, {headers, Headers}} ->
io:format("got headers: ~p~n", [Headers]),
Loop(Loop, Ref);
{hackney_response, Ref, done} ->
ok;
{hackney_response, Ref, Bin} ->
io:format("got chunk: ~p~n", [Bin]),
Loop(Loop, Ref);
Else ->
io:format("else ~p~n", [Else]),
ok
end
end.
{ok, ClientRef} = hackney:get(Url, [], <<>>, Opts),
LoopFun(LoopFun, ClientRef).
Note 1: When
{async, once}
is used the socket will receive only once. To receive the other messages use the functionhackney:stream_next/1
.
Note 2: Asynchronous responses automatically checkout the socket at the end.
Note 3: At any time you can go back and receive your response synchronously using the function
hackney:stop_async/1
See the example test_async_once2 for the usage.
Note 4: When the option
{following_redirect, true}
is passed to the request, you will receive the folllowing messages on valid redirection:
{redirect, To, Headers}
{see_other, To, Headers}
for status 303 and POST requests.
Note 5: You can send the messages to another process by using the option
{stream_to, Pid}
.
To reuse a connection globally in your application you can also use a socket pool. On startup, hackney launches a pool named default. To use it do the following:
Method = get,
URL = <<"https://friendpaste.com">>,
Headers = [],
Payload = <<>>,
Options = [{pool, default}],
{ok, StatusCode, RespHeaders, ClientRef} = hackney:request(Method, URL, Headers,
Payload, Options).
By adding the tuple {pool, default}
to the options, hackney will use
the connections stored in that pool.
You can also use different pools in your application which allows you to maintain a group of connections.
PoolName = mypool,
Options = [{timeout, 150000}, {max_connections, 100}],
ok = hackney_pool:start_pool(PoolName, Options),
timeout
is the time we keep the connection alive in the pool,
max_connections
is the number of connections maintained in the pool. Each
connection in a pool is monitored and closed connections are removed
automatically.
To close a pool do:
hackney_pool:stop_pool(PoolName).
Note: Sometimes you want to always use the default pool in your app without having to set the client option each time. You can now do this by setting the hackney application environment key
use_default_pool
to true.
Since the version 0.8 it is now possible to use your own Pool to maintain the connections in hackney.
A pool handler is a module that handles the hackney_pool_handler
behaviour.
See for example the hackney_disp a load-balanced Pool dispatcher based on dispcount].> Note: for now you can`t force the pool handler / client.
If the option {follow_redirect, true}
is given to the request, the
client will be able to automatically follow the redirection and
retrieve the body. The maximum number of connections can be set using the
{max_redirect, Max}
option. Default is 5.
The client will follow redirects on 301, 302 & 307 if the method is
get or head. If another method is used the tuple
{ok, maybe_redirect, Status, Headers, Client}
will be returned. It will
only follow 303 redirects (see other) if the method is a POST.
Last Location is stored in the location
property of the client state.
ex:
Method = get,
URL = "http://friendpaste.com/",
ReqHeaders = [{<<"accept-encoding">>, <<"identity">>}],
ReqBody = <<>>,
Options = [{follow_redirect, true}, {max_redirect, 5}],
{ok, S, H, Ref} = hackney:request(Method, URL, ReqHeaders,
ReqBody, Options),
{ok, Body1} = hackney:body(Ref).
To use an HTTP tunnel add the option {proxy, ProxyUrl}
where
ProxyUrl
can be a simple url or an {Host, Port}
tuple. If you need
to authenticate set the option {proxy_auth, {User, Password}}
.
Hackney supports the connection via a socks5 proxy. To set a socks5 proxy, use the following settings:
{proxy, {socks5, ProxyHost, ProxyPort}}
: to set the host and port of the proxy to connect.{socks5_user, Username}
: to set the user used to connect to the proxy{socks5_pass, Password}
: to set the password used to connect to the proxy
SSL and TCP connections can be forwarded via a socks5 proxy. hackney is automatically upgrading to an SSL connection if needed.
Hackney offers the following metrics
You can enable metrics collection by adding a mod_metrics
entry to hackney’s
app config. Metrics are disabled by default. The module specified must have an
API matching that of the hackney metrics module.
To use folsom, specify {mod_metrics, folsom}
, or if you want to use
exometer, specify{mod_metrics, exometers}
and ensure that folsom or exometer is in your code path and has
been started.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
hackney.nb_requests | counter | Number of running requests |
hackney.total_requests | counter | Total number of requests |
hackney.finished_requests | counter | Total number of requests finished |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
hackney.HOST.nb_requests | counter | Number of running requests |
hackney.HOST.request_time | histogram | Request time |
hackney.HOST.connect_time | counter | Connect time |
hackney.HOST.response_time | histogram | Response time |
hackney.HOST.connect_timeout | counter | Number of connect timeout |
hackney.HOST.connect_error | counter | Number of timeout errors |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
hackney.POOLNAME.take_rate | meter | meter recording rate at which a connection is retrieved from the pool |
hackney.POOLNAME.no_socket | counter | Count of new connections |
hackney.POOLNAME.in_use_count | histogram | How many connections from the pool are used |
hackney.POOLNAME.free_count | counter | Number of free sockets in the pool |
hackney.POOLNAME.queue_counter | histogram | queued clients |
For issues, comments or feedback please create an issue.
If you want to contribute patches or improve the docs, you will need to
build hackney using the rebar_dev.config
file. It can also be built
using the Makefile:
$ make dev ; # compile & get deps
$ make devclean ; # clean all files
For successfully running the hackney test suite locally it is necessary to install httpbin.
An example installation using virtualenv::
$ mkvirtualenv hackney
$ pip install gunicorn httpbin
Running the tests:
$ gunicorn --daemon --pid httpbin.pid httpbin:app
$ make test
$ kill `cat httpbin.pid`