NAME
HTTP::Request::FromCurl - create a HTTP::Request from a curl command line
SYNOPSIS
my $req = HTTP::Request::FromCurl->new(
# Note - curl itself may not appear
argv => ['https://example.com'],
);
my $req = HTTP::Request::FromCurl->new(
command => 'https://example.com',
);
my $req = HTTP::Request::FromCurl->new(
command_curl => 'curl -A mycurl/1.0 https://example.com',
);
my @requests = HTTP::Request::FromCurl->new(
command_curl => 'curl -A mycurl/1.0 https://example.com https://www.example.com',
);
# Send the requests
for my $r (@requests) {
$ua->request( $r->as_request )
}
RATIONALE
curl
command lines are found everywhere in documentation. The Firefox developer tools can also copy network requests as curl
command lines from the network panel. This module enables converting these to Perl code.
METHODS
->new
my $req = HTTP::Request::FromCurl->new(
# Note - curl itself may not appear
argv => ['--user-agent', 'myscript/1.0', 'https://example.com'],
);
my $req = HTTP::Request::FromCurl->new(
# Note - curl itself may not appear
command => '--user-agent myscript/1.0 https://example.com',
);
The constructor returns one or more HTTP::Request::CurlParameters objects that encapsulate the parameters. If the command generates multiple requests, they will be returned in list context. In scalar context, only the first request will be returned.
my $req = HTTP::Request::FromCurl->new(
command => '--data-binary @/etc/passwd https://example.com',
read_files => 1,
);
Options
- argv
-
An arrayref of commands as could be given in
@ARGV
. - command
-
A scalar in a command line, excluding the
curl
command - command_curl
-
A scalar in a command line, including the
curl
command - read_files
-
Do read in the content of files specified with (for example)
--data=@/etc/passwd
. The default is to not read the contents of files specified this way.
GLOBAL VARIABLES
%default_headers
Contains the default headers added to every request
@option_spec
Contains the Getopt::Long specification of the recognized command line parameters.
The following curl
options are recognized but largely ignored:
--dump-header
--include
--location
--progress-bar
--show-error
--fail
--silent
--verbose
-
If you want to keep session cookies between subsequent requests, you need to provide a cookie jar in your user agent.
--next
-
Resetting the UA between requests is something you need to handle yourself
--parallel
--parallel-immediate
--parallel-max
-
Parallel requests is something you need to handle in the UA
METHODS
->squash_uri( $uri )
my $uri = HTTP::Request::FromCurl->squash_uri(
URI->new( 'https://example.com/foo/bar/..' )
);
# https://example.com/foo/
Helper method to clean up relative path elements from the URI the same way that curl does.
LIVE DEMO
https://corion.net/curl2lwp.psgi
KNOWN DIFFERENCES
Incompatible cookie jar formats
Until somebody writes a robust Netscape cookie file parser and proper loading and storage for HTTP::CookieJar, this module will not be able to load and save files in the format that Curl uses.
Loading/saving cookie jars is the job of the UA
You're expected to instruct your UA to load/save cookie jars:
use Path::Tiny;
use HTTP::CookieJar::LWP;
if( my $cookies = $r->cookie_jar ) {
$ua->cookie_jar( HTTP::CookieJar::LWP->new()->load_cookies(
path($cookies)->lines
));
};
Different Content-Length for POST requests
Different delimiter for form data
The delimiter is built by HTTP::Message, and curl
uses a different mechanism to come up with a unique data delimiter. This results in differences in the raw body content and the Content-Length
header.
MISSING FUNCTIONALITY
File uploads / content from files
While file uploads and reading POST data from files are supported, the content is slurped into memory completely. This can be problematic for large files and little available memory.
Mixed data instances
Multiple mixed instances of
--data
,--data-ascii
,--data-raw
,--data-binary
or--data-raw
are sorted by type first instead of getting concatenated in the order they appear on the command line. If the order is important to you, use one type only.Multiple sets of parameters from the command line
Curl supports the
--next
command line switch which resets parameters for the next URL.This is not (yet) supported.
SEE ALSO
HTTP::Request::AsCurl - for the inverse function
The module HTTP::Request::AsCurl likely also implements a much better version of ->as_curl
than this module.
https://github.com/NickCarneiro/curlconverter - a converter for multiple target languages
REPOSITORY
The public repository of this module is http://github.com/Corion/HTTP-Request-FromCurl.
SUPPORT
The public support forum of this module is https://perlmonks.org/.
BUG TRACKER
Please report bugs in this module via the Github bug queue at https://github.com/Corion/HTTP-Request-FromCurl/issues
AUTHOR
Max Maischein corion@cpan.org
COPYRIGHT (c)
Copyright 2018-2021 by Max Maischein corion@cpan.org
.
LICENSE
This module is released under the same terms as Perl itself.