NAME

REST::Client - A simple client for interacting with RESTful http/https resources

VERSION

version 281

SYNOPSIS

use REST::Client;

#The basic use case
my $client = REST::Client->new();
$client->GET('http://example.com/dir/file.xml');
print $client->responseContent();
 
#A host can be set for convienience
$client->setHost('http://example.com');
$client->PUT('/dir/file.xml', '<example>new content</example>');
if( $client->responseCode() eq '200' ){
    print "Updated\n";
}
 
#custom request headers may be added
$client->addHeader('CustomHeader', 'Value');
 
#response headers may be gathered
print $client->responseHeader('ResponseHeader');
 
#X509 client authentication
$client->setCert('/path/to/ssl.crt');
$client->setKey('/path/to/ssl.key');
 
#add a CA to verify server certificates
$client->setCa('/path/to/ca.file');
 
#you may set a timeout on requests, in seconds
$client->setTimeout(10);
 
#options may be passed as well as set
$client = REST::Client->new({
        host    => 'https://example.com',
        cert    => '/path/to/ssl.crt',
        key     => '/path/to/ssl.key',
        ca      => '/path/to/ca.file',
        timeout => 10,
    });
$client->GET('/dir/file', {CustomHeader => 'Value'});
 
# Requests can be specificed directly as well
$client->request('GET', '/dir/file', 'request body content', {CustomHeader => 'Value'});

# Requests can optionally automatically follow redirects and auth, defaults to
# false 
$client->setFollow(1);

#It is possible to access the L<LWP::UserAgent> object REST::Client is using to
#make requests, and set advanced options on it, for instance:
$client->getUseragent()->proxy(['http'], 'http://proxy.example.com/');
 
# request responses can be written directly to a file 
$client->setContentFile( "FileName" );

# or call back method
$client->setContentFile( \&callback_method );
# see LWP::UserAgent for how to define callback methods

DESCRIPTION

REST::Client provides a simple way to interact with HTTP RESTful resources.

METHODS

Construction and setup

new ( [%$config] )

Construct a new REST::Client. Takes an optional hash or hash reference or config flags. Each config flag also has get/set accessors of the form getHost/setHost, getUseragent/setUseragent, etc. These can be called on the instantiated object to change or check values.

The config flags are:

host

A default host that will be prepended to all requests using relative URLs. Allows you to just specify the path when making requests.

The default is undef - you must include the host in your requests.

timeout

A timeout in seconds for requests made with the client. After the timeout the client will return a 500.

The default is 5 minutes.

cert

The path to a X509 certificate file to be used for client authentication.

The default is to not use a certificate/key pair.

key

The path to a X509 key file to be used for client authentication.

The default is to not use a certificate/key pair.

ca

The path to a certificate authority file to be used to verify host certificates.

The default is to not use a certificates authority.

pkcs12

The path to a PKCS12 certificate to be used for client authentication.

pkcs12password

The password for the PKCS12 certificate specified with 'pkcs12'.

follow

Boolean that determins whether REST::Client attempts to automatically follow redirects/authentication.

The default is false.

useragent

An LWP::UserAgent object, ready to make http requests.

REST::Client will provide a default for you if you do not set this.

addHeader ( $header_name, $value )

Add a custom header to any requests made by this client.

buildQuery ( [...] )

A convienience wrapper around URI::query_form for building query strings from a variety of data structures. See URI

Returns a scalar query string for use in URLs.

Request Methods

Each of these methods makes an HTTP request, sets the internal state of the object, and returns the object.

They can be combined with the response methods, such as:

print $client->GET('/search/?q=foobar')->responseContent();

GET ( $url, [%$headers] )

Preform an HTTP GET to the resource specified. Takes an optional hashref of custom request headers.

PUT ($url, [$body_content, %$headers] )

Preform an HTTP PUT to the resource specified. Takes an optional body content and hashref of custom request headers.

PATCH ( $url, [$body_content, %$headers] )

Preform an HTTP PATCH to the resource specified. Takes an optional body content and hashref of custom request headers.

POST ( $url, [$body_content, %$headers] )

Preform an HTTP POST to the resource specified. Takes an optional body content and hashref of custom request headers.

DELETE ( $url, [%$headers] )

Preform an HTTP DELETE to the resource specified. Takes an optional hashref of custom request headers.

OPTIONS ( $url, [%$headers] )

Preform an HTTP OPTIONS to the resource specified. Takes an optional hashref of custom request headers.

HEAD ( $url, [%$headers] )

Preform an HTTP HEAD to the resource specified. Takes an optional hashref of custom request headers.

request ( $method, $url, [$body_content, %$headers] )

Issue a custom request, providing all possible values.

Response Methods

Use these methods to gather information about the last requset performed.

responseCode ()

Return the HTTP response code of the last request

responseContent ()

Return the response body content of the last request

responseHeaders()

Returns a list of HTTP header names from the last response

responseHeader ( $header )

Return a HTTP header from the last response

responseXpath ()

A convienience wrapper that returns a XML::LibXML xpath context for the body content. Assumes the content is XML.

TODO

Caching, content-type negotiation, readable handles for body content.

AUTHORS

  • Miles Crawford <mcrawfor@cpan.org>

  • Kevin L. Kane <kkane@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2008 by Miles Crawford.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.