SYNOPSIS Invoke from the shell: bash$ presto http://my-server.com Very basic usage: http://my-server.com> GET /product/1.json {"id":1,"name":"My Product"} http://my-server.com> HEAD /product/1.json HTTP/1.1 200 OK Connection: close Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2012 21:05:33 GMT Content-Length: 0 Content-Type: application/json Client-Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2012 21:05:44 GMT Client-Response-Num: 1 DESCRIPTION App::Presto provides a command-line interface (CLI) for RESTful web services. When looking for a way to interact with RESTful services answers typically point to some horrible GUI or (on the complete opposite end of the spectrum) just using curl directly on the command-line. This tool attempts to find some sort of middle ground by providing a quasi-DSL for interacting with a RESTful service in an interactive way. FEATURES Basic HTTP methods All HTTP methods are implemented as commands in presto. The URL that is given is appended to the endpoint specified when presto is invoked as shown in the SYNOPSIS above. Request Building If the endpoint contains a * character the URL fragment specified in the GET/POST/etc command is inserted at that point. This allows you to do things like auto-append a file extension to all URLs. For instance: bash$ presto http://my-server.com*.json http://my-server.com> GET /product/1 In this case, the full URL would be http://my-server.com/product/1.json. If no * is found in the URL, the URL fragment is simply appended at the end of the endpoint. All arguments after the first will be treated as query parameters (for GET/HEAD/DELETE requests) or request content (for POST/PUT requests). For instance: http://my-server.com> GET /products limit=10 offset=20 # request goes to http://my-sever.com/products?limit=10&offset=20 http://my-server.com> POST /products '{"name":"A New Product"}' # request goes to http://my-sever.com/products with the body as specified You can also specify additional headers you would like included in the request: # the ":" is optional http://my-server.com> header Accept: application/json # shortcut for "header Content-Type application/json" http://my-server.com> type application/json # shortcut for "header Authorization: Basic QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ== http://my-server.com> authorization Aladdin 'open sesame' # view all headers http://my-server.com> headers # view specific header http://my-server.com> header Authorization # clear all headers http://my-server.com> headers --clear # unset specific header http://my-server.com> header --unset Authorization If you are creating form URL-encoded data, a shortcut has been made to avoid having to manually URL-encode everything manually: http://my-server.com> form foo=bar baz=1,2,3 # outputs foo=bar&baz=1%2C2%2C3 Response Handling By default, presto will just dump the response body to the screen after a request is completed. There are additional options, however: # dump full request/response to the screen (exactly as transmitted over the wire) http://my-server.com> config verbose 1 # parse the response according to the content-type and use # Data::Dumper to display it http://my-server.com> config deserialize_response 1 # use something other than Data::Dumper to dump a parsed # response body http://my-server.com> config pretty_printer JSON http://my-server.com> config pretty_printer Data::Dump # send the output to a file (the '>' must not be followed by any white-space!) http://my-server.com> GET /some-image.png >some-image.png Pretty-printing can be especially helpful for making XML or JSON response bodies more human-readable. When deserialize_response is set, if the content-type of the response is "text/html", the HTML is automatically stripped with HTML::FormatText::WithLinks and displayed as formatted text. If the request or response body is binary (using a simple heuristic like the -B file-test operator), the output is not printed to STDOUT. Instead, you may want to use output redirection as show above and send the response body to a file. http://my-server.com> GET /some-image.jpg >foo.jpg Persistent Configuration As demonstrated above, you can use the config command to change the behavior of presto. These configuration options are persisted in a config file specific to the endpoint provided at the command-line and will be reloaded the next time you invoke presto with the same endpoint. Current valid config keys are: * verbose Boolean, when enabled, dumps request/response to STDOUT (defaults to "0") * deserialize_response Boolean, when enabled response body is parsed based on the Content-Type header (defaults to "1") * pretty_printer Must be one of the supported modules (i.e. Data::Dumper or JSON). Use tab completion to see currently supported values (defaults to "JSON"). * binmode Used to set encoding of STDIN and STDOUT handles (defaults to "utf8") TODO: provide a means for aliasing endpoints so that configuration is shared across multiple endpoints. History and Scripting Just like configuration, command history is maintained separately for each endpoint specified on the command-line and is persisted across sessions (assuming you have a capable Term::Readline library installed). You can interrogate the history using the (surprisingly named) history command. It supports a small subset of the bash history command: # dump all history http://my-server.com> history # dump last 5 entries http://my-server.com> history 5 # delete specific history entries http://my-server.com> history -d 4 # clear history http://my-server.com> history -c Presto also provides a way of saving and replaying bits of your command history. Here are some examples: # save all history to script file "my-script" http://my-server.com> save my-script # save the last 5 history entries http://my-server.com> save my-script 5 # save entries 3-7 http://my-server.com> save my-script 3..7 To replay scripts: http://my-server.com> source my-script # prompt before each command http://my-server.com> source -i my-script Variable interpolation At times (especially when working with scripts) it might be handy to use elements from a previous response to affect a subsequent request. Anything inside a balanced $(...) will be interpolated for you. For instance, a very contrived example: # hypothetical authentication protocal that returns a token in the response headers http://my-server.com> POST /auth.json username=jdoe&password=s3cr3t {"authenticated":true} # see the authentication token http://my-server.com> echo $(HEADER[X-Auth-Token]) 2c26b46b68ffc68ff99b453c1d30413413422d706483bfa0f98a5e886266e7ae If you need to include that in subsequent request, you can use the "stash" feature: # store the value http://my-server.com> stash auth-token $(HEADER[X-Auth-Token]) # use the value later http://my-server.com> header X-Auth-Token $(STASH[auth-token]) Those variable substitutions can be used anywhere in a command. HEADER and BODY always refer to the most recent request while the STASH is a persisted for the life of the process. One useful feature for scripting is to prompt for user input. You can do this by using the PROMPT pseudo-variable. The first set of brackets specify the prompt value. The second (optional) set of brackets specify the initial value. An example: # collect the username/password from the user http://my-server.com> stash username $(PROMPT[username:]) http://my-server.com> stash password $(PROMPT[password:]) # use the stashed values http://my-server.com> authorization $(STASH[username]) $(STASH[password]) http://my-server.com> GET /$(STASH[username])/profile # or use a value that was prompted for directly (without stashing it) http://my-server.com> GET /products 'created_on=$(PROMPT[Created on (YYYY-MM-DD):])' # you can also specify initial values http://my-server.com> GET /products 'status=$(PROMPT[Product status:][active])' You may also specify a local file to use as an argument to a command. An example: http://my-server.com> POST /products $(FILE[my-product.xml]) The file is assumed to be in the same encoding as the binmode configuration. If it is using a different character set, you can specify that in a second bracketed parameter: http://my-server.com> POST /products $(FILE[my-product.xml][latin-1]) The contents of the file will be slurped, decoded and included as an argument to the command as if you had typed it on the command-line directly. TODO: Allow data structure references (from STASH or even BODY) to be passed to a POST or PUT command which is then serialized based on the content-type of the request before being sent over the wire. (EXPERIMENTAL) Data::DPath integration As an add-on to the variable interpolated described above, you can use dpath expressions to further process the data returned from the REST service. Another very contrived example: http://my-server.com> GET /products.json [{"id":"1","name":"My Product"},{"id":"2","name":"Another Product"}] # issue a request to /product/2.json http://my-server.com> GET /product/$(BODY/id[-1]).json {"id":2,"name":"Another Product"} In this example, anything after BODY (including the /) is passed to Data::DPath and the result is then injected in it's place (the target data for BODY being the previous request's response data). This feature will work on $(STASH) values as well. CAVEAT EMPTOR This is beta-quality code and while I use it in my own daily workflow, it is likely riddled with horribly obvious bugs and missing functionality (let alone undocumented features). ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Much of this was inspired by resty which is a rather magical (aka convoluted) set of bash functions (at least for this occassional bash programmer). After attempting to understand and enhance resty, I decided to try my hand at creating something a little more perlish. A big thank you to Shutterstock Images for allowing me to work on this on company time and release it to the CPAN.