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http.h

Library: http.h

Example

#define HTTP_IMPLEMENTATION
#include "http.h"                                                                                                                                                            

int main( int argc, char** argv )                                                                                                                          
	{                                                                                                                                                       
	(void) argc, argv;

	http_t* request = http_get( "http://www.mattiasgustavsson.com/http_test.txt", NULL );
	if( !request )
	{
		printf( "Invalid request.\n" );
		return 1;
	}

	http_status_t status = HTTP_STATUS_PENDING;
	int prev_size = -1;
	while( status == HTTP_STATUS_PENDING )
	{
		status = http_process( request );
		if( prev_size != (int) request->response_size )
		{
			printf( "%d byte(s) received.\n", (int) request->response_size );
			prev_size = (int) request->response_size;
		}
	}

	if( status == HTTP_STATUS_FAILED )
	{
		printf( "HTTP request failed (%d): %s.\n", request->status_code, request->reason_phrase );
		http_release( request );
		return 1;
	}

	printf( "\nContent type: %s\n\n%s\n", request->content_type, (char const*)request->response_data );        
	http_release( request );
	return 0;
	}

API Documentation

http.h is a small library for making http requests from a web server. It only supports GET and POST http commands, and is designed for when you just need a very basic way of communicating over http. http.h does not support https connections, just plain http.

http.h is a single-header library, and does not need any .lib files or other binaries, or any build scripts. To use it, you just include http.h to get the API declarations. To get the definitions, you must include http.h from one single C or C++ file, and #define the symbol HTTP_IMPLEMENTATION before you do.

Customization

Custom memory allocators

For working memory and to store the retrieved data, http.h needs to do dynamic allocation by calling malloc. Programs might want to keep track of allocations done, or use custom defined pools to allocate memory from. http.h allows for specifying custom memory allocation functions for malloc and free. This is done with the following code:

#define HTTP_IMPLEMENTATION
#define HTTP_MALLOC( ctx, size ) ( my_custom_malloc( ctx, size ) )
#define HTTP_FREE( ctx, ptr ) ( my_custom_free( ctx, ptr ) )
#include "http.h"

where my_custom_malloc and my_custom_free are your own memory allocation/deallocation functions. The ctx parameter is an optional parameter of type void*. When http_get or http_post is called, , you can pass in a memctx parameter, which can be a pointer to anything you like, and which will be passed through as the ctx parameter to every HTTP_MALLOC/HTTP_FREE call. For example, if you are doing memory tracking, you can pass a pointer to your tracking data as memctx, and in your custom allocation/deallocation function, you can cast the ctx param back to the right type, and access the tracking data.

If no custom allocator is defined, http.h will default to malloc and free from the C runtime library.

http_get

http_t* http_get( char const* url, void* memctx )

Initiates a http GET request with the specified url. url is a zero terminated string containing the request location, just like you would type it in a browser, for example http://www.mattiasgustavsson.com:80/http_test.txt. memctx is a pointer to user defined data which will be passed through to the custom HTTP_MALLOC/HTTP_FREE calls. It can be NULL if no user defined data is needed. Returns a http_t instance, which needs to be passed to http_process to process the request. When the request is finished (or have failed), the returned http_t instance needs to be released by calling http_release. If the request was invalid, http_get returns NULL.

http_post

http_t* http_post( char const* url, void const* data, size_t size, void* memctx )

Initiates a http POST request with the specified url. url is a zero terminated string containing the request location, just like you would type it in a browser, for example http://www.mattiasgustavsson.com:80/http_test.txt. data is a pointer to the data to be sent along as part of the request, and size is the number of bytes to send. memctx is a pointer to user defined data which will be passed through to the custom HTTP_MALLOC/HTTP_FREE calls. It can be NULL if no user defined data is needed. Returns a http_t instance, which needs to be passed to http_process to process the request. When the request is finished (or have failed), the returned http_t instance needs to be released by calling http_release. If the request was invalid, http_post returns NULL.

http_process

http_status_t http_process( http_t* http )

http.h uses non-blocking sockets, so after a request have been made by calling either http_get or http_post, you have to keep calling http_process for as long as it returns HTTP_STATUS_PENDING. You can call it from a loop which does other work too, for example from inside a game loop or from a loop which calls http_process on multiple requests. If the request fails, http_process returns HTTP_STATUS_FAILED, and the fields status_code and reason_phrase may contain more details (for example, status code can be 404 if the requested resource was not found on the server). If the request completes successfully, it returns HTTP_STATUS_COMPLETED. In this case, the http_t instance will contain details about the result. status_code and reason_phrase contains the details about the result, as specified in the HTTP protocol. content_type contains the MIME type for the returns resource, for example text/html for a normal web page. response_data is the pointer to the received data, and resonse_size is the number of bytes it contains. In the case when the response data is in text format, http.h ensures there is a zero terminator placed immediately after the response data block, so it is safe to interpret the resonse data as a char*. Note that the data size in this case will be the length of the data without the additional zero terminator.

http_release

void http_release( http_t* http )

Releases the resources acquired by http_get or http_post. Should be call when you are finished with the request.