This is a simple REST client for C++. It wraps libcurl for HTTP requests.
restclient-cpp provides two ways of interacting with REST endpoints. There is a simple one, which doesn't need you to configure an object to interact with an API. However the simple way doesn't provide a lot of configuration options either. So if you need more than just a simple HTTP call, you will probably want to check out the advanced usage.
The simple API is just some static methods modeled after the most common HTTP verbs:
#include "restclient-cpp/restclient.h"
RestClient::Response r = RestClient::get("http://url.com")
RestClient::Response r = RestClient::post("http://url.com/post", "text/json", "{\"foo\": \"bla\"}")
RestClient::Response r = RestClient::put("http://url.com/put", "text/json", "{\"foo\": \"bla\"}")
RestClient::Response r = RestClient::del("http://url.com/delete")
The response is of type RestClient::Response and has three attributes:
RestClient::Response.code // HTTP response code
RestClient::Response.body // HTTP response body
RestClient::Response.headers // HTTP response headers
However if you want more sophisticated features like connection reuse, timeouts or authentication, there is also a different, more configurable way.
#include "restclient-cpp/connection.h"
#include "restclient-cpp/restclient.h"
// initialize RestClient
RestClient::init();
// get a connection object
RestClient::Connection* conn = new RestClient::Connection("http://url.com");
// configure basic auth
conn->SetBasicAuth("WarMachine68", "WARMACHINEROX");
// set connection timeout to 5s
conn->SetTimeout(5);
// set custom user agent
// (this will result in the UA "foo/cool restclient-cpp/VERSION")
conn->SetUserAgent("foo/cool");
// enable following of redirects (default is off)
conn->FollowRedirects(true);
// set headers
RestClient::HeaderFields headers;
headers["Accept"] = "application/json";
conn->SetHeaders(headers)
// append additional headers
conn->AppendHeader("X-MY-HEADER", "foo")
// if using a non-standard Certificate Authority (CA) trust file
conn->SetCAInfoFilePath("/etc/custom-ca.crt")
RestClient::Response r = conn->get("/get")
RestClient::Response r = conn->post("/post", "text/json", "{\"foo\": \"bla\"}")
RestClient::Response r = conn->put("/put", "text/json", "{\"foo\": \"bla\"}")
RestClient::Response r = conn->del("/delete")
// deinit RestClient. After calling this you have to call RestClient::init()
// again before you can use it
RestClient::disable();
The responses are again of type RestClient::Response and have three attributes:
RestClient::Response.code // HTTP response code
RestClient::Response.body // HTTP response body
RestClient::Response.headers // HTTP response headers
The connection object also provides a simple way to get some diagnostics and
metrics information via conn->GetInfo()
. The result is a
RestClient::Connection::Info
struct and looks like this:
typedef struct {
std::string base_url;
RestClients::HeaderFields headers;
int timeout;
struct {
std::string username;
std::string password;
} basicAuth;
std::string customUserAgent;
struct {
// total time of the last request in seconds Total time of previous
// transfer. See CURLINFO_TOTAL_TIME
int totalTime;
// time spent in DNS lookup in seconds Time from start until name
// resolving completed. See CURLINFO_NAMELOOKUP_TIME
int nameLookupTime;
// time it took until Time from start until remote host or proxy
// completed. See CURLINFO_CONNECT_TIME
int connectTime;
// Time from start until SSL/SSH handshake completed. See
// CURLINFO_APPCONNECT_TIME
int appConnectTime;
// Time from start until just before the transfer begins. See
// CURLINFO_PRETRANSFER_TIME
int preTransferTime;
// Time from start until just when the first byte is received. See
// CURLINFO_STARTTRANSFER_TIME
int startTransferTime;
// Time taken for all redirect steps before the final transfer. See
// CURLINFO_REDIRECT_TIME
int redirectTime;
// number of redirects followed. See CURLINFO_REDIRECT_COUNT
int redirectCount;
} lastRequest;
} Info;
The connection object stores the curl easy handle in an instance variable and uses that for the lifetime of the object. This means curl will automatically reuse connections made with that handle.
restclient-cpp leans heavily on libcurl as it aims to provide a thin wrapper
around it. This means it adheres to the basic level of thread safety provided
by libcurl. The RestClient::init()
and
RestClient::disable()
methods basically correspond to curl_global_init
and
curl_global_cleanup
and thus need to be called right at the beginning of
your program and before shutdown respectively. These set up the environment
and are not thread-safe. After that you can create connection objects in
your threads. Do not share connection objects across threads as this would
mean accessing curl handles from multiple threads at the same time which is
not allowed.
In order to provide an easy to use API, the simple usage via the static methods implicitly calls the curl global functions and is therefore also not thread-safe.
There are some packages available for Linux on packagecloud. Otherwise you can do the regular autotools dance:
./autogen.sh
./configure
make install
All contributions are highly appreciated. This includes filing issues, updating documentation and writing code. Please take a look at the contributing guidelines before so your contribution can be merged as fast as possible.