HTTP::Request::Common man page on BSDOS

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lib::HTTP::RequUser:Contributed Perllib::HTTP::Request::Common(3)

NAME
       HTTP::Request::Common - Construct common HTTP::Request
       objects

SYNOPSIS
	 use HTTP::Request::Common;
	 $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new;
	 $ua->request(GET 'http://www.sn.no/');
	 $ua->request(POST 'http://somewhere/foo', [foo => bar, bar => foo]);

DESCRIPTION
       This module provide functions that return newly created
       HTTP::Request objects.  These functions are usually more
       convenient than the standard HTTP::Request constructor for
       these common requests.  The following functions are
       provided.

       GET $url, [Header => Value,...]
	   The GET() function returns a HTTP::Request object
	   initialized with the GET method and the specified URL.
	   Without additional arguments it is exactly equivalent
	   to the following call

	     HTTP::Request->new(GET => $url)

	   but is less clutter.	 It also reads better when used
	   together with the LWP::UserAgent->request() method:

	     my $ua = new LWP::UserAgent;
	     my $res = $ua->request(GET 'http://www.sn.no')
	     if ($res->is_success) { ...

	   You can also initialize the header values in the
	   request by specifying some key/value pairs as optional
	   arguments.  For instance:

	     $ua->request(GET 'http://www.sn.no',
			      If_Match => 'foo',
			      From     => 'gisle@aas.no',
			 );

	   A header key called 'Content' is special and when seen
	   the value will initialize the content part of the
	   request instead of setting a header.

       HEAD $url, [Header => Value,...]
	   Like GET() but the method in the request is HEAD.

       PUT $url, [Header => Value,...]
	   Like GET() but the method in the request is PUT.

       POST $url, [$form_ref], [Header => Value,...]
	   This works mostly like GET() with POST as method, but

24/Aug/1997	       perl 5.005, patch 03			1

lib::HTTP::RequUser:Contributed Perllib::HTTP::Request::Common(3)

	   this function also takes a second optional array
	   reference parameter ($form_ref).  This argument can be
	   used to pass key/value pairs for the form content.  By
	   default we will initialize a request using the
	   application/x-www-form-urlencoded content type.  This
	   means that you can emulate a HTML <form> POSTing like
	   this:

	     POST 'http://www.perl.org/survey.cgi',
		  [ name  => 'Gisle',
		    email => 'gisle@aas.no',
		    gender => 'm',
		    born   => '1964',
		    trust  => '3%',
		   ];

	   This will create a HTTP::Request object that looks
	   like this:

	     POST http://www.perl.org/survey.cgi
	     Content-Length: 61
	     Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded

	     name=Gisle&email=gisle%40aas.no&gender=m&born=1964&trust=3%25

	   The POST method also supports the multipart/form-data
	   content used for Form-based File Upload as specified
	   in RFC 1867.	 You trigger this content format by
	   specifying a content type of 'form-data'.  If one of
	   the values in the $form_ref is an array reference,
	   then it is treated as a file part specification with
	   the following values:

	     [ $file, $filename, Header => Value... ]

	   The first value in the array ($file) is the name of a
	   file to open.  This file will be read an its content
	   placed in the request.  The routine will croak if the
	   file can't be opened.  Use an undef as $file value if
	   you want to specify the content directly.  The
	   $filename is the filename to report in the request.
	   If this value is undefined, then the basename of the
	   $file will be used.	You can specify an empty string
	   as $filename if you don't want any filename in the
	   request.

	   Sending my ~/.profile to the survey used as example
	   above can be achieved by this:

24/Aug/1997	       perl 5.005, patch 03			2

lib::HTTP::RequUser:Contributed Perllib::HTTP::Request::Common(3)

	     POST 'http://www.perl.org/survey.cgi',
		  Content_Type => 'form-data',
		  Content      => [ name  => 'Gisle Aas',
				    email => 'gisle@aas.no',
				    gender => 'm',
				    born   => '1964',
				    init   => ["$ENV{HOME}/.profile"],
				  ]

	   This will create a HTTP::Request object that almost
	   looks this (the boundary and the content of your
	   ~/.profile is likely to be different):

	     POST http://www.perl.org/survey.cgi
	     Content-Length: 388
	     Content-Type: multipart/form-data; boundary="6G+f"

	     --6G+f
	     Content-Disposition: form-data; name="name"

	     Gisle Aas
	     --6G+f
	     Content-Disposition: form-data; name="email"

	     gisle@aas.no
	     --6G+f
	     Content-Disposition: form-data; name="gender"

	     m
	     --6G+f
	     Content-Disposition: form-data; name="born"

	     1964
	     --6G+f
	     Content-Disposition: form-data; name="init"; filename=".profile"
	     Content-Type: text/plain

	     PATH=/local/perl/bin:$PATH
	     export PATH

	     --6G+f--

SEE ALSO
       the HTTP::Request manpage, the LWP::UserAgent manpage

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 1997, Gisle Aas

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it
       and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

24/Aug/1997	       perl 5.005, patch 03			3

lib::HTTP::RequUser:Contributed Perllib::HTTP::Request::Common(3)

24/Aug/1997	       perl 5.005, patch 03			4

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