httpie - CLI, cURL-like tool for humans
- http
- [--json] [--form] [--pretty {all,colors,format,none}] [--style STYLE]
[--print WHAT] [--verbose] [--headers] [--body] [--stream] [--output FILE]
[--download] [--continue] [--session SESSION_NAME_OR_PATH |
--session-read-only SESSION_NAME_OR_PATH] [--auth USER[:PASS]]
[--auth-type {basic,digest}] [--proxy PROTOCOL:PROXY_URL] [--follow]
[--verify VERIFY] [--cert CERT] [--cert-key CERT_KEY] [--timeout SECONDS]
[--check-status] [--ignore-stdin] [--help] [--version] [--traceback]
[--debug]
[METHOD] URL [REQUEST_ITEM [REQUEST_ITEM ...]]
HTTPie is a CLI HTTP utility built out of frustration with
existing tools. The goal is to make CLI interaction with HTTP-based services
as human-friendly as possible.
HTTPie does so by providing an http command that allows for
issuing arbitrary HTTP requests using a simple and natural syntax and
displaying colorized responses.
These arguments come after any flags and in the order they are
listed here. Only URL is required.
- METHOD
-
The HTTP method to be used for the request (GET, POST, PUT,
DELETE, ...).
This argument can be omitted in which case HTTPie will use POST if there
is some data to be sent, otherwise GET:
$ http example.org # => GET
$ http example.org hello=world # => POST
- URL
-
The scheme defaults to 'http://' if the URL does not include
one.
You can also use a shorthand for localhost
$ http :3000 # => http://localhost:3000
$ http :/foo # => http://localhost/foo
- REQUEST_ITEM
-
Optional key-value pairs to be included in the request. The
separator used determines the type:
':' HTTP headers
Referer:http://httpie.org
Cookie:foo=bar
User-Agent:bacon/1.0
'==' URL parameters to be appended to the request URI
search==httpie
'=' Data fields to be serialized into a JSON object
(with --json, -j) or form data (with --form,
-f)
name=HTTPie
language=Python
description='CLI HTTP client'
':=' Non-string JSON data fields (only with
--json, -j)
awesome:=true
amount:=42
colors:='["red", "green", "blue"]'
'@' Form file fields (only with --form,
-f)
cs@~/Documents/CV.pdf
'=@' A data field like '=', but takes a file path and
embeds its content:
essay=@Documents/essay.txt
':=@' A raw JSON field like ':=', but takes a file path
and embeds its content:
package:=@./package.json
You can use a backslash to escape a colliding separator in the
field name:
field-name-with\:colon=value
--json, -j
- (default) Data items from the command line are serialized as a JSON
object. The Content-Type and Accept headers are set to application/json
(if not specified).
--form, -f
- Data items from the command line are serialized as form fields.
- The Content-Type is set to application/x-www-form-urlencoded (if not
specified). The presence of any file fields results in a
multipart/form-data request.
--pretty {all,colors,format,none}
- Controls output processing. The value can be "none" to not
prettify the output (default for redirected output), "all" to
apply both colors and formatting (default for terminal output),
"colors", or "format".
--style STYLE, -s STYLE
- Output coloring style (default is "solarized"). One of:
- algol, algol_nu, autumn, borland, bw, colorful, default, emacs, friendly,
fruity, igor, lovelace, manni, monokai, murphy, native, paraiso-dark,
paraiso-light, pastie, perldoc, rrt, solarized, tango, trac, vim, vs,
xcode
- For this option to work properly, please make sure that the $TERM
environment variable is set to "xterm-256color" or similar
(e.g., via `export TERM=xterm-256color' in your ~/.bashrc).
--print WHAT, -p WHAT
- String specifying what the output should contain:
- 'H' request headers 'B' request body 'h' response headers 'b' response
body
- The default behaviour is 'hb' (i.e., the response headers and body is
printed), if standard output is not redirected. If the output is piped to
another program or to a file, then only the response body is printed by
default.
--verbose, -v
- Print the whole request as well as the response. Shortcut for
--print=HBbh.
--headers, -h
- Print only the response headers. Shortcut for
--print=h.
--body, -b
- Print only the response body. Shortcut for --print=b.
--stream, -S
- Always stream the output by line, i.e., behave like `tail -f'.
- Without --stream and with --pretty (either set or implied),
HTTPie fetches the whole response before it outputs the processed
data.
- Set this option when you want to continuously display a prettified
long-lived response, such as one from the Twitter streaming API.
- It is useful also without --pretty: It ensures that the output is
flushed more often and in smaller chunks.
--output FILE, -o FILE
- Save output to FILE. If --download is set, then only the response
body is saved to the file. Other parts of the HTTP exchange are printed to
stderr.
--download, -d
- Do not print the response body to stdout. Rather, download it and store it
in a file. The filename is guessed unless specified with --output
[filename]. This action is similar to the default behaviour of wget.
--continue, -c
- Resume an interrupted download. Note that the --output option needs
to be specified as well.
--session SESSION_NAME_OR_PATH
- Create, or reuse and update a session. Within a session, custom headers,
auth credential, as well as any cookies sent by the server persist between
requests.
- Session files are stored in:
- /home/gaetano/.httpie/sessions/<HOST>/<SESSION_NAME>.json.
--session-read-only SESSION_NAME_OR_PATH
- Create or read a session without updating it form the request/response
exchange.
--auth USER[:PASS], -a USER[:PASS]
- If only the username is provided (-a username), HTTPie will prompt
for the password.
--auth-type {basic,digest}
- The authentication mechanism to be used. Defaults to
"basic".
- "basic": Basic HTTP auth "digest": Digest HTTP
auth
--proxy PROTOCOL:PROXY_URL
- String mapping protocol to the URL of the proxy (e.g.
http:http://foo.bar:3128). You can specify multiple proxies with different
protocols.
--follow
- Set this flag if full redirects are allowed (e.g. re-POST-ing of data at
new Location).
--verify VERIFY
- Set to "no" to skip checking the host's SSL certificate. You can
also pass the path to a CA_BUNDLE file for private certs. You can also set
the REQUESTS_CA_BUNDLE environment variable. Defaults to
"yes".
--cert CERT
- You can specify a local cert to use as client side SSL certificate. This
file may either contain both private key and certificate or you may
specify --cert-key separately.
--cert-key CERT_KEY
- The private key to use with SSL. Only needed if --cert is given and
the certificate file does not contain the private key.
--timeout SECONDS
- The connection timeout of the request in seconds. The default value is 30
seconds.
--check-status
- By default, HTTPie exits with 0 when no network or other fatal errors
occur. This flag instructs HTTPie to also check the HTTP status code and
exit with an error if the status indicates one.
- When the server replies with a 4xx (Client Error) or 5xx (Server Error)
status code, HTTPie exits with 4 or 5 respectively. If the response is a
3xx (Redirect) and --follow hasn't been set, then the exit status
is 3. Also an error message is written to stderr if stdout is
redirected.
--ignore-stdin
- Do not attempt to read stdin.
--help
- Show this help message and exit.
--version
- Show version and exit.
--traceback
- Prints exception traceback should one occur.
--debug
- Prints exception traceback should one occur, and also other information
that is useful for debugging HTTPie itself and for reporting bugs.
For every --OPTION there is also a --no-OPTION that
reverts OPTION to its default value.
Suggestions and bug reports are greatly appreciated:
<https://github.com/jakubroztocil/httpie/issues>
httpie was written by Jakub Roztocil
<jakub@roztocil.name>.
This manual page was written for the Debian project (and may be
used by others).