Title: | Perform HTTP Requests and Process the Responses |
---|---|
Description: | Tools for creating and modifying HTTP requests, then performing them and processing the results. 'httr2' is a modern re-imagining of 'httr' that uses a pipe-based interface and solves more of the problems that API wrapping packages face. |
Authors: | Hadley Wickham [aut, cre], Posit Software, PBC [cph, fnd], Maximilian Girlich [ctb] |
Maintainer: | Hadley Wickham <[email protected]> |
License: | MIT + file LICENSE |
Version: | 1.0.7.9000 |
Built: | 2024-12-24 14:19:42 UTC |
Source: | https://github.com/r-lib/httr2 |
The curl command line tool is commonly used to demonstrate HTTP APIs and can
easily be generated from
browser developer tools.
curl_translate()
saves you the pain of manually translating these calls
by implementing a partial, but frequently used, subset of curl options.
Use curl_help()
to see the supported options, and curl_translate()
to translate a curl invocation copy and pasted from elsewhere.
Inspired by curlconverter written by Bob Rudis.
curl_translate(cmd, simplify_headers = TRUE) curl_help()
curl_translate(cmd, simplify_headers = TRUE) curl_help()
cmd |
Call to curl. If omitted and the clipr package is installed, will be retrieved from the clipboard. |
simplify_headers |
Remove typically unimportant headers included when copying a curl command from the browser. This includes:
|
A string containing the translated httr2 code. If the input was copied from the clipboard, the translation will be copied back to the clipboard.
curl_translate("curl http://example.com") curl_translate("curl http://example.com -X DELETE") curl_translate("curl http://example.com --header A:1 --header B:2") curl_translate("curl http://example.com --verbose")
curl_translate("curl http://example.com") curl_translate("curl http://example.com -X DELETE") curl_translate("curl http://example.com --header A:1 --header B:2") curl_translate("curl http://example.com --verbose")
These functions are intended for use with the next_req
argument to
req_perform_iterative()
. Each implements iteration for a common
pagination pattern:
iterate_with_offset()
increments a query parameter, e.g. ?page=1
,
?page=2
, or ?offset=1
, offset=21
.
iterate_with_cursor()
updates a query parameter with the value of a
cursor found somewhere in the response.
iterate_with_link_url()
follows the url found in the Link
header.
See resp_link_url()
for more details.
iterate_with_offset( param_name, start = 1, offset = 1, resp_pages = NULL, resp_complete = NULL ) iterate_with_cursor(param_name, resp_param_value) iterate_with_link_url(rel = "next")
iterate_with_offset( param_name, start = 1, offset = 1, resp_pages = NULL, resp_complete = NULL ) iterate_with_cursor(param_name, resp_param_value) iterate_with_link_url(rel = "next")
param_name |
Name of query parameter. |
start |
Starting value. |
offset |
Offset for each page. The default is set to |
resp_pages |
A callback function that takes a response ( |
resp_complete |
A callback function that takes a response ( |
resp_param_value |
A callback function that takes a response ( |
rel |
The "link relation type" to use to retrieve the next page. |
req <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/iris") |> req_throttle(10) |> req_url_query(limit = 50) # If you don't know the total number of pages in advance, you can # provide a `resp_complete()` callback is_complete <- function(resp) { length(resp_body_json(resp)$data) == 0 } resps <- req_perform_iterative( req, next_req = iterate_with_offset("page_index", resp_complete = is_complete), max_reqs = Inf ) ## Not run: # Alternatively, if the response returns the total number of pages (or you # can easily calculate it), you can use the `resp_pages()` callback which # will generate a better progress bar. resps <- req_perform_iterative( req |> req_url_query(limit = 1), next_req = iterate_with_offset( "page_index", resp_pages = function(resp) resp_body_json(resp)$pages ), max_reqs = Inf ) ## End(Not run)
req <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/iris") |> req_throttle(10) |> req_url_query(limit = 50) # If you don't know the total number of pages in advance, you can # provide a `resp_complete()` callback is_complete <- function(resp) { length(resp_body_json(resp)$data) == 0 } resps <- req_perform_iterative( req, next_req = iterate_with_offset("page_index", resp_complete = is_complete), max_reqs = Inf ) ## Not run: # Alternatively, if the response returns the total number of pages (or you # can easily calculate it), you can use the `resp_pages()` callback which # will generate a better progress bar. resps <- req_perform_iterative( req |> req_url_query(limit = 1), next_req = iterate_with_offset( "page_index", resp_pages = function(resp) resp_body_json(resp)$pages ), max_reqs = Inf ) ## End(Not run)
These functions retrieve the most recent request made by httr2 and
the response it received, to facilitate debugging problems after they
occur. If the request did not succeed (or no requests have been made)
last_response()
will be NULL
.
last_response() last_request()
last_response() last_request()
invisible(request("http://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_perform()) last_request() last_response()
invisible(request("http://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_perform()) last_request() last_response()
Use this function to clear cached credentials.
oauth_cache_clear(client, cache_disk = FALSE, cache_key = NULL)
oauth_cache_clear(client, cache_disk = FALSE, cache_key = NULL)
client |
An |
cache_disk |
Should the access token be cached on disk? This reduces the number of times that you need to re-authenticate at the cost of storing access credentials on disk. Learn more in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html. |
cache_key |
If you want to cache multiple tokens per app, use this key to disambiguate them. |
When opted-in to, httr2 caches OAuth tokens in this directory. By default,
it uses a OS-standard cache directory, but, if needed, you can override the
location by setting the HTTR2_OAUTH_CACHE
env var.
oauth_cache_path()
oauth_cache_path()
An OAuth app is the combination of a client, a set of endpoints
(i.e. urls where various requests should be sent), and an authentication
mechanism. A client consists of at least a client_id
, and also often
a client_secret
. You'll get these values when you create the client on
the API's website.
oauth_client( id, token_url, secret = NULL, key = NULL, auth = c("body", "header", "jwt_sig"), auth_params = list(), name = hash(id) )
oauth_client( id, token_url, secret = NULL, key = NULL, auth = c("body", "header", "jwt_sig"), auth_params = list(), name = hash(id) )
id |
Client identifier. |
token_url |
Url to retrieve an access token. |
secret |
Client secret. For most apps, this is technically confidential
so in principle you should avoid storing it in source code. However, many
APIs require it in order to provide a user friendly authentication
experience, and the risks of including it are usually low. To make things
a little safer, I recommend using |
key |
Client key. As an alternative to using a |
auth |
Authentication mechanism used by the client to prove itself to
the API. Can be one of three built-in methods ("body", "header", or "jwt"),
or a function that will be called with arguments The most common mechanism in the wild is See |
auth_params |
Additional parameters passed to the function specified
by |
name |
Optional name for the client. Used when generating the cache
directory. If |
An OAuth client: An S3 list with class httr2_oauth_client
.
oauth_client("myclient", "http://example.com/token_url", secret = "DONTLOOK")
oauth_client("myclient", "http://example.com/token_url", secret = "DONTLOOK")
oauth_client_req_auth()
authenticates a request using the authentication
strategy defined by the auth
and auth_param
arguments to oauth_client()
.
This is used to authenticate the client as part of the OAuth flow, not
to authenticate a request on behalf of a user.
There are three built-in strategies:
oauth_client_req_body()
adds the client id and (optionally) the secret
to the request body, as described in Section 2.3.1 of RFC 6749.
oauth_client_req_header()
adds the client id and secret using HTTP
basic authentication with the Authorization
header, as described
in Section 2.3.1 of RFC 6749.
oauth_client_jwt_rs256()
adds a client assertion to the body using a
JWT signed with jwt_sign_rs256()
using a private key, as described
in Section 2.2 of RFC 7523.
You will generally not call these functions directly but will instead
specify them through the auth
argument to oauth_client()
. The req
and
client
parameters are automatically filled in; other parameters come from
the auth_params
argument.
oauth_client_req_auth(req, client) oauth_client_req_auth_header(req, client) oauth_client_req_auth_body(req, client) oauth_client_req_auth_jwt_sig(req, client, claim, size = 256, header = list())
oauth_client_req_auth(req, client) oauth_client_req_auth_header(req, client) oauth_client_req_auth_body(req, client) oauth_client_req_auth_jwt_sig(req, client, claim, size = 256, header = list())
req |
A httr2 request object. |
client |
An oauth_client. |
claim |
Claim set produced by |
size |
Size, in bits, of sha2 signature, i.e. 256, 384 or 512. Only for HMAC/RSA, not applicable for ECDSA keys. |
header |
A named list giving additional fields to include in the JWT header. |
A modified HTTP request.
# Show what the various forms of client authentication look like req <- request("https://example.com/whoami") client1 <- oauth_client( id = "12345", secret = "56789", token_url = "https://example.com/oauth/access_token", name = "oauth-example", auth = "body" # the default ) # calls oauth_client_req_auth_body() req_dry_run(oauth_client_req_auth(req, client1)) client2 <- oauth_client( id = "12345", secret = "56789", token_url = "https://example.com/oauth/access_token", name = "oauth-example", auth = "header" ) # calls oauth_client_req_auth_header() req_dry_run(oauth_client_req_auth(req, client2)) client3 <- oauth_client( id = "12345", key = openssl::rsa_keygen(), token_url = "https://example.com/oauth/access_token", name = "oauth-example", auth = "jwt_sig", auth_params = list(claim = jwt_claim()) ) # calls oauth_client_req_auth_header_jwt_sig() req_dry_run(oauth_client_req_auth(req, client3))
# Show what the various forms of client authentication look like req <- request("https://example.com/whoami") client1 <- oauth_client( id = "12345", secret = "56789", token_url = "https://example.com/oauth/access_token", name = "oauth-example", auth = "body" # the default ) # calls oauth_client_req_auth_body() req_dry_run(oauth_client_req_auth(req, client1)) client2 <- oauth_client( id = "12345", secret = "56789", token_url = "https://example.com/oauth/access_token", name = "oauth-example", auth = "header" ) # calls oauth_client_req_auth_header() req_dry_run(oauth_client_req_auth(req, client2)) client3 <- oauth_client( id = "12345", key = openssl::rsa_keygen(), token_url = "https://example.com/oauth/access_token", name = "oauth-example", auth = "jwt_sig", auth_params = list(claim = jwt_claim()) ) # calls oauth_client_req_auth_header_jwt_sig() req_dry_run(oauth_client_req_auth(req, client3))
The default redirect uri used by req_oauth_auth_code()
. Defaults to
http://localhost
unless the HTTR2_OAUTH_REDIRECT_URL
envvar is set.
oauth_redirect_uri()
oauth_redirect_uri()
Creates a S3 object of class <httr2_token>
representing an OAuth token
returned from the access token endpoint.
oauth_token( access_token, token_type = "bearer", expires_in = NULL, refresh_token = NULL, ..., .date = Sys.time() )
oauth_token( access_token, token_type = "bearer", expires_in = NULL, refresh_token = NULL, ..., .date = Sys.time() )
access_token |
The access token used to authenticate request |
token_type |
Type of token; only |
expires_in |
Number of seconds until token expires. |
refresh_token |
Optional refresh token; if supplied, this can be used to cheaply get a new access token when this one expires. |
... |
Additional components returned by the endpoint |
.date |
Date the request was made; used to convert the relative
|
An OAuth token: an S3 list with class httr2_token
.
oauth_token_cached()
to use the token cache with a specified
OAuth flow.
oauth_token("abcdef") oauth_token("abcdef", expires_in = 3600) oauth_token("abcdef", refresh_token = "ghijkl")
oauth_token("abcdef") oauth_token("abcdef", expires_in = 3600) oauth_token("abcdef", refresh_token = "ghijkl")
Use obfuscate("value")
to generate a call to obfuscated()
, which will
unobfuscate the value at the last possible moment. Obfuscated values only
work in limited locations:
The secret
argument to oauth_client()
Elements of the data
argument to req_body_form()
, req_body_json()
,
and req_body_multipart()
.
Working together this pair of functions provides a way to obfuscate mildly confidential information, like OAuth client secrets. The secret can not be revealed from your inspecting source code, but a skilled R programmer could figure it out with some effort. The main goal is to protect against scraping; there's no way for an automated tool to grab your obfuscated secrets.
obfuscate(x) obfuscated(x)
obfuscate(x) obfuscated(x)
x |
A string to |
obfuscate()
prints the obfuscated()
call to include in your
code. obfuscated()
returns an S3 class marking the string as obfuscated
so it can be unobfuscated when needed.
obfuscate("good morning") # Every time you obfuscate you'll get a different value because it # includes 16 bytes of random data which protects against certain types of # brute force attack obfuscate("good morning")
obfuscate("good morning") # Every time you obfuscate you'll get a different value because it # includes 16 bytes of random data which protects against certain types of # brute force attack obfuscate("good morning")
This is a custom auth protocol implemented by AWS.
req_auth_aws_v4( req, aws_access_key_id, aws_secret_access_key, aws_session_token = NULL, aws_service = NULL, aws_region = NULL )
req_auth_aws_v4( req, aws_access_key_id, aws_secret_access_key, aws_session_token = NULL, aws_service = NULL, aws_region = NULL )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
aws_access_key_id , aws_secret_access_key
|
AWS key and secret. |
aws_session_token |
AWS session token, if required. |
aws_service , aws_region
|
The AWS service and region to use for the request. If not supplied, will be automatically parsed from the URL hostname. |
creds <- paws.common::locate_credentials() model_id <- "anthropic.claude-3-5-sonnet-20240620-v1:0" req <- request("https://bedrock-runtime.us-east-1.amazonaws.com") # https://docs.aws.amazon.com/bedrock/latest/APIReference/API_runtime_Converse.html req <- req_url_path_append(req, "model", model_id, "converse") req <- req_body_json(req, list( messages = list(list( role = "user", content = list(list(text = "What's your name?")) )) )) req <- req_auth_aws_v4( req, aws_access_key_id = creds$access_key_id, aws_secret_access_key = creds$secret_access_key, aws_session_token = creds$session_token ) resp <- req_perform_connection(req) str(resp_body_json(resp))
creds <- paws.common::locate_credentials() model_id <- "anthropic.claude-3-5-sonnet-20240620-v1:0" req <- request("https://bedrock-runtime.us-east-1.amazonaws.com") # https://docs.aws.amazon.com/bedrock/latest/APIReference/API_runtime_Converse.html req <- req_url_path_append(req, "model", model_id, "converse") req <- req_body_json(req, list( messages = list(list( role = "user", content = list(list(text = "What's your name?")) )) )) req <- req_auth_aws_v4( req, aws_access_key_id = creds$access_key_id, aws_secret_access_key = creds$secret_access_key, aws_session_token = creds$session_token ) resp <- req_perform_connection(req) str(resp_body_json(resp))
This sets the Authorization header. See details at https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Authorization.
req_auth_basic(req, username, password = NULL)
req_auth_basic(req, username, password = NULL)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
username |
User name. |
password |
Password. You should avoid entering the password directly
when calling this function as it will be captured by |
A modified HTTP request.
req <- request("http://example.com") |> req_auth_basic("hadley", "SECRET") req req |> req_dry_run() # httr2 does its best to redact the Authorization header so that you don't # accidentally reveal confidential data. Use `redact_headers` to reveal it: print(req, redact_headers = FALSE) req |> req_dry_run(redact_headers = FALSE) # We do this because the authorization header is not encrypted and the # so password can easily be discovered: rawToChar(jsonlite::base64_dec("aGFkbGV5OlNFQ1JFVA=="))
req <- request("http://example.com") |> req_auth_basic("hadley", "SECRET") req req |> req_dry_run() # httr2 does its best to redact the Authorization header so that you don't # accidentally reveal confidential data. Use `redact_headers` to reveal it: print(req, redact_headers = FALSE) req |> req_dry_run(redact_headers = FALSE) # We do this because the authorization header is not encrypted and the # so password can easily be discovered: rawToChar(jsonlite::base64_dec("aGFkbGV5OlNFQ1JFVA=="))
A bearer token gives the bearer access to confidential resources (so you should keep them secure like you would with a user name and password). They are usually produced by some large authentication scheme (like the various OAuth 2.0 flows), but you are sometimes given then directly.
req_auth_bearer_token(req, token)
req_auth_bearer_token(req, token)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
token |
A bearer token |
A modified HTTP request.
See RFC 6750 for more details about bearer token usage with OAuth 2.0.
req <- request("http://example.com") |> req_auth_bearer_token("sdaljsdf093lkfs") req # httr2 does its best to redact the Authorization header so that you don't # accidentally reveal confidential data. Use `redact_headers` to reveal it: print(req, redact_headers = FALSE)
req <- request("http://example.com") |> req_auth_bearer_token("sdaljsdf093lkfs") req # httr2 does its best to redact the Authorization header so that you don't # accidentally reveal confidential data. Use `redact_headers` to reveal it: print(req, redact_headers = FALSE)
req_body_file()
sends a local file.
req_body_raw()
sends a string or raw vector.
req_body_json()
sends JSON encoded data. Named components of this data
can later be modified with req_body_json_modify()
.
req_body_form()
sends form encoded data.
req_body_multipart()
creates a multi-part body.
Adding a body to a request will automatically switch the method to POST.
req_body_raw(req, body, type = NULL) req_body_file(req, path, type = NULL) req_body_json( req, data, auto_unbox = TRUE, digits = 22, null = "null", type = "application/json", ... ) req_body_json_modify(req, ...) req_body_form(.req, ..., .multi = c("error", "comma", "pipe", "explode")) req_body_multipart(.req, ...)
req_body_raw(req, body, type = NULL) req_body_file(req, path, type = NULL) req_body_json( req, data, auto_unbox = TRUE, digits = 22, null = "null", type = "application/json", ... ) req_body_json_modify(req, ...) req_body_form(.req, ..., .multi = c("error", "comma", "pipe", "explode")) req_body_multipart(.req, ...)
req , .req
|
A httr2 request object. |
body |
A literal string or raw vector to send as body. |
type |
MIME content type. Will be ignored if you have manually set
a |
path |
Path to file to upload. |
data |
Data to include in body. |
auto_unbox |
Should length-1 vectors be automatically "unboxed" to JSON scalars? |
digits |
How many digits of precision should numbers use in JSON? |
null |
Should |
... |
<
|
.multi |
Controls what happens when an element of
If none of these options work for your needs, you can instead supply a function that takes a character vector of argument values and returns a a single string. |
A modified HTTP request.
req <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/post") # Most APIs expect small amounts of data in either form or json encoded: req |> req_body_form(x = "A simple text string") |> req_dry_run() req |> req_body_json(list(x = "A simple text string")) |> req_dry_run() # For total control over the body, send a string or raw vector req |> req_body_raw("A simple text string") |> req_dry_run() # There are two main ways that APIs expect entire files path <- tempfile() writeLines(letters[1:6], path) # You can send a single file as the body: req |> req_body_file(path) |> req_dry_run() # You can send multiple files, or a mix of files and data # with multipart encoding req |> req_body_multipart(a = curl::form_file(path), b = "some data") |> req_dry_run()
req <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/post") # Most APIs expect small amounts of data in either form or json encoded: req |> req_body_form(x = "A simple text string") |> req_dry_run() req |> req_body_json(list(x = "A simple text string")) |> req_dry_run() # For total control over the body, send a string or raw vector req |> req_body_raw("A simple text string") |> req_dry_run() # There are two main ways that APIs expect entire files path <- tempfile() writeLines(letters[1:6], path) # You can send a single file as the body: req |> req_body_file(path) |> req_dry_run() # You can send multiple files, or a mix of files and data # with multipart encoding req |> req_body_multipart(a = curl::form_file(path), b = "some data") |> req_dry_run()
Use req_perform()
to automatically cache HTTP requests. Most API requests
are not cacheable, but static files often are.
req_cache()
caches responses to GET requests that have status code 200 and
at least one of the standard caching headers (e.g. Expires
,
Etag
, Last-Modified
, Cache-Control
), unless caching has been expressly
prohibited with Cache-Control: no-store
. Typically, a request will still
be sent to the server to check that the cached value is still up-to-date,
but it will not need to re-download the body value.
To learn more about HTTP caching, I recommend the MDN article HTTP caching.
req_cache( req, path, use_on_error = FALSE, debug = getOption("httr2_cache_debug", FALSE), max_age = Inf, max_n = Inf, max_size = 1024^3 )
req_cache( req, path, use_on_error = FALSE, debug = getOption("httr2_cache_debug", FALSE), max_age = Inf, max_n = Inf, max_size = 1024^3 )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
path |
Path to cache directory. Will be created automatically if it does not exist. For quick and easy caching within a session, you can use httr2 doesn't provide helpers to manage the cache, but if you want to
empty it, you can use something like
|
use_on_error |
If the request errors, and there's a cache response,
should |
debug |
When |
max_n , max_age , max_size
|
Automatically prune the cache by specifying one or more of:
The cache pruning is performed at most once per minute. |
A modified HTTP request.
# GitHub uses HTTP caching for all raw files. url <- paste0( "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/allisonhorst/palmerpenguins/", "master/inst/extdata/penguins.csv" ) # Here I set debug = TRUE so you can see what's happening req <- request(url) |> req_cache(tempdir(), debug = TRUE) # First request downloads the data resp <- req |> req_perform() # Second request retrieves it from the cache resp <- req |> req_perform()
# GitHub uses HTTP caching for all raw files. url <- paste0( "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/allisonhorst/palmerpenguins/", "master/inst/extdata/penguins.csv" ) # Here I set debug = TRUE so you can see what's happening req <- request(url) |> req_cache(tempdir(), debug = TRUE) # First request downloads the data resp <- req |> req_perform() # Second request retrieves it from the cache resp <- req |> req_perform()
Use req_cookie_set()
to set client side cookies that are sent to the
server.
By default, httr2 uses a clean slate for every request meaning that cookies
are not automatically preserved across requests. To preserve cookies, use
req_cookie_preserve()
along with the path to cookie file that will be
read before and updated after each request.
req_cookie_preserve(req, path) req_cookies_set(req, ...)
req_cookie_preserve(req, path) req_cookies_set(req, ...)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
path |
A path to a file where cookies will be read from before and updated after the request. |
... |
< |
# Use `req_cookies_set()` to set client-side cookies request(example_url()) |> req_cookies_set(a = 1, b = 1) |> req_dry_run() # Use `req_cookie_preserve()` to preserve server-side cookies across requests path <- tempfile() # Set a server-side cookie request(example_url()) |> req_cookie_preserve(path) |> req_template("/cookies/set/:name/:value", name = "chocolate", value = "chip") |> req_perform() |> resp_body_json() # Set another sever-side cookie request(example_url()) |> req_cookie_preserve(path) |> req_template("/cookies/set/:name/:value", name = "oatmeal", value = "raisin") |> req_perform() |> resp_body_json() # Add a client side cookie request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/cookies/set") |> req_cookie_preserve(path) |> req_cookies_set(snicker = "doodle") |> req_perform() |> resp_body_json() # The cookie path has a straightforward format cat(readChar(path, nchars = 1e4))
# Use `req_cookies_set()` to set client-side cookies request(example_url()) |> req_cookies_set(a = 1, b = 1) |> req_dry_run() # Use `req_cookie_preserve()` to preserve server-side cookies across requests path <- tempfile() # Set a server-side cookie request(example_url()) |> req_cookie_preserve(path) |> req_template("/cookies/set/:name/:value", name = "chocolate", value = "chip") |> req_perform() |> resp_body_json() # Set another sever-side cookie request(example_url()) |> req_cookie_preserve(path) |> req_template("/cookies/set/:name/:value", name = "oatmeal", value = "raisin") |> req_perform() |> resp_body_json() # Add a client side cookie request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/cookies/set") |> req_cookie_preserve(path) |> req_cookies_set(snicker = "doodle") |> req_perform() |> resp_body_json() # The cookie path has a straightforward format cat(readChar(path, nchars = 1e4))
This shows you exactly what httr2 will send to the server, without
actually sending anything. It requires the httpuv package because it
works by sending the real HTTP request to a local webserver, thanks to
the magic of curl::curl_echo()
.
req_dry_run(req, quiet = FALSE, redact_headers = TRUE)
req_dry_run(req, quiet = FALSE, redact_headers = TRUE)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
quiet |
If |
redact_headers |
Redact confidential data in the headers? Currently redacts the contents of the Authorization header to prevent you from accidentally leaking credentials when debugging/reprexing. |
The Host
header is not respected.
Invisibly, a list containing information about the request,
including method
, path
, and headers
.
# httr2 adds default User-Agent, Accept, and Accept-Encoding headers request("http://example.com") |> req_dry_run() # the Authorization header is automatically redacted to avoid leaking # credentials on the console req <- request("http://example.com") |> req_auth_basic("user", "password") req |> req_dry_run() # if you need to see it, use redact_headers = FALSE req |> req_dry_run(redact_headers = FALSE)
# httr2 adds default User-Agent, Accept, and Accept-Encoding headers request("http://example.com") |> req_dry_run() # the Authorization header is automatically redacted to avoid leaking # credentials on the console req <- request("http://example.com") |> req_auth_basic("user", "password") req |> req_dry_run() # if you need to see it, use redact_headers = FALSE req |> req_dry_run(redact_headers = FALSE)
req_perform()
will automatically convert HTTP errors (i.e. any 4xx or 5xx
status code) into R errors. Use req_error()
to either override the
defaults, or extract additional information from the response that would
be useful to expose to the user.
req_error(req, is_error = NULL, body = NULL)
req_error(req, is_error = NULL, body = NULL)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
is_error |
A predicate function that takes a single argument (the
response) and returns |
body |
A callback function that takes a single argument (the response)
and returns a character vector of additional information to include in the
body of the error. This vector is passed along to the |
A modified HTTP request.
req_perform()
is designed to succeed if and only if you get a valid HTTP
response. There are two ways a request can fail:
The HTTP request might fail, for example if the connection is dropped
or the server doesn't exist. This type of error will have class
c("httr2_failure", "httr2_error")
.
The HTTP request might succeed, but return an HTTP status code that
represents an error, e.g. a 404 Not Found
if the specified resource is
not found. This type of error will have (e.g.) class
c("httr2_http_404", "httr2_http", "httr2_error")
.
These error classes are designed to be used in conjunction with R's
condition handling tools (https://adv-r.hadley.nz/conditions.html).
For example, if you want to return a default value when the server returns
a 404, use tryCatch()
:
tryCatch( req |> req_perform() |> resp_body_json(), httr2_http_404 = function(cnd) NULL )
Or if you want to re-throw the error with some additional context, use
withCallingHandlers()
, e.g.:
withCallingHandlers( req |> req_perform() |> resp_body_json(), httr2_http_404 = function(cnd) { rlang::abort("Couldn't find user", parent = cnd) } )
Learn more about error chaining at rlang::topic-error-chaining.
req_retry()
to control when errors are automatically retried.
# Performing this request usually generates an error because httr2 # converts HTTP errors into R errors: req <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/status/404") try(req |> req_perform()) # You can still retrieve it with last_response() last_response() # But you might want to suppress this behaviour: resp <- req |> req_error(is_error = \(resp) FALSE) |> req_perform() resp # Or perhaps you're working with a server that routinely uses the # wrong HTTP error codes only 500s are really errors request("http://example.com") |> req_error(is_error = \(resp) resp_status(resp) == 500) # Most typically you'll use req_error() to add additional information # extracted from the response body (or sometimes header): error_body <- function(resp) { resp_body_json(resp)$error } request("http://example.com") |> req_error(body = error_body) # Learn more in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/wrapping-apis.html
# Performing this request usually generates an error because httr2 # converts HTTP errors into R errors: req <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/status/404") try(req |> req_perform()) # You can still retrieve it with last_response() last_response() # But you might want to suppress this behaviour: resp <- req |> req_error(is_error = \(resp) FALSE) |> req_perform() resp # Or perhaps you're working with a server that routinely uses the # wrong HTTP error codes only 500s are really errors request("http://example.com") |> req_error(is_error = \(resp) resp_status(resp) == 500) # Most typically you'll use req_error() to add additional information # extracted from the response body (or sometimes header): error_body <- function(resp) { resp_body_json(resp)$error } request("http://example.com") |> req_error(body = error_body) # Learn more in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/wrapping-apis.html
req_headers()
allows you to set the value of any header.
req_headers(.req, ..., .redact = NULL)
req_headers(.req, ..., .redact = NULL)
.req |
A request. |
... |
<
|
.redact |
Headers to redact. If |
A modified HTTP request.
req <- request("http://example.com") # Use req_headers() to add arbitrary additional headers to the request req |> req_headers(MyHeader = "MyValue") |> req_dry_run() # Repeated use overrides the previous value: req |> req_headers(MyHeader = "Old value") |> req_headers(MyHeader = "New value") |> req_dry_run() # Setting Accept to NULL uses curl's default: req |> req_headers(Accept = NULL) |> req_dry_run() # Setting it to "" removes it: req |> req_headers(Accept = "") |> req_dry_run() # If you need to repeat a header, provide a vector of values # (this is rarely needed, but is important in a handful of cases) req |> req_headers(HeaderName = c("Value 1", "Value 2", "Value 3")) |> req_dry_run() # If you have headers in a list, use !!! headers <- list(HeaderOne = "one", HeaderTwo = "two") req |> req_headers(!!!headers, HeaderThree = "three") |> req_dry_run() # Use `.redact` to hide a header in the output req |> req_headers(Secret = "this-is-private", Public = "but-this-is-not", .redact = "Secret") |> req_dry_run()
req <- request("http://example.com") # Use req_headers() to add arbitrary additional headers to the request req |> req_headers(MyHeader = "MyValue") |> req_dry_run() # Repeated use overrides the previous value: req |> req_headers(MyHeader = "Old value") |> req_headers(MyHeader = "New value") |> req_dry_run() # Setting Accept to NULL uses curl's default: req |> req_headers(Accept = NULL) |> req_dry_run() # Setting it to "" removes it: req |> req_headers(Accept = "") |> req_dry_run() # If you need to repeat a header, provide a vector of values # (this is rarely needed, but is important in a handful of cases) req |> req_headers(HeaderName = c("Value 1", "Value 2", "Value 3")) |> req_dry_run() # If you have headers in a list, use !!! headers <- list(HeaderOne = "one", HeaderTwo = "two") req |> req_headers(!!!headers, HeaderThree = "three") |> req_dry_run() # Use `.redact` to hide a header in the output req |> req_headers(Secret = "this-is-private", Public = "but-this-is-not", .redact = "Secret") |> req_dry_run()
Use this function to use a custom HTTP method like HEAD
,
DELETE
, PATCH
, UPDATE
, or OPTIONS
. The default method is
GET
for requests without a body, and POST
for requests with a body.
req_method(req, method)
req_method(req, method)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
method |
Custom HTTP method |
A modified HTTP request.
request(example_url()) |> req_method("PATCH") request(example_url()) |> req_method("PUT") request(example_url()) |> req_method("HEAD")
request(example_url()) |> req_method("PATCH") request(example_url()) |> req_method("PUT") request(example_url()) |> req_method("HEAD")
Authenticate using the OAuth authorization code flow, as defined by Section 4.1 of RFC 6749.
This flow is the most commonly used OAuth flow where the user
opens a page in their browser, approves the access, and then returns to R.
When possible, it redirects the browser back to a temporary local webserver
to capture the authorization code. When this is not possible (e.g., when
running on a hosted platform like RStudio Server), provide a custom
redirect_uri
and httr2 will prompt the user to enter the code manually.
Learn more about the overall OAuth authentication flow in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html, and more about the motivations behind this flow in https://stack-auth.com/blog/oauth-from-first-principles.
req_oauth_auth_code( req, client, auth_url, scope = NULL, pkce = TRUE, auth_params = list(), token_params = list(), redirect_uri = oauth_redirect_uri(), cache_disk = FALSE, cache_key = NULL, host_name = deprecated(), host_ip = deprecated(), port = deprecated() ) oauth_flow_auth_code( client, auth_url, scope = NULL, pkce = TRUE, auth_params = list(), token_params = list(), redirect_uri = oauth_redirect_uri(), host_name = deprecated(), host_ip = deprecated(), port = deprecated() )
req_oauth_auth_code( req, client, auth_url, scope = NULL, pkce = TRUE, auth_params = list(), token_params = list(), redirect_uri = oauth_redirect_uri(), cache_disk = FALSE, cache_key = NULL, host_name = deprecated(), host_ip = deprecated(), port = deprecated() ) oauth_flow_auth_code( client, auth_url, scope = NULL, pkce = TRUE, auth_params = list(), token_params = list(), redirect_uri = oauth_redirect_uri(), host_name = deprecated(), host_ip = deprecated(), port = deprecated() )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
client |
An |
auth_url |
Authorization url; you'll need to discover this by reading the documentation. |
scope |
Scopes to be requested from the resource owner. |
pkce |
Use "Proof Key for Code Exchange"? This adds an extra layer of security and should always be used if supported by the server. |
auth_params |
A list containing additional parameters passed to
|
token_params |
List containing additional parameters passed to the
|
redirect_uri |
URL to redirect back to after authorization is complete. Often this must be registered with the API in advance. httr2 supports three forms of redirect. Firstly, you can use a Secondly, you can provide a URL to a website that uses Javascript to give the user a code to copy and paste back into the R session (see https://www.tidyverse.org/google-callback/ and https://github.com/r-lib/gargle/blob/main/inst/pseudo-oob/google-callback/index.html for examples). This is less convenient (because it requires more user interaction) but also works in hosted environments like RStudio Server. Finally, hosted platforms might set the |
cache_disk |
Should the access token be cached on disk? This reduces the number of times that you need to re-authenticate at the cost of storing access credentials on disk. Learn more in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html. |
cache_key |
If you want to cache multiple tokens per app, use this key to disambiguate them. |
host_name , host_ip , port
|
req_oauth_auth_code()
returns a modified HTTP request that will
use OAuth; oauth_flow_auth_code()
returns an oauth_token.
The authorization code flow is used for both web applications and native
applications (which are equivalent to R packages). RFC 8252 spells out
important considerations for native apps. Most importantly there's no way
for native apps to keep secrets from their users. This means that the
server should either not require a client_secret
(i.e. it should be a
public client and not a confidential client) or ensure that possession of
the client_secret
doesn't grant any significant privileges.
Only modern APIs from major providers (like Azure and Google) explicitly
support native apps. However, in most cases, even for older APIs, possessing
the client_secret
provides limited ability to perform harmful actions.
Therefore, our general principle is that it's acceptable to include it in an
R package, as long as it's mildly obfuscated to protect against credential
scraping attacks (which aim to acquire large numbers of client secrets by
scanning public sites like GitHub). The goal is to ensure that obtaining your
client credentials is more work than just creating a new client.
oauth_flow_auth_code_url()
for the components necessary to
write your own auth code flow, if the API you are wrapping does not adhere
closely to the standard.
Other OAuth flows:
req_oauth_bearer_jwt()
,
req_oauth_client_credentials()
,
req_oauth_password()
,
req_oauth_refresh()
,
req_oauth_token_exchange()
req_auth_github <- function(req) { req_oauth_auth_code( req, client = example_github_client(), auth_url = "https://github.com/login/oauth/authorize" ) } request("https://api.github.com/user") |> req_auth_github()
req_auth_github <- function(req) { req_oauth_auth_code( req, client = example_github_client(), auth_url = "https://github.com/login/oauth/authorize" ) } request("https://api.github.com/user") |> req_auth_github()
Authenticate using a Bearer JWT (JSON web token) as an authorization grant to get an access token, as defined by Section 2.1 of RFC 7523. It is often used for service accounts, accounts that are used primarily in automated environments.
Learn more about the overall OAuth authentication flow in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html.
req_oauth_bearer_jwt( req, client, claim, signature = "jwt_encode_sig", signature_params = list(), scope = NULL, token_params = list() ) oauth_flow_bearer_jwt( client, claim, signature = "jwt_encode_sig", signature_params = list(), scope = NULL, token_params = list() )
req_oauth_bearer_jwt( req, client, claim, signature = "jwt_encode_sig", signature_params = list(), scope = NULL, token_params = list() ) oauth_flow_bearer_jwt( client, claim, signature = "jwt_encode_sig", signature_params = list(), scope = NULL, token_params = list() )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
client |
An |
claim |
A list of claims. If all elements of the claim set are static
apart from |
signature |
Function use to sign |
signature_params |
Additional arguments passed to |
scope |
Scopes to be requested from the resource owner. |
token_params |
List containing additional parameters passed to the
|
req_oauth_bearer_jwt()
returns a modified HTTP request that will
use OAuth; oauth_flow_bearer_jwt()
returns an oauth_token.
Other OAuth flows:
req_oauth_auth_code()
,
req_oauth_client_credentials()
,
req_oauth_password()
,
req_oauth_refresh()
,
req_oauth_token_exchange()
req_auth <- function(req) { req_oauth_bearer_jwt( req, client = oauth_client("example", "https://example.com/get_token"), claim = jwt_claim() ) } request("https://example.com") |> req_auth()
req_auth <- function(req) { req_oauth_bearer_jwt( req, client = oauth_client("example", "https://example.com/get_token"), claim = jwt_claim() ) } request("https://example.com") |> req_auth()
Authenticate using OAuth client credentials flow, as defined by Section 4.4 of RFC 6749. It is used to allow the client to access resources that it controls directly, not on behalf of an user.
Learn more about the overall OAuth authentication flow in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html.
req_oauth_client_credentials(req, client, scope = NULL, token_params = list()) oauth_flow_client_credentials(client, scope = NULL, token_params = list())
req_oauth_client_credentials(req, client, scope = NULL, token_params = list()) oauth_flow_client_credentials(client, scope = NULL, token_params = list())
req |
A httr2 request object. |
client |
An |
scope |
Scopes to be requested from the resource owner. |
token_params |
List containing additional parameters passed to the
|
req_oauth_client_credentials()
returns a modified HTTP request that will
use OAuth; oauth_flow_client_credentials()
returns an oauth_token.
Other OAuth flows:
req_oauth_auth_code()
,
req_oauth_bearer_jwt()
,
req_oauth_password()
,
req_oauth_refresh()
,
req_oauth_token_exchange()
req_auth <- function(req) { req_oauth_client_credentials( req, client = oauth_client("example", "https://example.com/get_token") ) } request("https://example.com") |> req_auth()
req_auth <- function(req) { req_oauth_client_credentials( req, client = oauth_client("example", "https://example.com/get_token") ) } request("https://example.com") |> req_auth()
Authenticate using the OAuth device flow, as defined by RFC 8628. It's designed for devices that don't have access to a web browser (if you've ever authenticated an app on your TV, this is probably the flow you've used), but it also works well from within R.
Learn more about the overall OAuth authentication flow in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html.
req_oauth_device( req, client, auth_url, scope = NULL, auth_params = list(), token_params = list(), cache_disk = FALSE, cache_key = NULL ) oauth_flow_device( client, auth_url, pkce = FALSE, scope = NULL, auth_params = list(), token_params = list() )
req_oauth_device( req, client, auth_url, scope = NULL, auth_params = list(), token_params = list(), cache_disk = FALSE, cache_key = NULL ) oauth_flow_device( client, auth_url, pkce = FALSE, scope = NULL, auth_params = list(), token_params = list() )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
client |
An |
auth_url |
Authorization url; you'll need to discover this by reading the documentation. |
scope |
Scopes to be requested from the resource owner. |
auth_params |
A list containing additional parameters passed to
|
token_params |
List containing additional parameters passed to the
|
cache_disk |
Should the access token be cached on disk? This reduces the number of times that you need to re-authenticate at the cost of storing access credentials on disk. Learn more in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html. |
cache_key |
If you want to cache multiple tokens per app, use this key to disambiguate them. |
pkce |
Use "Proof Key for Code Exchange"? This adds an extra layer of security and should always be used if supported by the server. |
req_oauth_device()
returns a modified HTTP request that will
use OAuth; oauth_flow_device()
returns an oauth_token.
req_auth_github <- function(req) { req_oauth_device( req, client = example_github_client(), auth_url = "https://github.com/login/device/code" ) } request("https://api.github.com/user") |> req_auth_github()
req_auth_github <- function(req) { req_oauth_device( req, client = example_github_client(), auth_url = "https://github.com/login/device/code" ) } request("https://api.github.com/user") |> req_auth_github()
This function implements the OAuth resource owner password flow, as defined by Section 4.3 of RFC 6749. It allows the user to supply their password once, exchanging it for an access token that can be cached locally.
Learn more about the overall OAuth authentication flow in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html
req_oauth_password( req, client, username, password = NULL, scope = NULL, token_params = list(), cache_disk = FALSE, cache_key = username ) oauth_flow_password( client, username, password = NULL, scope = NULL, token_params = list() )
req_oauth_password( req, client, username, password = NULL, scope = NULL, token_params = list(), cache_disk = FALSE, cache_key = username ) oauth_flow_password( client, username, password = NULL, scope = NULL, token_params = list() )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
client |
An |
username |
User name. |
password |
Password. You should avoid entering the password directly
when calling this function as it will be captured by |
scope |
Scopes to be requested from the resource owner. |
token_params |
List containing additional parameters passed to the
|
cache_disk |
Should the access token be cached on disk? This reduces the number of times that you need to re-authenticate at the cost of storing access credentials on disk. Learn more in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html. |
cache_key |
If you want to cache multiple tokens per app, use this key to disambiguate them. |
req_oauth_password()
returns a modified HTTP request that will
use OAuth; oauth_flow_password()
returns an oauth_token.
Other OAuth flows:
req_oauth_auth_code()
,
req_oauth_bearer_jwt()
,
req_oauth_client_credentials()
,
req_oauth_refresh()
,
req_oauth_token_exchange()
req_auth <- function(req) { req_oauth_password(req, client = oauth_client("example", "https://example.com/get_token"), username = "username" ) } if (interactive()) { request("https://example.com") |> req_auth() }
req_auth <- function(req) { req_oauth_password(req, client = oauth_client("example", "https://example.com/get_token"), username = "username" ) } if (interactive()) { request("https://example.com") |> req_auth() }
Authenticate using a refresh token, following the process described in Section 6 of RFC 6749.
This technique is primarily useful for testing: you can manually retrieve
a OAuth token using another OAuth flow (e.g. with oauth_flow_auth_code()
),
extract the refresh token from the result, and then save in an environment
variable for use in automated tests.
When requesting an access token, the server may also return a new refresh
token. If this happens, oauth_flow_refresh()
will warn, and you'll have
retrieve a new update refresh token and update the stored value. If you find
this happening a lot, it's a sign that you should be using a different flow
in your automated tests.
Learn more about the overall OAuth authentication flow in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html.
req_oauth_refresh( req, client, refresh_token = Sys.getenv("HTTR2_REFRESH_TOKEN"), scope = NULL, token_params = list() ) oauth_flow_refresh( client, refresh_token = Sys.getenv("HTTR2_REFRESH_TOKEN"), scope = NULL, token_params = list() )
req_oauth_refresh( req, client, refresh_token = Sys.getenv("HTTR2_REFRESH_TOKEN"), scope = NULL, token_params = list() ) oauth_flow_refresh( client, refresh_token = Sys.getenv("HTTR2_REFRESH_TOKEN"), scope = NULL, token_params = list() )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
client |
An |
refresh_token |
A refresh token. This is equivalent to a password
so shouldn't be typed into the console or stored in a script. Instead,
we recommend placing in an environment variable; the default behaviour
is to look in |
scope |
Scopes to be requested from the resource owner. |
token_params |
List containing additional parameters passed to the
|
req_oauth_refresh()
returns a modified HTTP request that will
use OAuth; oauth_flow_refresh()
returns an oauth_token.
Other OAuth flows:
req_oauth_auth_code()
,
req_oauth_bearer_jwt()
,
req_oauth_client_credentials()
,
req_oauth_password()
,
req_oauth_token_exchange()
client <- oauth_client("example", "https://example.com/get_token") req <- request("https://example.com") req |> req_oauth_refresh(client)
client <- oauth_client("example", "https://example.com/get_token") req <- request("https://example.com") req |> req_oauth_refresh(client)
Authenticate by exchanging one security token for another, as defined by Section 2 of RFC 8693. It is typically used for advanced authorization flows that involve "delegation" or "impersonation" semantics, such as when a client accesses a resource on behalf of another party, or when a client's identity is federated from another provider.
Learn more about the overall OAuth authentication flow in https://httr2.r-lib.org/articles/oauth.html.
req_oauth_token_exchange( req, client, subject_token, subject_token_type, resource = NULL, audience = NULL, scope = NULL, requested_token_type = NULL, actor_token = NULL, actor_token_type = NULL, token_params = list() ) oauth_flow_token_exchange( client, subject_token, subject_token_type, resource = NULL, audience = NULL, scope = NULL, requested_token_type = NULL, actor_token = NULL, actor_token_type = NULL, token_params = list() )
req_oauth_token_exchange( req, client, subject_token, subject_token_type, resource = NULL, audience = NULL, scope = NULL, requested_token_type = NULL, actor_token = NULL, actor_token_type = NULL, token_params = list() ) oauth_flow_token_exchange( client, subject_token, subject_token_type, resource = NULL, audience = NULL, scope = NULL, requested_token_type = NULL, actor_token = NULL, actor_token_type = NULL, token_params = list() )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
client |
An |
subject_token |
The security token to exchange. This is usually an OpenID Connect ID token or a SAML2 assertion. |
subject_token_type |
A URI that describes the type of the security token. Usually one of the options in Section 3 of RFC 8693. |
resource |
The URI that identifies the resource that the client is trying to access, if applicable. |
audience |
The logical name that identifies the resource that the client
is trying to access, if applicable. Usually one of |
scope |
Scopes to be requested from the resource owner. |
requested_token_type |
An optional URI that describes the type of the security token being requested. Usually one of the options in Section 3 of RFC 8693. |
actor_token |
An optional security token that represents the client, rather than the identity behind the subject token. |
actor_token_type |
When |
token_params |
List containing additional parameters passed to the
|
req_oauth_token_exchange()
returns a modified HTTP request that
will exchange one security token for another; oauth_flow_token_exchange()
returns the resulting oauth_token directly.
Other OAuth flows:
req_oauth_auth_code()
,
req_oauth_bearer_jwt()
,
req_oauth_client_credentials()
,
req_oauth_password()
,
req_oauth_refresh()
# List Google Cloud storage buckets using an OIDC token obtained # from e.g. Microsoft Entra ID or Okta and federated to Google. (A real # project ID and workforce pool would be required for this in practice.) # # See: https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/workforce-obtaining-short-lived-credentials oidc_token <- "an ID token from Okta" request("https://storage.googleapis.com/storage/v1/b?project=123456") |> req_oauth_token_exchange( client = oauth_client("gcp", "https://sts.googleapis.com/v1/token"), subject_token = oidc_token, subject_token_type = "urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:id_token", scope = "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform", requested_token_type = "urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:access_token", audience = "//iam.googleapis.com/locations/global/workforcePools/123/providers/456", token_params = list( options = '{"userProject":"123456"}' ) )
# List Google Cloud storage buckets using an OIDC token obtained # from e.g. Microsoft Entra ID or Okta and federated to Google. (A real # project ID and workforce pool would be required for this in practice.) # # See: https://cloud.google.com/iam/docs/workforce-obtaining-short-lived-credentials oidc_token <- "an ID token from Okta" request("https://storage.googleapis.com/storage/v1/b?project=123456") |> req_oauth_token_exchange( client = oauth_client("gcp", "https://sts.googleapis.com/v1/token"), subject_token = oidc_token, subject_token_type = "urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:id_token", scope = "https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform", requested_token_type = "urn:ietf:params:oauth:token-type:access_token", audience = "//iam.googleapis.com/locations/global/workforcePools/123/providers/456", token_params = list( options = '{"userProject":"123456"}' ) )
req_options()
is for expert use only; it allows you to directly set
libcurl options to access features that are otherwise not available in
httr2.
req_options(.req, ...)
req_options(.req, ...)
.req |
A request. |
... |
< |
A modified HTTP request.
# req_options() allows you to access curl options that are not otherwise # exposed by httr2. For example, in very special cases you may need to # turn off SSL verification. This is generally a bad idea so httr2 doesn't # provide a convenient wrapper, but if you really know what you're doing # you can still access this libcurl option: req <- request("https://example.com") |> req_options(ssl_verifypeer = 0)
# req_options() allows you to access curl options that are not otherwise # exposed by httr2. For example, in very special cases you may need to # turn off SSL verification. This is generally a bad idea so httr2 doesn't # provide a convenient wrapper, but if you really know what you're doing # you can still access this libcurl option: req <- request("https://example.com") |> req_options(ssl_verifypeer = 0)
After preparing a request, call req_perform()
to perform it, fetching
the results back to R as a response.
The default HTTP method is GET
unless a body (set by req_body_json and
friends) is present, in which case it will be POST
. You can override
these defaults with req_method()
.
req_perform( req, path = NULL, verbosity = NULL, mock = getOption("httr2_mock", NULL), error_call = current_env() )
req_perform( req, path = NULL, verbosity = NULL, mock = getOption("httr2_mock", NULL), error_call = current_env() )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
path |
Optionally, path to save body of the response. This is useful for large responses since it avoids storing the response in memory. |
verbosity |
How much information to print? This is a wrapper
around
Use |
mock |
A mocking function. If supplied, this function is called
with the request. It should return either |
error_call |
The execution environment of a currently
running function, e.g. |
If the HTTP request succeeds, and the status code is ok (e.g. 200), an HTTP response.
If the HTTP request succeeds, but the status code is an error
(e.g a 404), an error with class c("httr2_http_404", "httr2_http")
.
By default, all 400 and 500 status codes will be treated as an error,
but you can customise this with req_error()
.
If the HTTP request fails (e.g. the connection is dropped or the
server doesn't exist), an error with class "httr2_failure"
.
Note that one call to req_perform()
may perform multiple HTTP requests:
If the url
is redirected with a 301, 302, 303, or 307, curl will
automatically follow the Location
header to the new location.
If you have configured retries with req_retry()
and the request
fails with a transient problem, req_perform()
will try again after
waiting a bit. See req_retry()
for details.
If you are using OAuth, and the cached token has expired, req_perform()
will get a new token either using the refresh token (if available)
or by running the OAuth flow.
req_perform()
will automatically add a progress bar if it needs to wait
between requests for req_throttle()
or req_retry()
. You can turn the
progress bar off (and just show the total time to wait) by setting
options(httr2_progress = FALSE)
.
req_perform_parallel()
to perform multiple requests in parallel.
req_perform_iterative()
to perform multiple requests iteratively.
request("https://google.com") |> req_perform()
request("https://google.com") |> req_perform()
Use req_perform_connection()
to perform a request if you want to stream the
response body. A response returned by req_perform_connection()
includes a
connection as the body. You can then use resp_stream_raw()
,
resp_stream_lines()
, or resp_stream_sse()
to retrieve data a chunk at a
time. Always finish up by closing the connection by calling
close(response)
.
This is an alternative interface to req_perform_stream()
that returns a
connection that you can use to pull the data, rather
than providing callbacks that the data is pushed to. This is useful if you
want to do other work in between handling inputs from the stream.
req_perform_connection(req, blocking = TRUE)
req_perform_connection(req, blocking = TRUE)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
blocking |
When retrieving data, should the connection block and wait for the desired information or immediately return what it has (possibly nothing)? |
req <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/stream-bytes/32768") resp <- req_perform_connection(req) length(resp_stream_raw(resp, kb = 16)) length(resp_stream_raw(resp, kb = 16)) # When the stream has no more data, you'll get an empty result: length(resp_stream_raw(resp, kb = 16)) # Always close the response when you're done close(resp)
req <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/stream-bytes/32768") resp <- req_perform_connection(req) length(resp_stream_raw(resp, kb = 16)) length(resp_stream_raw(resp, kb = 16)) # When the stream has no more data, you'll get an empty result: length(resp_stream_raw(resp, kb = 16)) # Always close the response when you're done close(resp)
req_perform_iterative()
iteratively generates and performs requests,
using a callback function, next_req
, to define the next request based on
the current request and response. You will probably want to pair it with an
iteration helper and use a
multi-response handler to process the result.
req_perform_iterative( req, next_req, path = NULL, max_reqs = 20, on_error = c("stop", "return"), progress = TRUE )
req_perform_iterative( req, next_req, path = NULL, max_reqs = 20, on_error = c("stop", "return"), progress = TRUE )
req |
The first request to perform. |
next_req |
A function that takes the previous response ( |
path |
Optionally, path to save the body of request. This should be
a glue string that uses |
max_reqs |
The maximum number of requests to perform. Use |
on_error |
What should happen if a request fails?
|
progress |
Display a progress bar for the status of all requests? Use
|
A list, at most length max_reqs
, containing responses and possibly one
error object, if on_error
is "return"
and one of the requests errors.
If present, the error object will always be the last element in the list.
Only httr2 errors are captured; see req_error()
for more details.
next_req()
The key piece that makes req_perform_iterative()
work is the next_req()
argument. For most common cases, you can use one of the canned helpers,
like iterate_with_offset()
. If, however, the API you're wrapping uses a
different pagination system, you'll need to write your own. This section
gives some advice.
Generally, your function needs to inspect the response, extract some data from it, then use that to modify the previous request. For example, imagine that the response returns a cursor, which needs to be added to the body of the request. The simplest version of this function might look like this:
next_req <- function(resp, req) { cursor <- resp_body_json(resp)$next_cursor req |> req_body_json_modify(cursor = cursor) }
There's one problem here: if there are no more pages to return, then
cursor
will be NULL
, but req_body_json_modify()
will still generate
a meaningful request. So we need to handle this specifically by
returning NULL
:
next_req <- function(resp, req) { cursor <- resp_body_json(resp)$next_cursor if (is.null(cursor)) return(NULL) req |> req_body_json_modify(cursor = cursor) }
A value of NULL
lets req_perform_iterative()
know there are no more
pages remaining.
There's one last feature you might want to add to your iterator: if you
know the total number of pages, then it's nice to let
req_perform_iterative()
know so it can adjust the progress bar.
(This will only ever decrease the number of pages, not increase it.)
You can signal the total number of pages by calling signal_total_pages()
,
like this:
next_req <- function(resp, req) { body <- resp_body_json(resp) cursor <- body$next_cursor if (is.null(cursor)) return(NULL) signal_total_pages(body$pages) req |> req_body_json_modify(cursor = cursor) }
req <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/iris") |> req_throttle(10) |> req_url_query(limit = 5) resps <- req_perform_iterative(req, iterate_with_offset("page_index")) data <- resps |> resps_data(function(resp) { data <- resp_body_json(resp)$data data.frame( Sepal.Length = sapply(data, `[[`, "Sepal.Length"), Sepal.Width = sapply(data, `[[`, "Sepal.Width"), Petal.Length = sapply(data, `[[`, "Petal.Length"), Petal.Width = sapply(data, `[[`, "Petal.Width"), Species = sapply(data, `[[`, "Species") ) }) str(data)
req <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/iris") |> req_throttle(10) |> req_url_query(limit = 5) resps <- req_perform_iterative(req, iterate_with_offset("page_index")) data <- resps |> resps_data(function(resp) { data <- resp_body_json(resp)$data data.frame( Sepal.Length = sapply(data, `[[`, "Sepal.Length"), Sepal.Width = sapply(data, `[[`, "Sepal.Width"), Petal.Length = sapply(data, `[[`, "Petal.Length"), Petal.Width = sapply(data, `[[`, "Petal.Width"), Species = sapply(data, `[[`, "Species") ) }) str(data)
This variation on req_perform_sequential()
performs multiple requests in
parallel. Exercise caution when using this function; it's easy to pummel a
server with many simultaneous requests. Only use it with hosts designed to
serve many files at once, which are typically web servers, not API servers.
req_perform_parallel()
has a few limitations:
Will not retrieve a new OAuth token if it expires part way through the requests.
Does not perform throttling with req_throttle()
.
Does not attempt retries as described by req_retry()
.
Only consults the cache set by req_cache()
before/after all requests.
If any of these limitations are problematic for your use case, we recommend
req_perform_sequential()
instead.
req_perform_parallel( reqs, paths = NULL, pool = NULL, on_error = c("stop", "return", "continue"), progress = TRUE )
req_perform_parallel( reqs, paths = NULL, pool = NULL, on_error = c("stop", "return", "continue"), progress = TRUE )
reqs |
A list of requests. |
paths |
An optional character vector of paths, if you want to download
the response bodies to disk. If supplied, must be the same length as
|
pool |
Optionally, a curl pool made by |
on_error |
What should happen if one of the requests fails?
|
progress |
Display a progress bar for the status of all requests? Use
|
A list, the same length as reqs
, containing responses and possibly
error objects, if on_error
is "return"
or "continue"
and one of the
responses errors. If on_error
is "return"
and it errors on the ith
request, the ith element of the result will be an error object, and the
remaining elements will be NULL
. If on_error
is "continue"
, it will
be a mix of requests and error objects.
Only httr2 errors are captured; see req_error()
for more details.
# Requesting these 4 pages one at a time would take 2 seconds: request_base <- request(example_url()) reqs <- list( request_base |> req_url_path("/delay/0.5"), request_base |> req_url_path("/delay/0.5"), request_base |> req_url_path("/delay/0.5"), request_base |> req_url_path("/delay/0.5") ) # But it's much faster if you request in parallel system.time(resps <- req_perform_parallel(reqs)) # req_perform_parallel() will fail on error reqs <- list( request_base |> req_url_path("/status/200"), request_base |> req_url_path("/status/400"), request("FAILURE") ) try(resps <- req_perform_parallel(reqs)) # but can use on_error to capture all successful results resps <- req_perform_parallel(reqs, on_error = "continue") # Inspect the successful responses resps |> resps_successes() # And the failed responses resps |> resps_failures() |> resps_requests()
# Requesting these 4 pages one at a time would take 2 seconds: request_base <- request(example_url()) reqs <- list( request_base |> req_url_path("/delay/0.5"), request_base |> req_url_path("/delay/0.5"), request_base |> req_url_path("/delay/0.5"), request_base |> req_url_path("/delay/0.5") ) # But it's much faster if you request in parallel system.time(resps <- req_perform_parallel(reqs)) # req_perform_parallel() will fail on error reqs <- list( request_base |> req_url_path("/status/200"), request_base |> req_url_path("/status/400"), request("FAILURE") ) try(resps <- req_perform_parallel(reqs)) # but can use on_error to capture all successful results resps <- req_perform_parallel(reqs, on_error = "continue") # Inspect the successful responses resps |> resps_successes() # And the failed responses resps |> resps_failures() |> resps_requests()
This variation on req_perform()
returns a promises::promise()
object immediately
and then performs the request in the background, returning program control before the request
is finished. See the
promises package documentation
for more details on how to work with the resulting promise object.
If using together with later::with_temp_loop()
or other private event loops,
a new curl pool made by curl::new_pool()
should be created for requests made
within the loop to ensure that only these requests are being polled by the loop.
Like with req_perform_parallel()
, exercise caution when using this function;
it's easy to pummel a server with many simultaneous requests. Also, not all servers
can handle more than 1 request at a time, so the responses may still return
sequentially.
req_perform_promise()
also has similar limitations to the
req_perform_parallel()
function, it:
Will not retrieve a new OAuth token if it expires after the promised request is created but before it is actually requested.
Does not perform throttling with req_throttle()
.
Does not attempt retries as described by req_retry()
.
Only consults the cache set by req_cache()
when the request is promised.
req_perform_promise(req, path = NULL, pool = NULL)
req_perform_promise(req, path = NULL, pool = NULL)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
path |
Optionally, path to save body of the response. This is useful for large responses since it avoids storing the response in memory. |
pool |
Optionally, a curl pool made by |
a promises::promise()
object which resolves to a response if
successful or rejects on the same errors thrown by req_perform()
.
## Not run: library(promises) request_base <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path_append("delay") p <- request_base |> req_url_path_append(2) |> req_perform_promise() # A promise object, not particularly useful on its own p # Use promise chaining functions to access results p %...>% resp_body_json() %...>% print() # Can run two requests at the same time p1 <- request_base |> req_url_path_append(2) |> req_perform_promise() p2 <- request_base |> req_url_path_append(1) |> req_perform_promise() p1 %...>% resp_url_path %...>% paste0(., " finished") %...>% print() p2 %...>% resp_url_path %...>% paste0(., " finished") %...>% print() # See the [promises package documentation](https://rstudio.github.io/promises/) # for more information on working with promises ## End(Not run)
## Not run: library(promises) request_base <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path_append("delay") p <- request_base |> req_url_path_append(2) |> req_perform_promise() # A promise object, not particularly useful on its own p # Use promise chaining functions to access results p %...>% resp_body_json() %...>% print() # Can run two requests at the same time p1 <- request_base |> req_url_path_append(2) |> req_perform_promise() p2 <- request_base |> req_url_path_append(1) |> req_perform_promise() p1 %...>% resp_url_path %...>% paste0(., " finished") %...>% print() p2 %...>% resp_url_path %...>% paste0(., " finished") %...>% print() # See the [promises package documentation](https://rstudio.github.io/promises/) # for more information on working with promises ## End(Not run)
Given a list of requests, this function performs each in turn, returning
a list of responses. It's slower than req_perform_parallel()
but
has fewer limitations.
req_perform_sequential( reqs, paths = NULL, on_error = c("stop", "return", "continue"), progress = TRUE )
req_perform_sequential( reqs, paths = NULL, on_error = c("stop", "return", "continue"), progress = TRUE )
reqs |
A list of requests. |
paths |
An optional character vector of paths, if you want to download
the response bodies to disk. If supplied, must be the same length as
|
on_error |
What should happen if one of the requests fails?
|
progress |
Display a progress bar for the status of all requests? Use
|
A list, the same length as reqs
, containing responses and possibly
error objects, if on_error
is "return"
or "continue"
and one of the
responses errors. If on_error
is "return"
and it errors on the ith
request, the ith element of the result will be an error object, and the
remaining elements will be NULL
. If on_error
is "continue"
, it will
be a mix of requests and error objects.
Only httr2 errors are captured; see req_error()
for more details.
# One use of req_perform_sequential() is if the API allows you to request # data for multiple objects, you want data for more objects than can fit # in one request. req <- request("https://api.restful-api.dev/objects") # Imagine we have 50 ids: ids <- sort(sample(100, 50)) # But the API only allows us to request 10 at time. So we first use split # and some modulo arithmetic magic to generate chunks of length 10 chunks <- unname(split(ids, (seq_along(ids) - 1) %/% 10)) # Then we use lapply to generate one request for each chunk: reqs <- chunks |> lapply(\(idx) req |> req_url_query(id = idx, .multi = "comma")) # Then we can perform them all and get the results ## Not run: resps <- reqs |> req_perform_sequential() resps_data(resps, \(resp) resp_body_json(resp)) ## End(Not run)
# One use of req_perform_sequential() is if the API allows you to request # data for multiple objects, you want data for more objects than can fit # in one request. req <- request("https://api.restful-api.dev/objects") # Imagine we have 50 ids: ids <- sort(sample(100, 50)) # But the API only allows us to request 10 at time. So we first use split # and some modulo arithmetic magic to generate chunks of length 10 chunks <- unname(split(ids, (seq_along(ids) - 1) %/% 10)) # Then we use lapply to generate one request for each chunk: reqs <- chunks |> lapply(\(idx) req |> req_url_query(id = idx, .multi = "comma")) # Then we can perform them all and get the results ## Not run: resps <- reqs |> req_perform_sequential() resps_data(resps, \(resp) resp_body_json(resp)) ## End(Not run)
After preparing a request, call req_perform_stream()
to perform the request
and handle the result with a streaming callback. This is useful for
streaming HTTP APIs where potentially the stream never ends.
The callback
will only be called if the result is successful. If you need
to stream an error response, you can use req_error()
to suppress error
handling so that the body is streamed to you.
req_perform_stream( req, callback, timeout_sec = Inf, buffer_kb = 64, round = c("byte", "line") )
req_perform_stream( req, callback, timeout_sec = Inf, buffer_kb = 64, round = c("byte", "line") )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
callback |
A single argument callback function. It will be called
repeatedly with a raw vector whenever there is at least |
timeout_sec |
Number of seconds to process stream for. |
buffer_kb |
Buffer size, in kilobytes. |
round |
How should the raw vector sent to |
An HTTP response. The body will be empty if the request was
successful (since the callback
function will have handled it). The body
will contain the HTTP response body if the request was unsuccessful.
show_bytes <- function(x) { cat("Got ", length(x), " bytes\n", sep = "") TRUE } resp <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/stream-bytes/100000") |> req_perform_stream(show_bytes, buffer_kb = 32) resp
show_bytes <- function(x) { cat("Got ", length(x), " bytes\n", sep = "") TRUE } resp <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/stream-bytes/100000") |> req_perform_stream(show_bytes, buffer_kb = 32) resp
When uploading or downloading a large file, it's often useful to provide a progress bar so that you know how long you have to wait.
req_progress(req, type = c("down", "up"))
req_progress(req, type = c("down", "up"))
req |
A request. |
type |
Type of progress to display: either number of bytes uploaded or downloaded. |
req <- request("https://r4ds.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/seattle-library-checkouts.csv") |> req_progress() ## Not run: path <- tempfile() req |> req_perform(path = path) ## End(Not run)
req <- request("https://r4ds.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/seattle-library-checkouts.csv") |> req_progress() ## Not run: path <- tempfile() req |> req_perform(path = path) ## End(Not run)
Use a proxy for a request
req_proxy( req, url, port = NULL, username = NULL, password = NULL, auth = "basic" )
req_proxy( req, url, port = NULL, username = NULL, password = NULL, auth = "basic" )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
url , port
|
Location of proxy. |
username , password
|
Login details for proxy, if needed. |
auth |
Type of HTTP authentication to use. Should be one of the
following: |
# Proxy from https://www.proxynova.com/proxy-server-list/ ## Not run: request("http://hadley.nz") |> req_proxy("20.116.130.70", 3128) |> req_perform() ## End(Not run)
# Proxy from https://www.proxynova.com/proxy-server-list/ ## Not run: request("http://hadley.nz") |> req_proxy("20.116.130.70", 3128) |> req_perform() ## End(Not run)
req_retry()
allows req_perform()
to automatically retry failing
requests. It's particularly important for APIs with rate limiting, but can
also be useful when dealing with flaky servers.
By default, req_perform()
will retry if the response is a 429
("too many requests", often used for rate limiting) or 503
("service unavailable"). If the API you are wrapping has other transient
status codes (or conveys transience with some other property of the
response), you can override the default with is_transient
. And
if you set retry_on_failure = TRUE
, the request will retry
if either the HTTP request or HTTP response doesn't complete successfully,
leading to an error from curl, the lower-level library that httr2 uses to
perform HTTP requests. This occurs, for example, if your Wi-Fi is down.
It's a bad idea to immediately retry a request, so req_perform()
will
wait a little before trying again:
If the response contains the Retry-After
header, httr2 will wait the
amount of time it specifies. If the API you are wrapping conveys this
information with a different header (or other property of the response),
you can override the default behavior with retry_after
.
Otherwise, httr2 will use "truncated exponential backoff with full
jitter", i.e., it will wait a random amount of time between one second and
2 ^ tries
seconds, capped at a maximum of 60 seconds. In other words, it
waits runif(1, 1, 2)
seconds after the first failure, runif(1, 1, 4)
after the second, runif(1, 1, 8)
after the third, and so on. If you'd
prefer a different strategy, you can override the default with backoff
.
req_retry( req, max_tries = NULL, max_seconds = NULL, retry_on_failure = FALSE, is_transient = NULL, backoff = NULL, after = NULL )
req_retry( req, max_tries = NULL, max_seconds = NULL, retry_on_failure = FALSE, is_transient = NULL, backoff = NULL, after = NULL )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
max_tries , max_seconds
|
Cap the maximum number of attempts
(
|
retry_on_failure |
Treat low-level failures as if they are transient errors that can be retried. |
is_transient |
A predicate function that takes a single argument
(the response) and returns |
backoff |
A function that takes a single argument (the number of failed attempts so far) and returns the number of seconds to wait. |
after |
A function that takes a single argument (the response) and
returns either a number of seconds to wait or |
A modified HTTP request.
req_throttle()
if the API has a rate-limit but doesn't expose
the limits in the response.
# google APIs assume that a 500 is also a transient error request("http://google.com") |> req_retry(is_transient = \(resp) resp_status(resp) %in% c(429, 500, 503)) # use a constant 10s delay after every failure request("http://example.com") |> req_retry(backoff = \(resp) 10) # When rate-limited, GitHub's API returns a 403 with # `X-RateLimit-Remaining: 0` and an Unix time stored in the # `X-RateLimit-Reset` header. This takes a bit more work to handle: github_is_transient <- function(resp) { resp_status(resp) == 403 && identical(resp_header(resp, "X-RateLimit-Remaining"), "0") } github_after <- function(resp) { time <- as.numeric(resp_header(resp, "X-RateLimit-Reset")) time - unclass(Sys.time()) } request("http://api.github.com") |> req_retry( is_transient = github_is_transient, after = github_after )
# google APIs assume that a 500 is also a transient error request("http://google.com") |> req_retry(is_transient = \(resp) resp_status(resp) %in% c(429, 500, 503)) # use a constant 10s delay after every failure request("http://example.com") |> req_retry(backoff = \(resp) 10) # When rate-limited, GitHub's API returns a 403 with # `X-RateLimit-Remaining: 0` and an Unix time stored in the # `X-RateLimit-Reset` header. This takes a bit more work to handle: github_is_transient <- function(resp) { resp_status(resp) == 403 && identical(resp_header(resp, "X-RateLimit-Remaining"), "0") } github_after <- function(resp) { time <- as.numeric(resp_header(resp, "X-RateLimit-Reset")) time - unclass(Sys.time()) } request("http://api.github.com") |> req_retry( is_transient = github_is_transient, after = github_after )
Many APIs document their methods with a lightweight template mechanism
that looks like GET /user/{user}
or POST /organisation/:org
. This
function makes it easy to copy and paste such snippets and retrieve template
variables either from function arguments or the current environment.
req_template()
will append to the existing path so that you can set a
base url in the initial request()
. This means that you'll generally want
to avoid multiple req_template()
calls on the same request.
req_template(req, template, ..., .env = parent.frame())
req_template(req, template, ..., .env = parent.frame())
req |
A httr2 request object. |
template |
A template string which consists of a optional HTTP method
and a path containing variables labelled like either |
... |
Template variables. |
.env |
Environment in which to look for template variables not found
in |
A modified HTTP request.
httpbin <- request(example_url()) # You can supply template parameters in `...` httpbin |> req_template("GET /bytes/{n}", n = 100) # or you retrieve from the current environment n <- 200 httpbin |> req_template("GET /bytes/{n}") # Existing path is preserved: httpbin_test <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/test") name <- "id" value <- "a3fWa" httpbin_test |> req_template("GET /set/{name}/{value}")
httpbin <- request(example_url()) # You can supply template parameters in `...` httpbin |> req_template("GET /bytes/{n}", n = 100) # or you retrieve from the current environment n <- 200 httpbin |> req_template("GET /bytes/{n}") # Existing path is preserved: httpbin_test <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/test") name <- "id" value <- "a3fWa" httpbin_test |> req_template("GET /set/{name}/{value}")
Use req_throttle()
to ensure that repeated calls to req_perform()
never
exceed a specified rate.
req_throttle(req, rate, realm = NULL)
req_throttle(req, rate, realm = NULL)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
rate |
Maximum rate, i.e. maximum number of requests per second.
Usually easiest expressed as a fraction,
|
realm |
A string that uniquely identifies the throttle pool to use (throttling limits always apply per pool). If not supplied, defaults to the hostname of the request. |
A modified HTTP request.
req_retry()
for another way of handling rate-limited APIs.
# Ensure we never send more than 30 requests a minute req <- request(example_url()) |> req_throttle(rate = 30 / 60) resp <- req_perform(req) throttle_status() resp <- req_perform(req) throttle_status()
# Ensure we never send more than 30 requests a minute req <- request(example_url()) |> req_throttle(rate = 30 / 60) resp <- req_perform(req) throttle_status() resp <- req_perform(req) throttle_status()
An error will be thrown if the request does not complete in the time limit.
req_timeout(req, seconds)
req_timeout(req, seconds)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
seconds |
Maximum number of seconds to wait |
A modified HTTP request.
# Give up after at most 10 seconds request("http://example.com") |> req_timeout(10)
# Give up after at most 10 seconds request("http://example.com") |> req_timeout(10)
req_url()
replaces the entire url
req_url_query()
modifies the components of the query
req_url_path()
modifies the path
req_url_path_append()
adds to the path
req_url(req, url) req_url_relative(req, url) req_url_query(.req, ..., .multi = c("error", "comma", "pipe", "explode")) req_url_path(req, ...) req_url_path_append(req, ...)
req_url(req, url) req_url_relative(req, url) req_url_query(.req, ..., .multi = c("error", "comma", "pipe", "explode")) req_url_path(req, ...) req_url_path_append(req, ...)
req , .req
|
A httr2 request object. |
url |
New URL; completely replaces existing. |
... |
For For |
.multi |
Controls what happens when an element of
If none of these options work for your needs, you can instead supply a function that takes a character vector of argument values and returns a a single string. |
A modified HTTP request.
req <- request("http://example.com") # Change url components req |> req_url_path_append("a") |> req_url_path_append("b") |> req_url_path_append("search.html") |> req_url_query(q = "the cool ice") # Change complete url req |> req_url("http://google.com") # Use a relative url req <- request("http://example.com/a/b/c") req |> req_url_relative("..") req |> req_url_relative("/d/e/f") # Use .multi to control what happens with vector parameters: req |> req_url_query(id = 100:105, .multi = "comma") req |> req_url_query(id = 100:105, .multi = "explode") # If you have query parameters in a list, use !!! params <- list(a = "1", b = "2") req |> req_url_query(!!!params, c = "3")
req <- request("http://example.com") # Change url components req |> req_url_path_append("a") |> req_url_path_append("b") |> req_url_path_append("search.html") |> req_url_query(q = "the cool ice") # Change complete url req |> req_url("http://google.com") # Use a relative url req <- request("http://example.com/a/b/c") req |> req_url_relative("..") req |> req_url_relative("/d/e/f") # Use .multi to control what happens with vector parameters: req |> req_url_query(id = 100:105, .multi = "comma") req |> req_url_query(id = 100:105, .multi = "explode") # If you have query parameters in a list, use !!! params <- list(a = "1", b = "2") req |> req_url_query(!!!params, c = "3")
This overrides the default user-agent set by httr2 which includes the version numbers of httr2, the curl package, and libcurl.
req_user_agent(req, string = NULL)
req_user_agent(req, string = NULL)
req |
A httr2 request object. |
string |
String to be sent in the |
A modified HTTP request.
# Default user-agent: request("http://example.com") |> req_dry_run() request("http://example.com") |> req_user_agent("MyString") |> req_dry_run() # If you're wrapping in an API in a package, it's polite to set the # user agent to identify your package. request("http://example.com") |> req_user_agent("MyPackage (http://mypackage.com)") |> req_dry_run()
# Default user-agent: request("http://example.com") |> req_dry_run() request("http://example.com") |> req_user_agent("MyString") |> req_dry_run() # If you're wrapping in an API in a package, it's polite to set the # user agent to identify your package. request("http://example.com") |> req_user_agent("MyPackage (http://mypackage.com)") |> req_dry_run()
req_verbose()
uses the following prefixes to distinguish between
different components of the HTTP requests and responses:
*
informative curl messages
->
request headers
>>
request body
<-
response headers
<<
response body
req_verbose( req, header_req = TRUE, header_resp = TRUE, body_req = FALSE, body_resp = FALSE, info = FALSE, redact_headers = TRUE )
req_verbose( req, header_req = TRUE, header_resp = TRUE, body_req = FALSE, body_resp = FALSE, info = FALSE, redact_headers = TRUE )
req |
A httr2 request object. |
header_req , header_resp
|
Show request/response headers? |
body_req , body_resp
|
Should request/response bodies? When the response body is compressed, this will show the number of bytes received in each "chunk". |
info |
Show informational text from curl? This is mainly useful for debugging https and auth problems, so is disabled by default. |
redact_headers |
Redact confidential data in the headers? Currently redacts the contents of the Authorization header to prevent you from accidentally leaking credentials when debugging/reprexing. |
A modified HTTP request.
req_perform()
which exposes a limited subset of these options
through the verbosity
argument and with_verbosity()
which allows you
to control the verbosity of requests deeper within the call stack.
# Use `req_verbose()` to see the headers that are sent back and forth when # making a request resp <- request("https://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_verbose() |> req_perform() # Or use one of the convenient shortcuts: resp <- request("https://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_perform(verbosity = 1)
# Use `req_verbose()` to see the headers that are sent back and forth when # making a request resp <- request("https://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_verbose() |> req_perform() # Or use one of the convenient shortcuts: resp <- request("https://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_perform(verbosity = 1)
There are three steps needed to perform a HTTP request with httr2:
Create a request object with request(url)
(this function).
Define its behaviour with req_
functions, e.g.:
req_headers()
to set header values.
req_url_path()
and friends to modify the url.
req_body_json()
and friends to add a body.
req_auth_basic()
to perform basic HTTP authentication.
req_oauth_auth_code()
to use the OAuth auth code flow.
Perform the request and fetch the response with req_perform()
.
request(base_url)
request(base_url)
base_url |
Base URL for request. |
An HTTP request: an S3 list with class httr2_request
.
request("http://r-project.org")
request("http://r-project.org")
resp_body_raw()
returns the raw bytes.
resp_body_string()
returns a UTF-8 string.
resp_body_json()
returns parsed JSON.
resp_body_html()
returns parsed HTML.
resp_body_xml()
returns parsed XML.
resp_has_body()
returns TRUE
if the response has a body.
resp_body_json()
and resp_body_xml()
check that the content-type header
is correct; if the server returns an incorrect type you can suppress the
check with check_type = FALSE
. These two functions also cache the parsed
object so the second and subsequent calls are low-cost.
resp_body_raw(resp) resp_has_body(resp) resp_body_string(resp, encoding = NULL) resp_body_json(resp, check_type = TRUE, simplifyVector = FALSE, ...) resp_body_html(resp, check_type = TRUE, ...) resp_body_xml(resp, check_type = TRUE, ...)
resp_body_raw(resp) resp_has_body(resp) resp_body_string(resp, encoding = NULL) resp_body_json(resp, check_type = TRUE, simplifyVector = FALSE, ...) resp_body_html(resp, check_type = TRUE, ...) resp_body_xml(resp, check_type = TRUE, ...)
resp |
A httr2 response object, created by |
encoding |
Character encoding of the body text. If not specified, will use the encoding specified by the content-type, falling back to UTF-8 with a warning if it cannot be found. The resulting string is always re-encoded to UTF-8. |
check_type |
Check that response has expected content type? Set to
|
simplifyVector |
Should JSON arrays containing only primitives (i.e. booleans, numbers, and strings) be caused to atomic vectors? |
... |
Other arguments passed on to |
resp_body_raw()
returns a raw vector.
resp_body_string()
returns a string.
resp_body_json()
returns NULL, an atomic vector, or list.
resp_body_html()
and resp_body_xml()
return an xml2::xml_document
resp <- request("https://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_perform() resp resp |> resp_has_body() resp |> resp_body_raw() resp |> resp_body_string() if (requireNamespace("xml2", quietly = TRUE)) { resp |> resp_body_html() }
resp <- request("https://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_perform() resp resp |> resp_has_body() resp |> resp_body_raw() resp |> resp_body_string() if (requireNamespace("xml2", quietly = TRUE)) { resp |> resp_body_html() }
A different content type than expected often leads to an error in parsing the response body. This function checks that the content type of the response is as expected and fails otherwise.
resp_check_content_type( resp, valid_types = NULL, valid_suffix = NULL, check_type = TRUE, call = caller_env() )
resp_check_content_type( resp, valid_types = NULL, valid_suffix = NULL, check_type = TRUE, call = caller_env() )
resp |
A httr2 response object, created by |
valid_types |
A character vector of valid MIME types. Should only
be specified with |
valid_suffix |
A string given an "structured media type" suffix. |
check_type |
Should the type actually be checked? Provided as a
convenience for when using this function inside |
call |
The execution environment of a currently
running function, e.g. |
Called for its side-effect; erroring if the response does not have the expected content type.
resp <- response(headers = list(`content-type` = "application/json")) resp_check_content_type(resp, "application/json") try(resp_check_content_type(resp, "application/xml")) # `types` can also specify multiple valid types resp_check_content_type(resp, c("application/xml", "application/json"))
resp <- response(headers = list(`content-type` = "application/json")) resp_check_content_type(resp, "application/json") try(resp_check_content_type(resp, "application/xml")) # `types` can also specify multiple valid types resp_check_content_type(resp, c("application/xml", "application/json"))
resp_content_type()
returns the just the type and subtype of the
from the Content-Type
header. If Content-Type
is not provided; it
returns NA
. Used by resp_body_json()
, resp_body_html()
, and
resp_body_xml()
.
resp_encoding()
returns the likely character encoding of text
types, as parsed from the charset
parameter of the Content-Type
header. If that header is not found, not valid, or no charset parameter
is found, returns UTF-8
. Used by resp_body_string()
.
resp_content_type(resp) resp_encoding(resp)
resp_content_type(resp) resp_encoding(resp)
resp |
A httr2 response object, created by |
A string. If no content type is specified resp_content_type()
will return a character NA
; if no encoding is specified,
resp_encoding()
will return "UTF-8"
.
resp <- response(headers = "Content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8") resp |> resp_content_type() resp |> resp_encoding() # No Content-Type header resp <- response() resp |> resp_content_type() resp |> resp_encoding()
resp <- response(headers = "Content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8") resp |> resp_content_type() resp |> resp_encoding() # No Content-Type header resp <- response() resp |> resp_content_type() resp |> resp_encoding()
All responses contain a request date in the Date
header; if not provided
by the server will be automatically added by httr2.
resp_date(resp)
resp_date(resp)
resp |
A httr2 response object, created by |
A POSIXct
date-time.
resp <- response(headers = "Date: Wed, 01 Jan 2020 09:23:15 UTC") resp |> resp_date() # If server doesn't add header (unusual), you get the time the request # was created: resp <- response() resp |> resp_date()
resp <- response(headers = "Date: Wed, 01 Jan 2020 09:23:15 UTC") resp |> resp_date() # If server doesn't add header (unusual), you get the time the request # was created: resp <- response() resp |> resp_date()
resp_headers()
retrieves a list of all headers.
resp_header()
retrieves a single header.
resp_header_exists()
checks if a header is present.
resp_headers(resp, filter = NULL) resp_header(resp, header, default = NULL) resp_header_exists(resp, header)
resp_headers(resp, filter = NULL) resp_header(resp, header, default = NULL) resp_header_exists(resp, header)
resp |
A httr2 response object, created by |
filter |
A regular expression used to filter the header names.
|
header |
Header name (case insensitive) |
default |
Default value to use if header doesn't exist. |
resp_headers()
returns a list.
resp_header()
returns a string if the header exists and NULL
otherwise.
resp_header_exists()
returns TRUE
or FALSE
.
resp <- request("https://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_perform() resp |> resp_headers() resp |> resp_headers("x-") resp |> resp_header_exists("server") resp |> resp_header("server") # Headers are case insensitive resp |> resp_header("SERVER") # Returns NULL if header doesn't exist resp |> resp_header("this-header-doesnt-exist")
resp <- request("https://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_perform() resp |> resp_headers() resp |> resp_headers("x-") resp |> resp_header_exists("server") resp |> resp_header("server") # Headers are case insensitive resp |> resp_header("SERVER") # Returns NULL if header doesn't exist resp |> resp_header("this-header-doesnt-exist")
Parses URLs out of the the Link
header as defined by RFC 8288.
resp_link_url(resp, rel)
resp_link_url(resp, rel)
resp |
A httr2 response object, created by |
rel |
The "link relation type" value for which to retrieve a URL. |
Either a string providing a URL, if the specified rel
exists, or
NULL
if not.
# Simulate response from GitHub code search resp <- response(headers = paste0("Link: ", '<https://api.github.com/search/code?q=addClass+user%3Amozilla&page=2>; rel="next",', '<https://api.github.com/search/code?q=addClass+user%3Amozilla&page=34>; rel="last"' )) resp_link_url(resp, "next") resp_link_url(resp, "last") resp_link_url(resp, "prev")
# Simulate response from GitHub code search resp <- response(headers = paste0("Link: ", '<https://api.github.com/search/code?q=addClass+user%3Amozilla&page=2>; rel="next",', '<https://api.github.com/search/code?q=addClass+user%3Amozilla&page=34>; rel="last"' )) resp_link_url(resp, "next") resp_link_url(resp, "last") resp_link_url(resp, "prev")
This function reconstructs the HTTP message that httr2 received from the server. It's unlikely to be exactly byte-for-byte identical (because most servers compress at least the body, and HTTP/2 can also compress the headers), but it conveys the same information.
resp_raw(resp)
resp_raw(resp)
resp |
A httr2 response object, created by |
resp
(invisibly).
resp <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/json") |> req_perform() resp |> resp_raw()
resp <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/json") |> req_perform() resp |> resp_raw()
Computes how many seconds you should wait before retrying a request by
inspecting the Retry-After
header. It parses both forms (absolute and
relative) and returns the number of seconds to wait. If the heading is not
found, it will return NA
.
resp_retry_after(resp)
resp_retry_after(resp)
resp |
A httr2 response object, created by |
Scalar double giving the number of seconds to wait before retrying a request.
resp <- response(headers = "Retry-After: 30") resp |> resp_retry_after() resp <- response(headers = "Retry-After: Mon, 20 Sep 2025 21:44:05 UTC") resp |> resp_retry_after()
resp <- response(headers = "Retry-After: 30") resp |> resp_retry_after() resp <- response(headers = "Retry-After: Mon, 20 Sep 2025 21:44:05 UTC") resp |> resp_retry_after()
resp_status()
retrieves the numeric HTTP status code
resp_status_desc()
retrieves the brief textual description.
resp_is_error()
returns TRUE
if the status code represents an error
(i.e. a 4xx or 5xx status).
resp_check_status()
turns HTTPs errors into R errors.
These functions are mostly for internal use because in most cases you will only ever see a 200 response:
1xx are handled internally by curl.
3xx redirects are automatically followed. You will only see them if you
have deliberately suppressed redirects with
req |> req_options(followlocation = FALSE)
.
4xx client and 5xx server errors are automatically turned into R errors.
You can stop them from being turned into R errors with req_error()
,
e.g. req |> req_error(is_error = ~ FALSE)
.
resp_status(resp) resp_status_desc(resp) resp_is_error(resp) resp_check_status(resp, info = NULL, error_call = caller_env())
resp_status(resp) resp_status_desc(resp) resp_is_error(resp) resp_check_status(resp, info = NULL, error_call = caller_env())
resp |
A httr2 response object, created by |
info |
A character vector of additional information to include in
the error message. Passed to |
error_call |
The execution environment of a currently
running function, e.g. |
resp_status()
returns a scalar integer
resp_status_desc()
returns a string
resp_is_error()
returns TRUE
or FALSE
resp_check_status()
invisibly returns the response if it's ok;
otherwise it throws an error with class httr2_http_{status}
.
# An HTTP status code you're unlikely to see in the wild: resp <- response(418) resp |> resp_is_error() resp |> resp_status() resp |> resp_status_desc()
# An HTTP status code you're unlikely to see in the wild: resp <- response(418) resp |> resp_is_error() resp |> resp_status() resp |> resp_status_desc()
resp_stream_raw()
retrieves bytes (raw
vectors).
resp_stream_lines()
retrieves lines of text (character
vectors).
resp_stream_sse()
retrieves a single server-sent event.
resp_stream_aws()
retrieves a single event from an AWS stream
(i.e. mime type 'application/vnd.amazon.eventstream“).
resp_stream_raw(resp, kb = 32) resp_stream_lines(resp, lines = 1, max_size = Inf, warn = TRUE) resp_stream_sse(resp, max_size = Inf) resp_stream_aws(resp, max_size = Inf) ## S3 method for class 'httr2_response' close(con, ...)
resp_stream_raw(resp, kb = 32) resp_stream_lines(resp, lines = 1, max_size = Inf, warn = TRUE) resp_stream_sse(resp, max_size = Inf) resp_stream_aws(resp, max_size = Inf) ## S3 method for class 'httr2_response' close(con, ...)
resp , con
|
A streaming response created by |
kb |
How many kilobytes (1024 bytes) of data to read. |
lines |
The maximum number of lines to return at once. |
max_size |
The maximum number of bytes to buffer; once this number of bytes has been exceeded without a line/event boundary, an error is thrown. |
warn |
Like |
... |
Not used; included for compatibility with generic. |
resp_stream_raw()
: a raw vector.
resp_stream_lines()
: a character vector.
resp_stream_sse()
: a list with components type
, data
, and id
resp_stream_aws()
: a list with components headers
and body
.
body
will be automatically parsed if the event contents a :content-type
header with application/json
.
resp_stream_sse()
and resp_stream_aws()
will return NULL
to signal that
the end of the stream has been reached or, if in nonblocking mode, that
no event is currently available.
resp_url()
returns the complete url.
resp_url_path()
returns the path component.
resp_url_query()
returns a single query component.
resp_url_queries()
returns the query component as a named list.
resp_url(resp) resp_url_path(resp) resp_url_query(resp, name, default = NULL) resp_url_queries(resp)
resp_url(resp) resp_url_path(resp) resp_url_query(resp, name, default = NULL) resp_url_queries(resp)
resp |
A httr2 response object, created by |
name |
Query parameter name. |
default |
Default value to use if query parameter doesn't exist. |
resp <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/get?hello=world") |> req_perform() resp |> resp_url() resp |> resp_url_path() resp |> resp_url_queries() resp |> resp_url_query("hello")
resp <- request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/get?hello=world") |> req_perform() resp |> resp_url() resp |> resp_url_path() resp |> resp_url_queries() resp |> resp_url_query("hello")
These function provide a basic toolkit for operating with lists of
responses and possibly errors, as returned by req_perform_parallel()
,
req_perform_sequential()
and req_perform_iterative()
.
resps_successes()
returns a list successful responses.
resps_failures()
returns a list failed responses (i.e. errors).
resps_requests()
returns the list of requests that corresponds to
each request.
resps_data()
returns all the data in a single vector or data frame.
It requires the vctrs package to be installed.
resps_successes(resps) resps_failures(resps) resps_requests(resps) resps_data(resps, resp_data)
resps_successes(resps) resps_failures(resps) resps_requests(resps) resps_data(resps, resp_data)
resps |
A list of responses (possibly including errors). |
resp_data |
A function that takes a response ( |
reqs <- list( request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/ip"), request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/user-agent"), request(example_url()) |> req_template("/status/:status", status = 404), request("INVALID") ) resps <- req_perform_parallel(reqs, on_error = "continue") # find successful responses resps |> resps_successes() # collect all their data resps |> resps_successes() |> resps_data(\(resp) resp_body_json(resp)) # find requests corresponding to failure responses resps |> resps_failures() |> resps_requests()
reqs <- list( request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/ip"), request(example_url()) |> req_url_path("/user-agent"), request(example_url()) |> req_template("/status/:status", status = 404), request("INVALID") ) resps <- req_perform_parallel(reqs, on_error = "continue") # find successful responses resps |> resps_successes() # collect all their data resps |> resps_successes() |> resps_data(\(resp) resp_body_json(resp)) # find requests corresponding to failure responses resps |> resps_failures() |> resps_requests()
httr2 provides a handful of functions designed for working with confidential data. These are useful because testing packages that use httr2 often requires some confidential data that needs to be available for testing, but should not be available to package users.
secret_encrypt()
and secret_decrypt()
work with individual strings
secret_encrypt_file()
encrypts a file in place and
secret_decrypt_file()
decrypts a file in a temporary location.
secret_write_rds()
and secret_read_rds()
work with .rds
files
secret_make_key()
generates a random string to use as a key.
secret_has_key()
returns TRUE
if the key is available; you can
use it in examples and vignettes that you want to evaluate on your CI,
but not for CRAN/package users.
These all look for the key in an environment variable. When used inside of
testthat, they will automatically testthat::skip()
the test if the env var
isn't found. (Outside of testthat, they'll error if the env var isn't
found.)
secret_make_key() secret_encrypt(x, key) secret_decrypt(encrypted, key) secret_write_rds(x, path, key) secret_read_rds(path, key) secret_decrypt_file(path, key, envir = parent.frame()) secret_encrypt_file(path, key) secret_has_key(key)
secret_make_key() secret_encrypt(x, key) secret_decrypt(encrypted, key) secret_write_rds(x, path, key) secret_read_rds(path, key) secret_decrypt_file(path, key, envir = parent.frame()) secret_encrypt_file(path, key) secret_has_key(key)
x |
Object to encrypt. Must be a string for |
key |
Encryption key; this is the password that allows you to "lock"
and "unlock" the secret. The easiest way to specify this is as the
name of an environment variable. Alternatively, if you already have
a base64url encoded string, you can wrap it in |
encrypted |
String to decrypt |
path |
Path to file to encrypted file to read or write. For
|
envir |
The decrypted file will be automatically deleted when this environment exits. You should only need to set this argument if you want to pass the unencrypted file to another function. |
secret_decrypt()
and secret_encrypt()
return strings.
secret_decrypt_file()
returns a path to a temporary file;
secret_encrypt_file()
encrypts the file in place.
secret_write_rds()
returns x
invisibly; secret_read_rds()
returns the saved object.
secret_make_key()
returns a string with class AsIs
.
secret_has_key()
returns TRUE
or FALSE
.
Use secret_make_key()
to generate a password. Make this available
as an env var (e.g. {MYPACKAGE}_KEY
) by adding a line to your
.Renviron
.
Encrypt strings with secret_encrypt()
, files with
secret_encrypt_file()
, and other data with secret_write_rds()
,
setting key = "{MYPACKAGE}_KEY"
.
In your tests, decrypt the data with secret_decrypt()
,
secret_decrypt_file()
, or secret_read_rds()
to match how you encrypt
it.
If you push this code to your CI server, it will already "work" because
all functions automatically skip tests when your {MYPACKAGE}_KEY
env var isn't set. To make the tests actually run, you'll need to set
the env var using whatever tool your CI system provides for setting
env vars. Make sure to carefully inspect the test output to check that
the skips have actually gone away.
key <- secret_make_key() path <- tempfile() secret_write_rds(mtcars, path, key = key) secret_read_rds(path, key) # While you can manage the key explicitly in a variable, it's much # easier to store in an environment variable. In real life, you should # NEVER use `Sys.setenv()` to create this env var because you will # also store the secret in your `.Rhistory`. Instead add it to your # .Renviron using `usethis::edit_r_environ()` or similar. Sys.setenv("MY_KEY" = key) x <- secret_encrypt("This is a secret", "MY_KEY") x secret_decrypt(x, "MY_KEY")
key <- secret_make_key() path <- tempfile() secret_write_rds(mtcars, path, key = key) secret_read_rds(path, key) # While you can manage the key explicitly in a variable, it's much # easier to store in an environment variable. In real life, you should # NEVER use `Sys.setenv()` to create this env var because you will # also store the secret in your `.Rhistory`. Instead add it to your # .Renviron using `usethis::edit_r_environ()` or similar. Sys.setenv("MY_KEY" = key) x <- secret_encrypt("This is a secret", "MY_KEY") x secret_decrypt(x, "MY_KEY")
This is the inverse of url_parse()
, taking a parsed URL object and
turning it back into a string.
url_build(url)
url_build(url)
url |
An URL object created by url_parse. |
Other URL manipulation:
url_modify()
,
url_parse()
Modify components of a URL. The default value of each argument, NULL
,
means leave the component as is. If you want to remove a component,
set it to ""
. Note that setting scheme
or hostname
to ""
will
create a relative URL.
url_modify( url, scheme = NULL, hostname = NULL, username = NULL, password = NULL, port = NULL, path = NULL, query = NULL, fragment = NULL )
url_modify( url, scheme = NULL, hostname = NULL, username = NULL, password = NULL, port = NULL, path = NULL, query = NULL, fragment = NULL )
url |
A string or parsed URL. |
scheme |
The scheme, typically either |
hostname |
The hostname, e.g., |
username , password
|
Username and password to embed in the URL. Not generally recommended but needed for some legacy applications. |
port |
An integer port number. |
path |
The path, e.g., |
query |
Either a query string or a named list of query components. |
fragment |
The fragment, e.g., |
An object of the same type as url
.
Other URL manipulation:
url_build()
,
url_parse()
url_modify("http://hadley.nz", path = "about") url_modify("http://hadley.nz", scheme = "https") url_modify("http://hadley.nz/abc", path = "/cde") url_modify("http://hadley.nz/abc", path = "") url_modify("http://hadley.nz?a=1", query = "b=2") url_modify("http://hadley.nz?a=1", query = list(c = 3))
url_modify("http://hadley.nz", path = "about") url_modify("http://hadley.nz", scheme = "https") url_modify("http://hadley.nz/abc", path = "/cde") url_modify("http://hadley.nz/abc", path = "") url_modify("http://hadley.nz?a=1", query = "b=2") url_modify("http://hadley.nz?a=1", query = list(c = 3))
url_parse()
parses a URL into its component parts, powered by
curl::curl_parse_url()
. The parsing algorithm follows the specifications
detailed in RFC 3986.
url_parse(url, base_url = NULL)
url_parse(url, base_url = NULL)
url |
A string containing the URL to parse. |
base_url |
Use this as a parent, if |
An S3 object of class httr2_url
with the following components:
scheme
, hostname
, username
, password
, port
, path
, query
, and
fragment
.
Other URL manipulation:
url_build()
,
url_modify()
url_parse("http://google.com/") url_parse("http://google.com:80/") url_parse("http://google.com:80/?a=1&b=2") url_parse("http://[email protected]:80/path;test?a=1&b=2#40") # You can parse a relative URL if you also provide a base url url_parse("foo", "http://google.com/bar/") url_parse("..", "http://google.com/bar/")
url_parse("http://google.com/") url_parse("http://google.com:80/") url_parse("http://google.com:80/?a=1&b=2") url_parse("http://[email protected]:80/path;test?a=1&b=2#40") # You can parse a relative URL if you also provide a base url url_parse("foo", "http://google.com/bar/") url_parse("..", "http://google.com/bar/")
Mocking allows you to selectively and temporarily replace the response you would typically receive from a request with your own code. It's primarily used for testing.
with_mocked_responses(mock, code) local_mocked_responses(mock, env = caller_env())
with_mocked_responses(mock, code) local_mocked_responses(mock, env = caller_env())
mock |
A function, a list, or
|
code |
Code to execute in the temporary environment. |
env |
Environment to use for scoping changes. |
with_mock()
returns the result of evaluating code
.
# This function should perform a response against google.com: google <- function() { request("http://google.com") |> req_perform() } # But I can use a mock to instead return my own made up response: my_mock <- function(req) { response(status_code = 403) } try(with_mock(my_mock, google()))
# This function should perform a response against google.com: google <- function() { request("http://google.com") |> req_perform() } # But I can use a mock to instead return my own made up response: my_mock <- function(req) { response(status_code = 403) } try(with_mock(my_mock, google()))
with_verbosity()
is useful for debugging httr2 code buried deep inside
another package because it allows you to see exactly what's been sent
and requested.
with_verbosity(code, verbosity = 1)
with_verbosity(code, verbosity = 1)
code |
Code to execture |
verbosity |
How much information to print? This is a wrapper
around
Use |
The result of evaluating code
.
fun <- function() { request("https://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_perform() } with_verbosity(fun())
fun <- function() { request("https://httr2.r-lib.org") |> req_perform() } with_verbosity(fun())