lua-resty-requests - Yet Another HTTP Library for OpenResty.
resty -e 'print(require "resty.requests".get{ url = "https://github.com", stream = false }.content)'
- Name
- Status
- Features
- Synopsis
- Installation
- Methods
- Response Object
- Session
- TODO
- Author
- Copyright and License
- See Also
This Lua module now can be considered as production ready.
Note since the v0.7.1
release, this module started using lua-resty-socket,
for working in the non-yieldable phases, but still more efforts are needed,
so DONOT use it in the init
or init_worker
phases (or other
non-yieldable phases).
- HTTP/1.0, HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2 (WIP).
- SSL/TLS support.
- Chunked data support.
- Convenient interfaces to support features like json, authorization and etc.
- Stream interfaces to read body.
- HTTP/HTTPS proxy.
- Latency metrics.
- Session support.
local requests = require "resty.requests"
-- example url
local url = "http://example.com/index.html"
local r, err = requests.get(url)
if not r then
ngx.log(ngx.ERR, err)
return
end
-- read all body
local body = r:body()
ngx.print(body)
-- or you can iterate the response body
-- while true do
-- local chunk, err = r:iter_content(4096)
-- if not chunk then
-- ngx.log(ngx.ERR, err)
-- return
-- end
--
-- if chunk == "" then
-- break
-- end
--
-- ngx.print(chunk)
-- end
-- you can also use the non-stream mode
-- local opts = {
-- stream = false
-- }
--
-- local r, err = requests.get(url, opts)
-- if not r then
-- ngx.log(ngx.ERR, err)
-- end
--
-- ngx.print(r.content)
-- or you can use the shortcut way to make the code cleaner.
local r, err = requests.get { url = url, stream = false }
$ luarocks install lua-resty-requests
- OPM:
$ opm get tokers/lua-resty-requests
- Manually:
Just tweeks the lua_package_path
or the LUA_PATH
environment variable, to add the installation path for this Lua module:
/path/to/lua-resty-requests/lib/resty/?.lua;
syntax: local r, err = requests.request(method, url, opts?)
syntax: *local r, err = requests.request { method = method, url = url, ... }
This is the pivotal method in lua-resty-requests
, it will return a response object r
. In the case of failure, nil
, and a Lua string which describles the corresponding error will be given.
The first parameter method
, is the HTTP method that you want to use(same as
HTTP's semantic), which takes a Lua string and the value can be:
GET
HEAD
POST
PUT
DELETE
OPTIONS
PATCH
The second parameter url
, just takes the literal meaning(i.e. Uniform Resource Location),
for instance, http://foo.com/blah?a=b
, you can omit the scheme prefix and as the default scheme,
http
will be selected.
The third param, an optional Lua table, which contains a number of options:
-
headers
holds the custom request headers. -
allow_redirects
specifies whether redirecting to the target url(specified byLocation
header) or not when the status code is301
,302
,303
,307
or308
. -
redirect_max_times
specifies the redirect limits, default is10
. -
body
, the request body, can be:- a Lua string, or
- a Lua function, without parameter and returns a piece of data (string) or an empty Lua string to represent EOF, or
- a Lua table, each key-value pair will be concatenated with the "&", and Content-Type header will
"application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
-
error_filter
, holds a Lua function which takes two parameters,state
anderr
. the parametererr
describes the error andstate
is always one of these values(represents the current stage):requests.CONNECT
requests.HANDSHAKE
requests.SEND_HEADER
requests.SEND_BODY
requests.RECV_HEADER
requests.RECV_BODY
requests.CLOSE
You can use the method requests.state to get the textual meaning of these values.
-
timeouts
, an array-like table,timeouts[1]
,timeouts[2]
andtimeouts[3]
representsconnect timeout
,send timeout
andread timeout
respectively (in milliseconds). -
http10
specify whether theHTTP/1.0
should be used, default verion isHTTP/1.1
. -
http20
specify whether theHTTP/2
should be used, default verion isHTTP/1.1
.
Note this is still unstable, caution should be exercised. Also, there are some limitations, see lua-resty-http2 for the details.
-
ssl
holds a Lua table, with three fields:verify
, controls whether to perform SSL verificationserver_name
, is used to specify the server name for the new TLS extension Server Name Indication (SNI)
-
proxies
specify proxy servers, the form is like
{
http = { host = "127.0.0.1", port = 80 },
https = { host = "192.168.1.3", port = 443 },
}
When using HTTPS proxy, a preceding CONNECT request will be sent to proxy server.
hooks
, also a Lua table, represents the hook system that you can use to manipulate portions of the request process. Available hooks are:response
, will be triggered immediately after receiving the response headers
you can assign Lua functions to hooks, these functions accept the response object as the unique param.
local hooks = {
response = function(r)
ngx.log(ngx.WARN, "during requests process")
end
}
Considering the convenience, there are also some "short path" options:
auth
, to do the Basic HTTP Authorization, takes a Lua table containsuser
andpass
, e.g. whenauth
is:
{
user = "alex",
pass = "123456"
}
Request header Authorization
will be added, and the value is Basic YWxleDoxMjM0NTY=
.
-
json
, takes a Lua table, it will be serialized bycjson
, the serialized data will be sent as the request body, and it takes the priority when bothjson
andbody
are specified. -
cookie
, takes a Lua table, the key-value pairs will be organized according to theCookie
header's rule, e.g.cookie
is:
{
["PHPSESSID"] = "298zf09hf012fh2",
["csrftoken"] = "u32t4o3tb3gg43"
}
The Cookie
header will be PHPSESSID=298zf09hf012fh2; csrftoken=u32t4o3tb3gg43
.
stream
, takes a boolean value, specifies whether reading the body in the stream mode, and it will be true by default.
syntax: local state_name = requests.state(state)
The method is used for getting the textual meaning of these values:
requests.CONNECT
requests.HANDSHAKE
requests.SEND_HEADER
requests.SEND_BODY
requests.RECV_HEADER
requests.RECV_BODY
requests.CLOSE
a Lua string "unknown"
will be returned if state
isn't one of the above values.
syntax: local r, err = requests.get(url, opts?)
syntax: local r, err = requests.get { url = url, ... }
Sends a HTTP GET request. This is identical with
requests.request("GET", url, opts)
syntax: local r, err = requests.head(url, opts?)
syntax: local r, err = requests.head { url = url, ... }
Sends a HTTP HEAD request. This is identical with
requests.request("HEAD", url, opts)
syntax: local r, err = requests.post(url, opts?)
syntax: local r, err = requests.post { url = url, ... }
Sends a HTTP POST request. This is identical with
requests.request("POST", url, opts)
syntax: local r, err = requests.put(url, opts?)
syntax: local r, err = requests.put { url = url, ... }
Sends a HTTP PUT request. This is identical with
requests.request("PUT", url, opts)
syntax: local r, err = requests.delete(url, opts?)
syntax: local r, err = requests.delete { url = url, ... }
Sends a HTTP DELETE request. This is identical with
requests.request("DELETE", url, opts)
syntax: local r, err = requests.options(url, opts?)
syntax: local r, err = requests.options { url = url, ... }
Sends a HTTP OPTIONS request. This is identical with
requests.request("OPTIONS", url, opts)
syntax: local r, err = requests.patch(url, opts?)
syntax: local r, err = requests.patch { url = url, ... }
Sends a HTTP PATCH request. This is identical with
requests.request("PATCH", url, opts)
Methods like requests.get
and others will return a response object r
, which can be manipulated by the following methods and variables:
url
, the url passed from callermethod
, the request method, e.g.POST
status_line
, the raw status line(received from the remote)status_code
, the HTTP status codehttp_version
, the HTTP version of response, e.g.HTTP/1.1
headers
, a Lua table represents the HTTP response headers(case-insensitive)close
, holds a Lua function, used to close(keepalive) the underlying TCP connectiondrop
, is a Lua function, used for dropping the unread HTTP response body, will be invoked automatically when closing (if any unread data remains)iter_content
, which is also a Lua function, emits a part of response body(decoded from chunked format) each time called.
This function accepts an optional param size
to specify the size of body that the caller wants, when absent, iter_content
returns 8192
bytes when the response body is plain or returns a piece of chunked data if the resposne body is chunked.
In case of failure, nil
and a Lua string described the error will be returned.
body
, also holds a Lua function that returns the whole response body.
In case of failure, nil
and a Lua string described the error will be returned.
-
json
, holds a Lua function, serializes the body to a Lua table, note theContent-Type
should beapplication/json
. In case of failure,nil
and an error string will be given. -
content
, the response body, only valid in the non-stream mode. -
elapsed
, a hash-like Lua table which represents the cost time (in seconds) for each stage.elapsed.connect
, cost time for the TCP 3-Way Handshake;elapsed.handshake
, cost time for the SSL/TLS handshake (if any);elapsed.send_header
, cost time for sending the HTTP request headers;elapsed.send_body
, cost time for sending the HTTP request body (if any);elapsed.read_header
, cost time for receiving the HTTP response headers;elapsed.ttfb
, the time to first byte.
Note When HTTP/2 protocol is applied, the elapsed.send_body
(if any) will be same as elapsed.send_header
.
A session persists some data across multiple requests, like cookies data, authorization data and etc.
This mechanism now is still experimental.
A simple example:
s = requests.session()
local r, err = s:get("https://www.example.com")
ngx.say(r:body())
A session object has same interfaces with requests
, i.e. those http methods.
- other interesting features...
Alex Zhang (张超) [email protected], UPYUN Inc.
The bundle itself is licensed under the 2-clause BSD license.
Copyright (c) 2017-2019, Alex Zhang.
This module is licensed under the terms of the BSD license.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.