libsoup Client Basicslibsoup Client Basics — Client-side tutorial |
This section explains how to use libsoup as an HTTP client using several new APIs introduced in version 2.42. If you want to be compatible with older versions of libsoup, consult the documentation for that version.
The first step in using the client API is to create a SoupSession. The session object encapsulates all of the state that libsoup is keeping on behalf of your program; cached HTTP connections, authentication information, etc.
When you create the session with soup_session_new_with_options
,
you can specify various additional options:
|
Allows you to set the maximum total number of connections the session will have open at one time. (Once it reaches this limit, it will either close idle connections, or wait for existing connections to free up before starting new requests.) The default value is 10. |
|
Allows you to set the maximum total number of connections the session will have open to a single host at one time. The default value is 2. |
|
Allows you to set a User-Agent string that will be sent on all outgoing requests. |
|
Allow you to set an Accept-Language header on all outgoing
requests. |
|
Allow you to tell the session to recognize additional URI
schemes as aliases for " |
|
Alternatively, if you want all requests to go through a
single proxy, you can set |
|
These allow you to specify SoupSessionFeatures (discussed below) to add at construct-time. |
Other properties are also available; see the SoupSession documentation for more details.
If you don't need to specify any options, you can just use soup_session_new
,
which takes no arguments.
Additional session functionality is provided as SoupSessionFeatures,
which can be added to a session, via the SOUP_SESSION_ADD_FEATURE
and SOUP_SESSION_ADD_FEATURE_BY_TYPE
options at session-construction-time, or afterward via the soup_session_add_feature
and soup_session_add_feature_by_type
functions.
A SoupContentDecoder is added for you automatically. This advertises to servers that the client supports compression, and automatically decompresses compressed responses.
Some other available features that you can add include:
SoupLogger |
A debugging aid, which logs all of libsoup's HTTP traffic
to |
SoupCookieJar, SoupCookieJarText, and SoupCookieJarDB |
Support for HTTP cookies. SoupCookieJar provides non-persistent cookie storage, while SoupCookieJarText uses a text file to keep track of cookies between sessions, and SoupCookieJarDB uses a SQLite database. |
SoupContentSniffer |
Uses the HTML5 sniffing rules to attempt to determine the Content-Type of a response when the server does not identify the Content-Type, or appears to have provided an incorrect one. |
Use the "add_feature_by_type" property/function to add features that don't require any configuration (such as SoupContentSniffer), and the "add_feature" property/function to add features that must be constructed first (such as SoupLogger). For example, an application might do something like the following:
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session = soup_session_new_with_options ( SOUP_SESSION_ADD_FEATURE_BY_TYPE, SOUP_TYPE_CONTENT_SNIFFER, NULL); if (debug_level) { SoupLogger *logger; logger = soup_logger_new (debug_level, -1); soup_session_add_feature (session, SOUP_SESSION_FEATURE (logger)); g_object_unref (logger); } |
Once you have a session, you send HTTP requests using SoupMessage. In the simplest case, you only need to create the message and it's ready to send:
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SoupMessage *msg; msg = soup_message_new ("GET", "http://example.com/"); |
In more complicated cases, you can use various SoupMessage, SoupMessageHeaders, and SoupMessageBody methods to set the request headers and body of the message:
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SoupMessage *msg; msg = soup_message_new ("POST", "http://example.com/form.cgi"); soup_message_set_request (msg, "application/x-www-form-urlencoded", SOUP_MEMORY_COPY, formdata, strlen (formdata)); soup_message_headers_append (msg->request_headers, "Referer", referring_url); |
(Although this is a bad example, because libsoup actually has convenience methods for dealing with HTML forms, as well as XML-RPC.)
You can also use soup_message_set_flags
to change some default behaviors. For example, by default,
SoupSession automatically handles responses from the
server that redirect to another URL. If you would like to handle these
yourself, you can set the SOUP_MESSAGE_NO_REDIRECT
flag.
To send a message and wait for the response, use soup_session_send
:
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GInputStream *stream; GError *error = NULL; stream = soup_session_send (session, msg, cancellable, &error); |
At the point when soup_session_send
returns, the
request will have been sent, and the response headers read back in;
you can examine the message's status_code
,
reason_phrase
, and
response_headers
fields to see the response
metadata. To get the response body, read from the returned GInputStream, and close it
when you are done.
Note that soup_session_send
only returns an error
if a transport-level problem occurs (eg, it could not connect to the
host, or the request was cancelled). Use the message's
status_code
field to determine whether the
request was successful or not at the HTTP level (ie, "200
OK
" vs "401 Bad Request
").
If you would prefer to have libsoup gather
the response body for you and then return it all at once, you can use
the older
soup_session_send_message
API:
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guint status; status = soup_session_send_message (session, msg); |
In this case, the response body will be available in the message's
response_body
field, and transport-level
errors will be indicated in the status_code
field via special pseudo-HTTP-status codes like SOUP_STATUS_CANT_CONNECT
.
To send a message asynchronously, use soup_session_send_async
:
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{ ... soup_session_send_async (session, msg, cancellable, my_callback, my_callback_data); ... } static void my_callback (GObject *object, GAsyncResult *result, gpointer user_data) { GInputStream *stream; GError *error = NULL; stream = soup_session_send_finish (SOUP_SESSION (object), result, &error); ... } |
The message will be added to the session's queue, and eventually (when control is returned back to the main loop), it will be sent and the response be will be read. When the message has been sent, and its headers received, the callback will be invoked, in the standard GAsyncReadyCallback style.
As with synchronous sending, there is also an alternate API, soup_session_queue_message
,
in which your callback is not invoked until the response has been
completely read:
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{ ... soup_session_queue_message (session, msg, my_callback, my_callback_data); ... } static void my_callback (SoupSession *session, SoupMessage *msg, gpointer user_data) { /* msg->response_body contains the response */ } |
soup_session_queue_message
is slightly unusual in that it steals a reference to the message
object, and unrefs it after the last callback is invoked on it. So
when using this API, you should not unref the message yourself.
Once you have received the initial response from the server,
synchronously or asynchronously, streaming or not, you can look at the
response fields in the SoupMessage
to decide what
to do next. The status_code
and
reason_phrase
fields contain the numeric
status and textual status response from the server.
response_headers
contains the response
headers, which you can investigate using soup_message_headers_get
and soup_message_headers_foreach
.
SoupMessageHeaders
automatically parses several important headers in
response_headers
for you and provides
specialized accessors for them. Eg, soup_message_headers_get_content_type
.
There are several generic methods such as soup_header_parse_param_list
(for parsing an attribute-list-type header) and soup_header_contains
(for quickly testing if a list-type header contains a particular
token). These handle the various syntactical oddities of parsing HTTP
headers much better than functions like
g_strsplit
or strstr
.
SoupSession handles most of the details of HTTP
authentication for you. If it receives a 401 ("Unauthorized") or 407
("Proxy Authentication Required") response, the session will emit the
authenticate signal,
providing you with a SoupAuth object indicating the
authentication type ("Basic", "Digest", or "NTLM") and the realm name
provided by the server. If you have a username and password available
(or can generate one), call soup_auth_authenticate
to give the information to libsoup. The session will automatically
requeue the message and try it again with that authentication
information. (If you don't call
soup_auth_authenticate
, the session will just
return the message to the application with its 401 or 407 status.)
If the server doesn't accept the username and password provided, the
session will emit authenticate again, with the
retrying
parameter set to TRUE
. This lets the
application know that the information it provided earlier was
incorrect, and gives it a chance to try again. If this
username/password pair also doesn't work, the session will contine to
emit authenticate
again and again until the
provided username/password successfully authenticates, or until the
signal handler fails to call soup_auth_authenticate
,
at which point libsoup will allow the
message to fail (with status 401 or 407).
If you need to handle authentication asynchronously (eg, to pop up a
password dialog without recursively entering the main loop), you can
do that as well. Just call soup_session_pause_message
on the message before returning from the signal handler, and
g_object_ref
the SoupAuth. Then,
later on, after calling soup_auth_authenticate
(or deciding not to), call soup_session_unpause_message
to resume the paused message.
By default, NTLM authentication is not enabled. To add NTLM support to a session, call:
1 |
soup_session_add_feature_by_type (session, SOUP_TYPE_AUTH_NTLM); |
(You can also disable Basic or Digest authentication by calling soup_session_remove_feature_by_type
on SOUP_TYPE_AUTH_BASIC
or SOUP_TYPE_AUTH_DIGEST
.)
A SoupSession can be used from multiple threads. However, if you are using the async APIs, then each thread you use the session from must have its own thread-default GMainContext.
SoupMessage is not thread-safe, so once you send a message on the session, you must not interact with it from any thread other than the one where it was sent.
A few sample programs are available in the
libsoup sources, in the
examples
directory:
get
is a simple command-line
HTTP GET utility using the asynchronous API.
simple-proxy
uses both the
client and server APIs to create a simple (and not very
RFC-compliant) proxy server. It shows how to use the SOUP_MESSAGE_OVERWRITE_CHUNKS
flag when reading a message to save memory by processing each
chunk of the message as it is read, rather than accumulating
them all into a single buffer to process all at the end.
More complicated examples are available in GNOME git.