Expand description
reqwest
The reqwest
crate provides a convenient, higher-level HTTP Client.
It handles many of the things that most people just expect an HTTP client to do for them.
- Uses system-native TLS
- Plain bodies, JSON, urlencoded, multipart
- Customizable redirect policy
- Proxies
- Cookies (only rudimentary support, full support is TODO)
The rudimentary cookie support means that the cookies need to be manually configured for every single request. In other words, there’s no cookie jar support as of now. The tracking issue for this feature is available on GitHub.
The reqwest::Client
is synchronous, making it a great fit for
applications that only require a few HTTP requests, and wish to handle
them synchronously.
Making a GET request
For a single request, you can use the get
shortcut method.
let body = reqwest::get("https://www.rust-lang.org")?
.text()?;
println!("body = {:?}", body);
Additionally, reqwest’s Response
struct implements Rust’s
Read
trait, so many useful standard library and third party crates will
have convenience methods that take a Response
anywhere T: Read
is
acceptable.
NOTE: If you plan to perform multiple requests, it is best to create a
Client
and reuse it, taking advantage of keep-alive connection
pooling.
Making POST requests (or setting request bodies)
There are several ways you can set the body of a request. The basic one is
by using the body()
method of a RequestBuilder
. This lets you set the
exact raw bytes of what the body should be. It accepts various types,
including String
, Vec<u8>
, and File
. If you wish to pass a custom
Reader, you can use the reqwest::Body::new()
constructor.
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
let res = client.post("http://httpbin.org/post")
.body("the exact body that is sent")
.send()?;
Forms
It’s very common to want to send form data in a request body. This can be done with any type that can be serialized into form data.
This can be an array of tuples, or a HashMap
, or a custom type that
implements Serialize
.
// This will POST a body of `foo=bar&baz=quux`
let params = [("foo", "bar"), ("baz", "quux")];
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
let res = client.post("http://httpbin.org/post")
.form(¶ms)
.send()?;
JSON
There is also a json
method helper on the RequestBuilder
that works in
a similar fashion the form
method. It can take any value that can be
serialized into JSON.
// This will POST a body of `{"lang":"rust","body":"json"}`
let mut map = HashMap::new();
map.insert("lang", "rust");
map.insert("body", "json");
let client = reqwest::Client::new();
let res = client.post("http://httpbin.org/post")
.json(&map)
.send()?;
Optional Features
The following are a list of Cargo features that can be enabled or disabled:
- default-tls (enabled by default): Provides TLS support via the
native-tls
library to connect over HTTPS. - hyper-011: Provides support for hyper’s old typed headers.
Modules
Client
.Structs
Request
.Client
to make Requests with.ClientBuilder
can be used to create a Client
with custom configuration.Request
.Client
should pass requests to.Client::execute()
.Request
.Request
.status-code
in RFC 7230 et al.).Enums
Traits
Url
.Functions
GET
request.Type Definitions
Result
alias where the Err
case is reqwest::Error
.