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HTTPSnippet

version License

HTTP Request snippet generator for many languages & tools including: cURL, HTTPie, JavaScript, Node, C, Java, PHP, Objective-C, Swift, Python, Ruby, C#, Go, OCaml, Crystal and more!

Relies on the popular HAR format to import data and describe HTTP calls.

See it in action on companion service: APIembed

Build Downloads

Quickstart

Core Concepts

  1. HTTPSnippet's input is a JSON object that represents an HTTP request in the HAR Request Object format.
  2. HTTPSnippet's output is executable code that sends the input HTTP request, in a wide variety of languages and libraries.
  3. You provide HTTPSnippet your desired target, client, and options.
    • a target refers to a group of code generators. Generally, a target is a programming language like Rust, Go, C, or OCaml.
    • client refers to a more specific generator within the parent target. For example, the C# target has two available clients, httpclient and restsharp, each referring to a popular C# library for making requests.
    • options are per client and generally control things like specific indent behaviors or other formatting rules.

CLI Quickstart

httpsnippet har.json \ # the path your input file (must be in HAR format)
  --target shell \ # your desired language
  --client curl \ # your desired language library
  --output ./examples \ # an output directory, otherwise will just output to Stdout
  --options '{ "indent": false }' # any client options as a JSON string

TypeScript Library Quickstart

import { HTTPSnippet } from 'httpsnippet';

const snippet = new HTTPSnippet({
  method: 'GET',
  url: 'http://mockbin.com/request',
});

const options = { indent: '\t' };
const output = snippet.convert('shell', 'curl', options);
console.log(output);

CLI Usage

CLI Installation

NPM Yarn
npm install --global httpsnippet
yarn global add httpsnippet
httpsnippet [harFilePath]

the default command

Options:
      --help     Show help                                   [boolean]
      --version  Show version number                         [boolean]
  -t, --target   target output                     [string] [required]
  -c, --client   language client                              [string]
  -o, --output   write output to directory                    [string]
  -x, --options  provide extra options for the target/client  [string]

Examples:
  httpsnippet my_har.json --target rust --client actix --output my_src_directory

Example

The input to HTTPSnippet is any valid HAR Request Object, or full HAR log format.

`example.json`
{
  "method": "POST",
  "url": "http://mockbin.com/har?key=value",
  "httpVersion": "HTTP/1.1",
  "queryString": [
    {
      "name": "foo",
      "value": "bar"
    },
    {
      "name": "foo",
      "value": "baz"
    },
    {
      "name": "baz",
      "value": "abc"
    }
  ],
  "headers": [
    {
      "name": "accept",
      "value": "application/json"
    },
    {
      "name": "content-type",
      "value": "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
    }
  ],
  "cookies": [
    {
      "name": "foo",
      "value": "bar"
    },
    {
      "name": "bar",
      "value": "baz"
    }
  ],
  "postData": {
    "mimeType": "application/x-www-form-urlencoded",
    "params": [
      {
        "name": "foo",
        "value": "bar"
      }
    ]
  }
}
httpsnippet example.json --target shell --client curl --output ./examples
$ tree examples
examples/
└── example.sh

inside examples/example.sh you'll see the generated output:

curl --request POST \
  --url 'http://mockbin.com/har?foo=bar&foo=baz&baz=abc&key=value' \
  --header 'accept: application/json' \
  --header 'content-type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded' \
  --cookie 'foo=bar; bar=baz' \
  --data foo=bar

provide extra options:

httpsnippet example.json --target shell --client curl --output ./examples --options '{ "indent": false }'

and see how the output changes, in this case without indentation

curl --request POST --url 'http://mockbin.com/har?foo=bar&foo=baz&baz=abc&key=value' --header 'accept: application/json' --header 'content-type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded' --cookie 'foo=bar; bar=baz' --data foo=bar

TypeScript Library Usage

Library Installation

NPM Yarn
npm install --save httpsnippet
yarn add httpsnippet

Types

HarRequest

See https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped/tree/master/types/har-format for the TypeScript type corresponding to this type

HarEntry

interface Entry {
  request: Partial<HarRequest>;
}

interface HarEntry {
  log: {
    version: string;
    creator: {
      name: string;
      version: string;
    };
    entries: {
      request: Partial<HarRequest>;
    }[];
  };
}

TargetId

type TargetId = string;

ClientId

type ClientId = string;

Converter

type Converter<T extends Record<string, any>> = (
  request: Request,
  options?: Merge<CodeBuilderOptions, T>,
) => string;

Client

interface Client<T extends Record<string, any> = Record<string, any>> {
  info: ClientInfo;
  convert: Converter<T>;
}

ClientInfo

interface ClientInfo {
  key: ClientId;
  title: string;
  link: string;
  description: string;
}

Extension

type Extension = `.${string}` | null;

TargetInfo

interface TargetInfo {
  key: TargetId;
  title: string;
  extname: Extension;
  default: string;
}

Target

interface Target {
  info: TargetInfo;
  clientsById: Record<ClientId, Client>;
}

Library Exports

new HTTPSnippet(source: HarRequest | HarEntry)

Name of conversion target

import { HTTPSnippet } from 'httpsnippet';

const snippet = new HTTPSnippet({
  method: 'GET',
  url: 'http://mockbin.com/request',
});

snippet.convert(targetId: string, clientId?: string, options?: T)

The convert method requires a target ID such as node, shell, go, etc. If no client ID is provided, the default client for that target will be used.

Note: to see the default targets for a given client, see target.info.default. For example shell's target has the default of curl.

Many targets provide specific options. Look at the TypeScript types for the target you are interested in to see what options it provides. For example shell:curl's options correspond to the CurlOptions interface in the shell:curl client file.

import { HTTPSnippet } from 'httpsnippet';

const snippet = new HTTPSnippet({
  method: 'GET',
  url: 'http://mockbin.com/request',
});

// generate Node.js: Native output
console.log(snippet.convert('node'));

// generate Node.js: Native output, indent with tabs
console.log(
  snippet.convert('node', {
    indent: '\t',
  }),
);

isTarget

Useful for validating that a custom target is considered valid by HTTPSnippet.

const isTarget: (target: Target) => target is Target;
import { myCustomTarget } from './my-custom-target';
import { isTarget } from 'httpsnippet';

try {
  console.log(isTarget(myCustomTarget));
} catch (error) {
  console.error(error);
}

addTarget

Use addTarget to add a new custom target that you can then use in your project.

const addTarget: (target: Target) => void;
import { myCustomClient } from './my-custom-client';
import { HAR } from 'my-custom-har';
import { HTTPSnippet, addTargetClient } from 'httpsnippet';

addTargetClient(myCustomClient);

const snippet = new HTTPSnippet(HAR);
const output = snippet.convert('customTargetId');
console.log(output);

isClient

Useful for validating that a custom client is considered valid by HTTPSnippet.

const isClient: (client: Client) => client is Client;
import { myCustomClient } from './my-custom-client';
import { isClient } from 'httpsnippet';

try {
  console.log(isClient(myCustomClient));
} catch (error) {
  console.error(error);
}

addTargetClient

Use addTargetClient to add a custom client to an existing target. See addTarget for how to add a custom target.

const addTargetClient: (targetId: TargetId, client: Client) => void;
import { myCustomClient } from './my-custom-client';
import { HAR } from 'my-custom-har';
import { HTTPSnippet, addTargetClient } from 'httpsnippet';

addTargetClient('customTargetId', myCustomClient);

const snippet = new HTTPSnippet(HAR);
const output = snippet.convert('customTargetId', 'customClientId');
console.log(output);

Bugs and feature requests

Have a bug or a feature request? Please first read the issue guidelines and search for existing and closed issues. If your problem or idea is not addressed yet, please open a new issue.

Contributing

Please read through our contributing guidelines. Included are directions for opening issues, coding standards, and notes on development.

For info on creating new conversion targets, please review this guideline

Moreover, if your pull request contains TypeScript patches or features, you must include relevant unit tests.

Editor preferences are available in the editor config for easy use in common text editors. Read more and download plugins at http://editorconfig.org.

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  • TypeScript 46.2%
  • JavaScript 11.1%
  • Objective-C 6.4%
  • PHP 5.9%
  • Java 4.7%
  • Swift 3.7%
  • Other 22.0%