Is there a cURL library for Ruby?
13 Answers
If you like it less low-level, there is also Typhoeus, which is built on top of Curl::Multi.
Use OpenURI and
open("http://...", :http_basic_authentication=>[user, password])
accessing sites/pages/resources that require HTTP authentication.
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13Honestly, if I see that a library uses open-uri internally, I don't use that library. It's a deeply flawed library built on top of a deeply flawed URI parser. It's fine for usage in IRB and that's it.– Bob AmanJun 1, 2009 at 19:30
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@Sporkmonger: Well, that's what we have— what do you suggest, raw Net::HTTP? Jun 2, 2009 at 5:18
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8Use Net::HTTP or Patron or Curb or any of the other libraries mentioned in the other answers. How this answer got voted up or accepted is beyond me.– Bob AmanOct 25, 2009 at 3:22
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7
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3Net::HTTP and open-uri are both notoriously bad in how they do http. Jan 20, 2013 at 21:30
Curb-fu is a wrapper around Curb which in turn uses libcurl. What does Curb-fu offer over Curb? Just a lot of syntactic sugar - but that can be often what you need.
If you know how to write your request as a curl
command, there is an online tool that can turn it into ruby (2.0+) code: curl-to-ruby
Currently, it knows the following options: -d/--data
, -H/--header
, -I/--head
, -u/--user
, --url
, and -X/--request
. It is open to contributions.
the eat
gem is a "replacement" for OpenURI, so you need to install the gem eat
in the first place
$ gem install eat
Now you can use it
require 'eat'
eat('http://yahoo.com') #=> String
eat('/home/seamus/foo.txt') #=> String
eat('file:///home/seamus/foo.txt') #=> String
It uses HTTPClient under the hood. It also has some options:
eat('http://yahoo.com', :timeout => 10) # timeout after 10 seconds
eat('http://yahoo.com', :limit => 1024) # only read the first 1024 chars
eat('https://yahoo.com', :openssl_verify_mode => 'none') # don't bother verifying SSL certificate
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1I can't get this to work. `require': cannot load such file -- eat (LoadError) Jul 16, 2014 at 15:02
Here's a little program I wrote to get some files with.
base = "http://media.pragprog.com/titles/ruby3/code/samples/tutthreads_"
for i in 1..50
url = "#{ base }#{ i }.rb"
file = "tutthreads_#{i}.rb"
File.open(file, 'w') do |f|
system "curl -o #{f.path} #{url}"
end
end
I know it could be a little more eloquent but it serves it purpose. Check it out. I just cobbled it together today because I got tired of going to each URL to get the code for the book that was not included in the source download.
There's also Mechanize, which is a very high-level web scraping client that uses Nokogiri for HTML parsing.
Adding a more recent answer, HTTPClient is another Ruby library that uses libcurl, supports parallel threads and lots of the curl goodies. I use HTTPClient and Typhoeus for any non-trivial apps.
To state the maybe-too-obvious, tick marks execute shell code in Ruby as well. Provided your Ruby code is running in a shell that has curl
:
puts `curl http://www.google.com?q=hello`
or
result = `
curl -X POST https://www.myurl.com/users \
-d "name=pat" \
-d "age=21"
`
puts result
A nice minimal reproducible example to copy/paste into your rails console:
require 'open-uri'
require 'nokogiri'
url = "https://www.example.com"
html_file = URI.open(url)
doc = Nokogiri::HTML(html_file)
doc.css("h1").text
# => "Example Domain"