An HTTP client with a focus on performance, built on top of Mint and NimblePool.
In order to use Finch, you must start it and provide a :name
. Often in your
supervision tree:
children = [
{Finch, name: MyFinch}
]
Or, in rare cases, dynamically:
Finch.start_link(name: MyFinch)
Once you have started your instance of Finch, you are ready to start making requests:
Finch.build(:get, "https://hex.pm") |> Finch.request(MyFinch)
When using HTTP/1, Finch will parse the passed in URL into a {scheme, host, port}
tuple, and maintain one or more connection pools for each {scheme, host, port}
you
interact with.
You can also configure a pool size and count to be used for specific URLs that are
known before starting Finch. The passed URLs will be parsed into {scheme, host, port}
,
and the corresponding pools will be started. See Finch.start_link/1
for configuration
options.
children = [
{Finch,
name: MyConfiguredFinch,
pools: %{
:default => [size: 10],
"https://hex.pm" => [size: 32, count: 8]
}}
]
Pools will be started for each configured {scheme, host, port}
when Finch is started.
For any unconfigured {scheme, host, port}
, the pool will be started the first time
it is requested. Note pools are not automatically terminated if they are unused, so
Finch is best suited when you are requesting a known list of static hosts.
Finch uses Telemetry to provide instrumentation. See the Finch.Telemetry
module for details on specific events.
The package can be installed by adding finch
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:finch, "~> 0.5"}
]
end
The docs can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/finch.