970e0bd325
FossilOrigin-Name: d2fb3a4af7d16b4c14ac85d2d08c0cb8805f10f433ae3783312fe080c6d26bcc
112 lines
3.3 KiB
Forth
112 lines
3.3 KiB
Forth
Typically to deal with HTTP I just use curl(1), but it is possible to
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make HTTP requests using the sockets vocabulary. It's just a pain to
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do so as HTTP has a lot of annoyances.
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This example provides a way to make HTTP requests using only RETRO.
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First, some variables. I'll keep the socket handle in `Socket` and the
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number of bytes read in `Read`.
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~~~
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'Socket var
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'Read var
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~~~
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Since HTTP allows for a large number of response headers with various
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sizes and ordering, skipping them can be annoying. I do care about one:
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the Content-Length: result.
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I'll track the number of sequential newlines in a variable named `Seq`,
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the value for Content-Length in `Length`, and then the current response
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line in `Line`.
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As a bonus annoyance, HTTP doesn't limit the size of any particular
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header line, so I need to allocate enough space to cover anything it
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throws at me. Per a stackoverflow posting at
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https://stackoverflow.com/questions/686217/maximum-on-http-header-values
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I'll need at least 8KiB, so:
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~~~
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'Length var
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'Seq var
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'Line var #8192 allot
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~~~
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Then skipping the headers is a matter of reading lines until two newlines
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are encountered.
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~~~
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:read-byte here #1 @Socket socket:recv drop-pair here fetch ;
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:append dup buffer:add ;
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:eol? [ ASCII:LF eq? ] [ ASCII:CR eq? ] bi or ;
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:is-length? &Line 'Content-Length:_ s:begins-with? ;
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:process &Line s:trim #16 + s:to-number !Length ;
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:next &Line buffer:set ;
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:yes &Seq v:inc ;
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:no #0 !Seq ;
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:check [ yes is-length? [ process ] if next ] [ no ] choose ;
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:read-line read-byte append eol? check ;
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:done? @Seq #4 eq? ;
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:skip-headers [ &Line buffer:set [ read-line done? ] until ] buffer:preserve ;
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~~~
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Now on to making the actual request to the server. An HTTP PUT request
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takes a form like:
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POST <file> HTTP/1.1
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Host: domain
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Content-Type: text/plain
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Content-Length: <size>
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<parameters>
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So I begin by writing a word to parse a URL. It'll store pointers to the
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parts in the `Host` and `Request` variables. This is pretty easy. I
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increase the starting point by 7 to skip over the HTTP:// part and then
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split on the first / character to separate the domain and requested file.
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This also takes a second string with the parameters to pass.
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~~~
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'Host var
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'Request var
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'Params var
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:parse-url #7 + $/ s:split s:keep !Host s:keep !Request s:keep !Params ;
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~~~
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Given that, making a request is simply:
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~~~
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:make-request
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@Params dup s:length @Host @Request
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'POST_%s_HTTP/1.1\r\nHost:_%s\r\nContent-Type:_text/plain\r\nContent-Length:_%n\r\n\r\n%s\r\n s:format @Socket socket:send drop-pair ;
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~~~
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Moving on to reading the body, this is just reading bytes and shoving
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them into a buffer. I use the `Read` variable to track the number of
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bytes read, stopping when this reaches the `Length` extracted from the
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headers.
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~~~
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:read-byte here #1 @Socket socket:recv drop-pair here fetch buffer:add ;
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:read-body [ &Read v:inc read-byte @Read @Length eq? ] until ;
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~~~
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And finally tieing this all together:
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~~~
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:http:post (ass-n)
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parse-url
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#0 !Seq #0 !Read
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socket:create !Socket @Host '80 socket:configure
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@Socket socket:connect drop-pair
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[ buffer:set make-request skip-headers read-body ] buffer:preserve @Read ;
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~~~
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And a test case:
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```
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'Body d:create #90000 allot
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&Body 'hand=wave&test=true 'http://httpbin.org/post http:post
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&Body s:put
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```
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