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Version: 20 R7 BETA

HTTP Get

HTTP Get ( url ; response {; headerNames ; headerValues}{; *} ) -> Function result

ParameterTypeDescription
urlTextURL to which to send the request
responseText, Blob, Picture, ObjectResult of request
headerNamesText arrayHeader names of the request
Returned header names
headerValuesText arrayHeader values of the request
Returned header values
*OperatorIf passed, connection is maintained (keep-alive)If omitted, connection is closed automatically
Function resultLongintHTTP status code
Compatibility

This command is maintained for compatibility reasons only. It is now recommended to use the 4D.HTTPRequest class.

Description

The HTTP Get command sends an HTTP GET request directly to a specific URL and processes the HTTP server response.

Pass the URL where you want the request sent in the url parameter. The syntax to use is:

http://[{user}:[{password}]@]host[:{port}][/{path}][?{queryString}]

For example, you can pass the following strings:

    http://www.myserver.com    http://www.myserver.com/path    http://www.myserver.com/path?name="jones"    https://www.myserver.com/login (*)    http://123.45.67.89:8083    http://john:smith@123.45.67.89:8083    http://[2001:0db8:0000:0000:0000:ff00:0042:8329]    http://[2001:0db8:0000:0000:0000:ff00:0042:8329]:8080/index.html (**)

(*) During HTTPS requests, authority of the certificate is not checked.
(**) For more information about IPv6 addresses in urls, please refer to the RFC 2732.

After command execution, the response parameter receives the result of the request returned by the server. This result corresponds to the body of the response, with no headers.
You can pass different types of variables in response:

  • Text: When the result is expected to be text (see note below).
  • BLOB: When the result is expected to be in binary form.
  • Picture: When the result is expected to be a picture.
  • Object: When the result is expected to be an object.

Note: When a text variable is passed in response, 4D will try to decode the data returned from the server. 4D first tries to retrieve the charset from the content-type header, then from the content using a BOM, and finally looks for any http-equiv charset (in html content) or encoding (for xml) attribute. If no charset can be detected, 4D will attempt to decode the response in ANSI. If the conversion fails, the resulting text will be empty. If you are unsure whether the server returns a charset information or a BOM, but you know the encoding, it is more accurate to pass response in BLOB and call Convert to text.

If you pass a BLOB, it contains the text, picture or any type of contents (.wav, .zip, etc.) returned by the server. You must then manage the recovery of these contents (headers are not included in the BLOB). When you pass an object, if the request returns a result with a text content-type, 4D attempts to parse the content as JSON and returns the parsed result as an object, otherwise a 4D.Blob object is returned.

In headerNames and headerValues, you pass arrays containing the names and values of the request headers.
After this method is executed, these arrays contain the names and values of headers returned by the HTTP server. More specifically, this lets you manage cookies.

The * parameter enables the keep-alive mechanism for the server connection. By default, if this parameter is omitted, keep-alive is not enabled.

The command returns a standard HTTP status code (200=OK and so on) as returned by the server. The list of HTTP status codes is provided in RFC 2616.
If you are unable to connect to the server for a reason related to the network (DNS Failed, Server not reachable...), the command returns 0 and an error is generated. You can intercept errors using an error-handling method installed by the ON ERR CALL command.

Example 1

Retrieval of the 4D logo on the 4D Web site:

 var URLPic_t : Text
 URLPic_t:="http://www.4d.com/sites/all/themes/dimention/images/home/logo4D.jpg"
 ARRAY TEXT(HeaderNames_at;0)
 ARRAY TEXT(HeaderValues_at;0)
 var Pic_i : Picture
 $httpResponse:=HTTP Get(URLPic_t;Pic_i;HeaderNames_at;HeaderValues_at)

Example 2

Retrieval of an RFC:

 var URLText_t : Text
 var Text_t : Text
 URLText_t:="http://tools.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1.txt"
 ARRAY TEXT(HeaderNames_at;0)
 ARRAY TEXT(HeaderValues_at;0)
 $httpResponse:=HTTP Get(URLText_t;Text_t;HeaderNames_at;HeaderValues_at)

Example 3

Retrieval of a video:

 var vBlob : Blob
 $httpResponse:=HTTP Get("http://www.example.com/video.flv";vBlob)
 BLOB TO DOCUMENT("video.flv";vBlob)

See also

HTTP Request