NAME

IO::Lambda::HTTP - http requests lambda style

DESCRIPTION

The module exports a single predicate http_request that accepts a HTTP::Request object and set of options as parameters. Returns either a HTTP::Response on success, or an error string otherwise.

SYNOPSIS

use HTTP::Request;
use IO::Lambda qw(:all);
use IO::Lambda::HTTP qw(http_request);

lambda {
   context shift;
   http_request {
      my $result = shift;
      if ( ref($result)) {
         print "good: ", length($result-> content), " bytes\n";
      } else {
         print "bad: $result\n";
      }
   }
}-> wait(
    HTTP::Request-> new( GET => "http://www.perl.com/")
);

API

http_request $HTTP::Request

http_request is a lambda predicate that accepts HTTP::Request object in the context. Returns either a HTTP::Response object on success, or error string otherwise.

new $HTTP::Request

Stores HTTP::Request object and returns a new lambda that will finish when the associated request completes. The lambda will return either a HTTP::Response object on success, or an error string otherwise.

OPTIONS

async_dns BOOLEAN

If set, hostname will be resolved with IO::Lambda::DNS using asynchronous Net::DNS. Note that this method won't be able to account for non-DNS (/etc/hosts, NIS) host names.

If unset (default), hostnames will be resolved in a blocking manner.

auth $AUTH

Normally, a request is sent without any authentication. The authentication is only tried after a 401 error is returned. To avoid this first stage, knowing in advance the type of authentication that shall be accepted by the remote, option auth can be used.

username => 'user',
password => 'pass',
auth     => 'Basic',
conn_cache $LWP::ConnCache = undef

The requestor can optionally use a LWP::ConnCache object to reuse connections on per-host per-port basis. Desired for HTTP/1.1. Required for NTLM authentication. See LWP::ConnCache for details.

deadline SECONDS = undef

Aborts a request and returns 'timeout' string if it is not finished by the given deadline (in epoch seconds). If undef, no timeouts occur.

keep_alive BOOLEAN

If set, all incoming requests are silently converted to use HTTP/1.1, and connections are reused. Same as a combination of the following:

$req-> protocol('HTTP/1.1');
$req-> headers-> header( Host => $req-> uri-> host);
new( $req, conn_cache => LWP::ConnCache-> new);
max_redirect NUM = 7

Maximum allowed redirects. If 0, no redirection attemps are made.

preferred_auth $AUTH|%AUTH

List of preferred authentication methods, used to choose the authentication method where there are more than one supported by the server. When the value is a string, the given method is tried first, and then all available methods. When it is a hash, its values are treated as weight factors, - the method with the greatest weight is tried first. Negative values prevent the corresponding methods from being tried.

     # try basic and whatever else
     preferred_auth => 'Basic',

     # try basic and never ntlm
     preferred_auth => {
         Basic => 1,
	 NTLM  => -1,
     },

Note that the current implementation doesn't provide re-trying of authentication if either a method or username/password combination fails. When at least one method was declared by the remote as supported, and was tried and failed, no further retries are made.

proxy HOSTNAME | [ HOSTNAME, PORT ]

If set, HOSTNAME (or HOSTNAME and PORT tuple) is used as HTTP proxy settings.

timeout SECONDS = undef

Maximum allowed time the request can take. If undef, no timeouts occur.

BUGS

Non-blocking connects, and hence the module, don't work on win32 on perl5.8.X due to under-implementation in ext/IO.xs . They do work on 5.10 however.

SEE ALSO

IO::Lambda, HTTP::Request, HTTP::Response

AUTHOR

Dmitry Karasik, <dmitry@karasik.eu.org>.