REST Client — simple DSL for accessing HTTP and REST resources

A simple HTTP and REST client for Ruby, inspired by the Sinatra’s microframework style of specifying actions: get, put, post, delete.

Usage: Raw URL

  require 'rest_client'

  RestClient.get 'http://example.com/resource'

  RestClient.get 'https://user:password@example.com/private/resource'

  RestClient.post 'http://example.com/resource', :param1 => 'one', :nested => { :param2 => 'two' }

  RestClient.post "http://example.com/resource", { 'x' => 1 }.to_json, :content_type => :json, :accept => :json

  RestClient.delete 'http://example.com/resource'

Multipart

Yeah, that’s right! This does multipart sends for you!

  RestClient.post '/data', :myfile => File.new("/path/to/image.jpg")

This does two things for you:

If you are sending params that do not contain a File object but the payload needs to be multipart then:

  RestClient.post '/data', :foo => 'bar', :multipart => true

Usage: ActiveResource-Style

  resource = RestClient::Resource.new 'http://example.com/resource'
  resource.get

  private_resource = RestClient::Resource.new 'https://example.com/private/resource', 'user', 'pass'
  private_resource.put File.read('pic.jpg'), :content_type => 'image/jpg'

See RestClient::Resource module docs for details.

Usage: Resource Nesting

  site = RestClient::Resource.new('http://example.com')
  site['posts/1/comments'].post 'Good article.', :content_type => 'text/plain'

See RestClient::Resource docs for details.

Exceptions

Result handling

A block can be passed to the RestClient method, this block will then be called with the Response. Response.return! can be called to invoke the default response’s behavior (return the Response for 200..206, raise an exception in other cases).

  # Don't raise exceptions but return the response
  RestClient.get('http://example.com/resource'){|response| response}
  

Non-normalized URIs.

If you want to use non-normalized URIs, you can normalize them with the addressable gem (addressable.rubyforge.org/api/).

  require 'addressable/uri'
  RestClient.get(Addressable::URI.parse("http://www.詹姆斯.com/").normalize.to_str)

Lower-level access

For cases not covered by the general API, you can use the RestClient::Resource class which provide a lower-level API, see the class’ rdoc for more information.

Shell

The restclient shell command gives an IRB session with RestClient already loaded:

  $ restclient
  >> RestClient.get 'http://example.com'

Specify a URL argument for get/post/put/delete on that resource:

  $ restclient http://example.com
  >> put '/resource', 'data'

Add a user and password for authenticated resources:

  $ restclient https://example.com user pass
  >> delete '/private/resource'

Create ~/.restclient for named sessions:

  sinatra:
    url: http://localhost:4567
  rack:
    url: http://localhost:9292
  private_site:
    url: http://example.com
    username: user
    password: pass

Then invoke:

  $ restclient private_site

Use as a one-off, curl-style:

  $ restclient get http://example.com/resource > output_body

  $ restclient put http://example.com/resource < input_body

Logging

To enable logging you can

Either produces logs like this:

  RestClient.get "http://some/resource"
  # => 200 OK | text/html 250 bytes
  RestClient.put "http://some/resource", "payload"
  # => 401 Unauthorized | application/xml 340 bytes

Note that these logs are valid Ruby, so you can paste them into the restclient shell or a script to replay your sequence of rest calls.

Proxy

All calls to RestClient, including Resources, will use the proxy specified by RestClient.proxy:

  RestClient.proxy = "http://proxy.example.com/"
  RestClient.get "http://some/resource"
  # => response from some/resource as proxied through proxy.example.com

Often the proxy url is set in an environment variable, so you can do this to use whatever proxy the system is configured to use:

  RestClient.proxy = ENV['http_proxy']

Cookies

Request and Response objects know about HTTP cookies, and will automatically extract and set headers for them as needed:

  response = RestClient.get 'http://example.com/action_which_sets_session_id'
  response.cookies
  # => {"_applicatioN_session_id" => "1234"}

  response2 = RestClient.post(
    'http://localhost:3000/',
    {:param1 => "foo"},
    {:cookies => {:session_id => "1234"}}
  )
  # ...response body

SSL Client Certificates

  RestClient::Resource.new(
    'https://example.com',
    :ssl_client_cert  =>  OpenSSL::X509::Certificate.new(File.read("cert.pem")),
    :ssl_client_key   =>  OpenSSL::PKey::RSA.new(File.read("key.pem"), "passphrase, if any"),
    :ssl_ca_file      =>  "ca_certificate.pem",
    :verify_ssl       =>  OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_PEER
  ).get

Self-signed certificates can be generated with the openssl command-line tool.

Meta

Written by Adam Wiggins, major modifications by Blake Mizerany, maintained by Julien Kirch

Patches contributed by many, including Chris Anderson, Greg Borenstein, Ardekantur, Pedro Belo, Rafael Souza, Rick Olson, Aman Gupta, François Beausoleil and Nick Plante.

Released under the MIT License: www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php

Main page: github.com/archiloque/rest-client

Rdoc: rdoc.info/projects/archiloque/rest-client

Mailing list: rest.client@librelist.com (send a mail to subscribe).

IRC: #rest-client at freenode