AMPHP is a collection of event-driven libraries for PHP designed with fibers and concurrency in mind.
This package provides an asynchronous HTTP client for PHP based on Revolt.
Its API simplifies standards-compliant HTTP resource traversal and RESTful web service consumption without obscuring the underlying protocol.
The library manually implements HTTP over TCP sockets; as such it has no dependency on ext/curl
.
- Supports HTTP/1 and HTTP/2
- Requests concurrently by default
- Pools persistent connections (keep-alive @ HTTP/1.1, multiplexing @ HTTP/2)
- Transparently follows redirects
- Decodes compressed entity bodies (gzip, deflate)
- Exposes headers and message data
- Streams entity bodies for memory management with large transfers
- Supports all standard and custom HTTP method verbs
- Simplifies HTTP form submissions
- Implements secure-by-default TLS (
https://
) - Supports cookies and sessions
- Functions seamlessly behind HTTP proxies
This package can be installed as a Composer dependency.
composer require amphp/http-client
Additionally, you might want to install the nghttp2
library to take advantage of FFI to speed up and reduce the memory usage.
The main interaction point with this library is the HttpClient
class.
HttpClient
instances can be built using HttpClientBuilder
without knowing about the existing implementations.
HttpClientBuilder
allows to register two kinds of interceptors, which allows customizing the HttpClient
behavior in a composable fashion.
In its simplest form, the HTTP client takes a request with a URL as string and interprets that as a GET
request to that resource without any custom headers.
Standard headers like Accept
, Connection
or Host
will automatically be added if not present.
use Amp\Http\Client\HttpClientBuilder;
$client = HttpClientBuilder::buildDefault();
$response = $client->request(new Request("https://httpbin.org/get"));
var_dump($response->getStatus());
var_dump($response->getHeaders());
var_dump($response->getBody()->buffer());
The HttpClient
requires a Request
being passed as first argument to request()
.
The Request
class can be used to specify further specifics of the request such as setting headers or changing the request method.
Note
Request
objects are mutable (instead of immutable as inamphp/artax
/ PSR-7).Cloning
Request
objects will result in a deep clone, but doing so is usually only required if requests are retried or cloned for sub-requests.
The constructor requires an absolute request URI. Request::setUri(string $uri)
allows changing the request URI.
$request = new Request("https://httpbin.org/post", "POST");
$request->setBody("foobar");
$request->setUri("https://google.com/");
Request::getUri()
exposes the request URI of the given Request
object.
The constructor accepts an optional request method, it defaults to GET
. Request::setMethod(string $method)
allows changing the request method.
$request = new Request("https://httpbin.org/post", "POST");
$request->setBody("foobar");
$request->setMethod("PUT");
Request::getMethod()
exposes the request method of the given Request
object.
Request::setHeader(string $field, string $value)
allows changing the request headers. It will remove any previous values for that field. Request::addHeader(string $field, string $value)
allows adding an additional header line without removing existing lines.
Request::setHeaders(array $headers)
allows adding multiple headers at once with the array keys being the field names and the values being the header values. The header values can also be arrays of strings to set multiple header lines.
Request::hasHeader(string $field)
checks whether at least one header line with the given name exists.
Request::getHeader(string $field)
returns the first header line with the given name or null
if no such header exists.
Request::getHeaderArray(string $field)
returns an array of header lines with the given name. An empty array is returned if no header with the given name exists.
Request::getHeaders()
returns an associative array with the keys being the header names and the values being arrays of header lines.
$request = new Request("https://httpbin.org/post", "POST");
$request->setHeader("X-Foobar", "Hello World");
$request->setBody("foobar");
Request::setBody($body)
allows changing the request body. Accepted types are string
, null
, and RequestBody
. string
and null
are automatically converted to an instance of RequestBody
.
Note
RequestBody
is basically a factory for request bodies. We cannot simply accept streams here, because a request body might have to be sent again on a redirect / retry. Additionally,RequestBody
allows the body to set headers, which can be used to automatically set headers such asContent-Type: application/json
for aJsonBody
. Note that headers set viaRequestBody::getHeaders()
are only applied if theRequest
doesn't have such a header. This allows overriding the default body header in a request.
$request = new Request("https://httpbin.org/post", "POST");
$request->setBody("foobar");
Request::getBody()
exposes the request body of the given Request
object and will always return a RequestBody
.
HttpClient::request()
returns a Response
as soon as the response headers are successfully received.
Note
Response
objects are mutable (instead of immutable as in Artax v3 / PSR-7)
You can retrieve the response's HTTP status using getStatus()
. It returns the status as an integer. The optional (and possibly empty) reason associated with the status can be retrieved using getReason()
.
$response = $client->request($request);
var_dump($response->getStatus(), $response->getReason());
You can retrieve the response's HTTP protocol version using getProtocolVersion()
.
$response = $client->request($request);
var_dump($response->getProtocolVersion());
Response headers can be accessed by a set of methods.
hasHeader(string)
returns whether a given header is present.getHeader(string)
returns the first header with the given name ornull
if no such header is present.getHeaderArray(string)
returns all headers with the given name, possibly an empty array.getHeaders()
returns all headers as an associative array, see below.
getHeaders()
Format
[
"header-1" => [
"value-1",
"value-2",
],
"header-2" => [
"value-1",
],
]
getBody()
returns a Payload
, which allows simple buffering and streaming access.
Warning
$chunk = $response->getBody()->read();
reads only a single chunk from the body while$contents = $response->getBody()->buffer()
buffers the complete body. Please refer to thePayload
documentation for more information.
getRequest()
allows access to the request corresponding to the response. This might not be the original request in case of redirects. getOriginalRequest()
returns the original request sent by the client. This might not be the same request that was passed to Client::request()
, because the client might normalize headers or assign cookies. getPreviousResponse
allows access to previous responses in case of redirects, but the response bodies of these responses won't be available, as they're discarded. If you need access to these, you need to disable auto redirects and implement them yourself.
Interceptors allow customizing the HttpClient
behavior in a composable fashion.
Use cases range from adding / removing headers from a request / response and recording timing information to more advanced use cases like a fully compliant HTTP cache that intercepts requests and serves them from the cache if possible.
use Amp\Http\Client\Client;
use Amp\Http\Client\HttpClientBuilder;
use Amp\Http\Client\Interceptor\SetRequestHeader;
use Amp\Http\Client\Interceptor\SetResponseHeader;
use Amp\Http\Client\Request;
$client = (new HttpClientBuilder)
->intercept(new SetRequestHeader('x-foo', 'bar'))
->intercept(new SetResponseHeader('x-tea', 'now'))
->build();
$response = $client->request(new Request("https://httpbin.org/get"));
$body = $response->getBody()->buffer();
There are two kinds of interceptors with separate interfaces named ApplicationInterceptor
and NetworkInterceptor
.
Most interceptors should be implemented as ApplicationInterceptor
.
However, there's sometimes the need to have access to the underlying connection properties.
In such a case, a NetworkInterceptor
can be implemented to access the used IPs and TLS settings.
Another use-case for implementing a NetworkInterceptor
is an interceptor, that should only ever run if the request is sent over the network instead of served from a cache or similar.
However, that should usually be solved with the configuration order of the application interceptors.
The big disadvantage of network interceptors is that they have to be rather quick and can't take too long, because they're only invoked after the connection has been created and the client will run into a timeout if there's no activity within a reasonable time.
AddRequestHeader
AddResponseHeader
ConditionalInterceptor
DecompressResponse
FollowRedirects
ForbidUriUserInfo
IfOrigin
ModifyRequest
ModifyResponse
RemoveRequestHeader
RemoveResponseHeader
RetryRequests
SetRequestHeader
SetRequestHeaderIfUnset
SetResponseHeader
SetResponseHeaderIfUnset
CookieHandler
PrivateCache
If you use HttpClientBuilder
, the resulting HttpClient
will automatically follow up to ten redirects by default.
Automatic following can be customized or disabled (using a limit of 0
) using HttpClientBuilder::followRedirects()
.
The FollowRedirects
interceptor will only follow redirects with a GET
method.
If another request method is used and a 307
or 308
response is received, the response will be returned as is, so another interceptor or the application can take care of it.
Cross-origin redirects will be attempted without any headers set, so any application headers will be discarded.
If HttpClientBuilder
is used to configure the client, the FollowRedirects
interceptor is the outermost interceptor, so any headers set by interceptors will still be present in the response.
It is therefore recommended to set headers via interceptors instead of directly in the request.
All previous responses can be accessed from the resulting Response
via Response::getPreviousResponse()
.
However, the response body is discarded on redirects, so it can no longer be consumed.
If you want to consume redirect response bodies, you need to implement your own interceptor.
See amphp/http-client-cookies
.
The LogHttpArchive
event listener allows logging all requests / responses including detailed timing information to an HTTP archive (HAR).
These log files can then be imported into the browsers developer tools or online tools like HTTP Archive Viewer or Google's HAR Analyzer.
Warning Be careful if your log files might contain sensitive information in URLs or headers if you submit these files to third parties like the linked services above.
use Amp\Http\Client\HttpClientBuilder;
use Amp\Http\Client\EventListener\LogHttpArchive;
$httpClient = (new HttpClientBuilder)
->listen(new LogHttpArchive('/tmp/http-client.har'))
->build();
$httpClient->request(...);
See amphp/http-tunnel
.
amphp/http-client
follows the semver semantic versioning specification like all other amphp
packages.
Everything in an Internal
namespace or marked as @internal
is not public API and therefore not covered by BC guarantees.
If you discover any security related issues, please email [email protected]
instead of using the issue tracker.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see LICENSE
for more information.