| Safe Haskell | None |
|---|---|
| Language | Haskell2010 |
Servant.Client.Internal.HttpClient
Synopsis
- data ClientEnv = ClientEnv {
- manager :: Manager
- baseUrl :: BaseUrl
- cookieJar :: Maybe (TVar CookieJar)
- makeClientRequest :: BaseUrl -> Request -> IO Request
- middleware :: ClientMiddleware
- type ClientApplication = Request -> ClientM Response
- type ClientMiddleware = ClientApplication -> ClientApplication
- mkClientEnv :: Manager -> BaseUrl -> ClientEnv
- client :: HasClient ClientM api => Proxy api -> Client ClientM api
- hoistClient :: HasClient ClientM api => Proxy api -> (forall a. m a -> n a) -> Client m api -> Client n api
- newtype ClientM a = ClientM {}
- runClientM :: ClientM a -> ClientEnv -> IO (Either ClientError a)
- performRequest :: Maybe [Status] -> Request -> ClientM Response
- mkFailureResponse :: BaseUrl -> Request -> ResponseF ByteString -> ClientError
- clientResponseToResponse :: (a -> b) -> Response a -> ResponseF b
- defaultMakeClientRequest :: Applicative f => BaseUrl -> Request -> f Request
- catchConnectionError :: IO a -> IO (Either ClientError a)
Documentation
The environment in which a request is run.
The baseUrl and makeClientRequest function are used to create a http-client request.
Cookies are then added to that request if a CookieJar is set on the environment.
Finally the request is executed with the manager.
The makeClientRequest function can be used to modify the request to execute and set values which
are not specified on a servant Request like responseTimeout or redirectCount
Constructors
| ClientEnv | |
Fields
| |
Instances
client :: HasClient ClientM api => Proxy api -> Client ClientM api Source #
Generates a set of client functions for an API.
Example:
type API = Capture "no" Int :> Get '[JSON] Int
:<|> Get '[JSON] [Bool]
api :: Proxy API
api = Proxy
getInt :: Int -> ClientM Int
getBools :: ClientM [Bool]
getInt :<|> getBools = client apihoistClient :: HasClient ClientM api => Proxy api -> (forall a. m a -> n a) -> Client m api -> Client n api Source #
Change the monad the client functions live in, by supplying a conversion function (a natural transformation to be precise).
For example, assuming you have some manager :: and
Managerbaseurl :: around:BaseUrl
type API = Get '[JSON] Int :<|> Capture "n" Int :> Post '[JSON] Int api :: Proxy API api = Proxy getInt :: IO Int postInt :: Int -> IO Int getInt :<|> postInt = hoistClient api (flip runClientM cenv) (client api) where cenv = mkClientEnv manager baseurl
ClientM is the monad in which client functions run. Contains the
Manager and BaseUrl used for requests in the reader environment.
Instances
runClientM :: ClientM a -> ClientEnv -> IO (Either ClientError a) Source #
mkFailureResponse :: BaseUrl -> Request -> ResponseF ByteString -> ClientError Source #
clientResponseToResponse :: (a -> b) -> Response a -> ResponseF b Source #
defaultMakeClientRequest :: Applicative f => BaseUrl -> Request -> f Request Source #
Create a http-client Request from a servant Request
The host, path and port fields are extracted from the BaseUrl
otherwise the body, headers and query string are derived from the servant Request
Note that Applicative dependency is not really needed for this function
implementation. But in the past the return type was wrapped into IO
without a necessity breaking the API backward-compatibility. In order to not
break the API again it was changed to Applicative so that you can just use
something like Data.Functor.Identity without a need to involve IO but
still keeping it compatible with the code written when it was typed as IO.
catchConnectionError :: IO a -> IO (Either ClientError a) Source #