|
|
HTTP::Request - HTTP style request message
require HTTP::Request; $request = HTTP::Request->new(GET => 'http://www.example.com/');
and usually used like this:
$ua = LWP::UserAgent->new; $response = $ua->request($request);
HTTP::Request
is a class encapsulating HTTP style requests,
consisting of a request line, some headers, and a content body. Note
that the LWP library uses HTTP style requests even for non-HTTP
protocols. Instances of this class are usually passed to the
request()
method of an LWP::UserAgent
object.
HTTP::Request
is a subclass of HTTP::Message
and therefore
inherits its methods. The following additional methods are available:
Constructs a new HTTP::Request
object describing a request on the
object $uri using method $method. The $method argument must be a
string. The $uri argument can be either a string, or a reference to a
URI
object. The optional $header argument should be a reference to
an HTTP::Headers
object or a plain array reference of key/value
pairs. The optional $content argument should be a string of bytes.
This constructs a new request object by parsing the given string.
This is used to get/set the method attribute. The method should be a short string like ``GET'', ``HEAD'', ``PUT'' or ``POST''.
This is used to get/set the uri attribute. The $val can be a reference to a URI object or a plain string. If a string is given, then it should be parseable as an absolute URI.
This is used to get/set header values and it is inherited from
HTTP::Headers
via HTTP::Message
. See the HTTP::Headers manpage for
details and other similar methods that can be used to access the
headers.
This is used to get/set the content and it is inherited from the
HTTP::Message
base class. See the HTTP::Message manpage for details and
other methods that can be used to access the content.
Note that the content should be a string of bytes. Strings in perl
can contain characters outside the range of a byte. The Encode
module can be used to turn such strings into a string of bytes.
Method returning a textual representation of the request.
the HTTP::Headers manpage, the HTTP::Message manpage, the HTTP::Request::Common manpage, the HTTP::Response manpage
Copyright 1995-2004 Gisle Aas.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.