| Copyright | (c) 2014 Bryan O'Sullivan |
|---|---|
| License | BSD-style |
| Maintainer | bos@serpentine.com |
| Stability | experimental |
| Portability | GHC |
| Safe Haskell | None |
| Language | Haskell98 |
Network.Wreq
Description
A library for client-side HTTP requests, focused on ease of use.
When reading the examples in this module, you should assume the following environment:
-- Make it easy to write literalByteStringandTextvalues. {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-} -- Our handy module. import Network.Wreq -- Operators such as (&) and (.~). import Control.Lens -- Conversion of Haskell values to JSON. import Data.Aeson (toJSON) -- Easy traversal of JSON data. import Data.Aeson.Lens (key,nth)
There exist some less frequently used lenses that are not exported from this module; these can be found in Network.Wreq.Lens.
Synopsis
- get :: String -> IO (Response ByteString)
- getWith :: Options -> String -> IO (Response ByteString)
- post :: Postable a => String -> a -> IO (Response ByteString)
- postWith :: Postable a => Options -> String -> a -> IO (Response ByteString)
- head_ :: String -> IO (Response ())
- headWith :: Options -> String -> IO (Response ())
- options :: String -> IO (Response ())
- optionsWith :: Options -> String -> IO (Response ())
- put :: Putable a => String -> a -> IO (Response ByteString)
- putWith :: Putable a => Options -> String -> a -> IO (Response ByteString)
- delete :: String -> IO (Response ByteString)
- deleteWith :: Options -> String -> IO (Response ByteString)
- customMethod :: String -> String -> IO (Response ByteString)
- customMethodWith :: String -> Options -> String -> IO (Response ByteString)
- customHistoriedMethod :: String -> String -> IO (HistoriedResponse ByteString)
- customHistoriedMethodWith :: String -> Options -> String -> IO (HistoriedResponse ByteString)
- customPayloadMethod :: Postable a => String -> String -> a -> IO (Response ByteString)
- customPayloadMethodWith :: Postable a => String -> Options -> String -> a -> IO (Response ByteString)
- customHistoriedPayloadMethod :: Postable a => String -> String -> a -> IO (HistoriedResponse ByteString)
- customHistoriedPayloadMethodWith :: Postable a => String -> Options -> String -> a -> IO (HistoriedResponse ByteString)
- foldGet :: (a -> ByteString -> IO a) -> a -> String -> IO a
- foldGetWith :: Options -> (a -> ByteString -> IO a) -> a -> String -> IO a
- data Options
- defaults :: Options
- manager :: Lens' Options (Either ManagerSettings Manager)
- header :: HeaderName -> Lens' Options [ByteString]
- param :: Text -> Lens' Options [Text]
- redirects :: Lens' Options Int
- headers :: Lens' Options [Header]
- params :: Lens' Options [(Text, Text)]
- cookie :: ByteString -> Traversal' Options Cookie
- cookies :: Lens' Options (Maybe CookieJar)
- checkResponse :: Lens' Options (Maybe ResponseChecker)
- data Auth
- data AWSAuthVersion = AWSv4
- auth :: Lens' Options (Maybe Auth)
- basicAuth :: ByteString -> ByteString -> Auth
- oauth1Auth :: ByteString -> ByteString -> ByteString -> ByteString -> Auth
- oauth2Bearer :: ByteString -> Auth
- oauth2Token :: ByteString -> Auth
- awsAuth :: AWSAuthVersion -> ByteString -> ByteString -> Auth
- awsFullAuth :: AWSAuthVersion -> ByteString -> ByteString -> Maybe ByteString -> Maybe (ByteString, ByteString) -> Auth
- awsSessionTokenAuth :: AWSAuthVersion -> ByteString -> ByteString -> ByteString -> Auth
- data Proxy = Proxy ByteString Int
- proxy :: Lens' Options (Maybe Proxy)
- httpProxy :: ByteString -> Int -> Proxy
- withManager :: (Options -> IO a) -> IO a
- data Payload where
- Raw :: ContentType -> RequestBody -> Payload
- data FormParam where
- (:=) :: FormValue v => ByteString -> v -> FormParam
- class FormValue a
- type Part = PartM IO
- partName :: Lens' Part Text
- partFileName :: Lens' Part (Maybe String)
- partContentType :: Traversal' Part (Maybe MimeType)
- partGetBody :: Lens' Part (IO RequestBody)
- partBS :: forall (m :: Type -> Type). Applicative m => Text -> ByteString -> PartM m
- partLBS :: forall (m :: Type -> Type). Applicative m => Text -> ByteString -> PartM m
- partText :: Text -> Text -> Part
- partString :: Text -> String -> Part
- partFile :: Text -> FilePath -> Part
- partFileSource :: Text -> FilePath -> Part
- data Response body
- responseBody :: Lens (Response body0) (Response body1) body0 body1
- responseHeader :: HeaderName -> Traversal' (Response body) ByteString
- responseLink :: ByteString -> ByteString -> Fold (Response body) Link
- responseCookie :: ByteString -> Fold (Response body) Cookie
- responseHeaders :: Lens' (Response body) ResponseHeaders
- responseCookieJar :: Lens' (Response body) CookieJar
- responseStatus :: Lens' (Response body) Status
- data Status
- statusCode :: Lens' Status Int
- statusMessage :: Lens' Status ByteString
- data HistoriedResponse body
- hrFinalRequest :: Lens' (HistoriedResponse body) Request
- hrFinalResponse :: Lens' (HistoriedResponse body) (Response body)
- hrRedirects :: Lens' (HistoriedResponse body) [(Request, Response ByteString)]
- data Link
- linkURL :: Lens' Link ByteString
- linkParams :: Lens' Link [(ByteString, ByteString)]
- data JSONError = JSONError String
- asJSON :: (MonadThrow m, FromJSON a) => Response ByteString -> m (Response a)
- asValue :: MonadThrow m => Response ByteString -> m (Response Value)
- data Cookie
- cookieName :: Lens' Cookie ByteString
- cookieValue :: Lens' Cookie ByteString
- cookieExpiryTime :: Lens' Cookie UTCTime
- cookieDomain :: Lens' Cookie ByteString
- cookiePath :: Lens' Cookie ByteString
- atto :: Parser a -> Fold ByteString a
- atto_ :: Parser a -> Fold ByteString a
HTTP verbs
Sessions
The basic HTTP functions (get, post, and so on) in this module
have a few key drawbacks:
- If several requests go to the same server, there is no reuse of TCP connections.
- There is no management of cookies across multiple requests.
This makes these functions inefficient and verbose for many common uses. For greater efficiency, use the Network.Wreq.Session module.
GET
get :: String -> IO (Response ByteString) Source #
Issue a GET request.
Example:
get "http://httpbin.org/get"
>>>r <- get "http://httpbin.org/get">>>r ^. responseStatus . statusCode200
getWith :: Options -> String -> IO (Response ByteString) Source #
Issue a GET request, using the supplied Options.
Example:
let opts =defaults¶m"foo".~["bar"]getWithopts "http://httpbin.org/get"
>>>let opts = defaults & param "foo" .~ ["bar"]>>>r <- getWith opts "http://httpbin.org/get">>>r ^? responseBody . key "url"Just (String "http://httpbin.org/get?foo=bar")
POST
The Postable class determines which Haskell types can be used as
POST payloads.
Part and [Part] give a request body with a
Content-Type of multipart/form-data. Constructor functions
include partText and partFile.
>>>r <- post "http://httpbin.org/post" (partText "hello" "world")>>>r ^? responseBody . key "form" . key "hello"Just (String "world")
(ByteString, ByteString) and FormParam (and lists of
each) give a request body with a Content-Type of
application/x-www-form-urlencoded. The easiest way to use this is
via the (:=) constructor.
>>>r <- post "http://httpbin.org/post" ["num" := 31337, "str" := "foo"]>>>r ^? responseBody . key "form" . key "num"Just (String "31337")
The "magical" type conversion on the right-hand side of :=
above is due to the FormValue class. This package provides
sensible instances for the standard string and number types.
You may need to explicitly add types to the values (e.g. :: String)
in order to evade ambigous type errors.
>>>r <- post "http://httpbin.org/post" ["num" := (31337 :: Int), "str" := ("foo" :: String)]
The Value type gives a JSON request body with a
Content-Type of application/json. Any instance of
ToJSON can of course be converted to a Value using
toJSON.
>>>r <- post "http://httpbin.org/post" (toJSON [1,2,3])>>>r ^? responseBody . key "json" . nth 0Just (Number 1.0)
postWith :: Postable a => Options -> String -> a -> IO (Response ByteString) Source #
Issue a POST request, using the supplied Options.
Example:
let opts =defaults¶m"foo".~["bar"]postWithopts "http://httpbin.org/post" (toJSON[1,2,3])
>>>let opts = defaults & param "foo" .~ ["bar"]>>>r <- postWith opts "http://httpbin.org/post" (toJSON [1,2,3])>>>r ^? responseBody . key "url"Just (String "http://httpbin.org/post?foo=bar")
HEAD
head_ :: String -> IO (Response ()) Source #
Issue a HEAD request.
Example:
head_ "http://httpbin.org/get"
>>>r <- head_ "http://httpbin.org/get">>>r ^? responseHeader "Content-Type"Just "application/json"
OPTIONS
PUT
putWith :: Putable a => Options -> String -> a -> IO (Response ByteString) Source #
Issue a PUT request, using the supplied Options.
DELETE
delete :: String -> IO (Response ByteString) Source #
Issue a DELETE request.
Example:
delete "http://httpbin.org/delete"
>>>r <- delete "http://httpbin.org/delete">>>r ^. responseStatus . statusCode200
deleteWith :: Options -> String -> IO (Response ByteString) Source #
Custom Method
customMethod :: String -> String -> IO (Response ByteString) Source #
Issue a custom-method request
Example:
customMethod "PATCH" "http://httpbin.org/patch"
>>>r <- customMethod "PATCH" "http://httpbin.org/patch">>>r ^. responseStatus . statusCode200
customMethodWith :: String -> Options -> String -> IO (Response ByteString) Source #
Issue a custom request method request, using the supplied Options.
Example:
let opts =defaults&redirects.~0customMethodWith"PATCH" opts "http://httpbin.org/patch"
>>>let opts = defaults & redirects .~ 0>>>r <- customMethodWith "PATCH" opts "http://httpbin.org/patch">>>r ^. responseStatus . statusCode200
customHistoriedMethod :: String -> String -> IO (HistoriedResponse ByteString) Source #
Issue a custom request method. Keep track of redirects and return the HistoriedResponse
Example:
customHistoriedMethod "GET" "http://httpbin.org/redirect/3"
>>>r <- customHistoriedMethod "GET" "http://httpbin.org/redirect/3">>>length (r ^. hrRedirects)3
Since: 0.5.2.0
customHistoriedMethodWith :: String -> Options -> String -> IO (HistoriedResponse ByteString) Source #
Issue a custom request method request, using the supplied Options.
Keep track of redirects and return the HistoriedResponse.
Since: 0.5.2.0
Custom Payload Method
customPayloadMethod :: Postable a => String -> String -> a -> IO (Response ByteString) Source #
Issue a custom-method request with a payload
customPayloadMethodWith :: Postable a => String -> Options -> String -> a -> IO (Response ByteString) Source #
Issue a custom-method request with a payload, using the supplied Options.
customHistoriedPayloadMethod :: Postable a => String -> String -> a -> IO (HistoriedResponse ByteString) Source #
Issue a custom-method historied request with a payload
customHistoriedPayloadMethodWith :: Postable a => String -> Options -> String -> a -> IO (HistoriedResponse ByteString) Source #
Issue a custom-method historied request with a paylod, using the supplied Options.
Incremental consumption of responses
GET
foldGetWith :: Options -> (a -> ByteString -> IO a) -> a -> String -> IO a Source #
Configuration
Options for configuring a client.
manager :: Lens' Options (Either ManagerSettings Manager) Source #
A lens onto configuration of the connection manager provided by the http-client package.
In this example, we enable the use of OpenSSL for (hopefully) secure connections:
import OpenSSL.Session (context) import Network.HTTP.Client.OpenSSL let opts =defaults&manager.~Left (opensslManagerSettingscontext)withOpenSSL$getWithopts "https://httpbin.org/get"
In this example, we also set the response timeout to 10000 microseconds:
import OpenSSL.Session (context) import Network.HTTP.Client.OpenSSL import Network.HTTP.Client (defaultManagerSettings,managerResponseTimeout) let opts =defaults&manager.~Left (opensslManagerSettingscontext)&manager.~Left (defaultManagerSettings{managerResponseTimeout= responseTimeoutMicro 10000 } )withOpenSSL$getWithopts "https://httpbin.org/get"
header :: HeaderName -> Lens' Options [ByteString] Source #
redirects :: Lens' Options Int Source #
A lens onto the maximum number of redirects that will be followed before an exception is thrown.
In this example, a HttpException will be
thrown with a TooManyRedirects constructor,
because the maximum number of redirects allowed will be exceeded.
let opts =defaults&redirects.~3getWithopts "http://httpbin.org/redirect/5"
cookie :: ByteString -> Traversal' Options Cookie Source #
A traversal onto the cookie with the given name, if one exists.
N.B. This is an "illegal" Traversal': we can change the
cookieName of the associated Cookie so that it differs from the
name provided to this function.
checkResponse :: Lens' Options (Maybe ResponseChecker) Source #
A lens to get the optional status check function
Authentication
Do not use HTTP authentication unless you are using TLS encryption. These authentication tokens can easily be captured and reused by an attacker if transmitted in the clear.
Supported authentication types.
Do not use HTTP authentication unless you are using TLS encryption. These authentication tokens can easily be captured and reused by an attacker if transmitted in the clear.
data AWSAuthVersion Source #
Constructors
| AWSv4 | AWS request signing version 4 |
Instances
| Eq AWSAuthVersion Source # | |
Defined in Network.Wreq.Internal.Types Methods (==) :: AWSAuthVersion -> AWSAuthVersion -> Bool # (/=) :: AWSAuthVersion -> AWSAuthVersion -> Bool # | |
| Show AWSAuthVersion Source # | |
Defined in Network.Wreq.Internal.Types Methods showsPrec :: Int -> AWSAuthVersion -> ShowS # show :: AWSAuthVersion -> String # showList :: [AWSAuthVersion] -> ShowS # | |
Arguments
| :: ByteString | Username. |
| -> ByteString | Password. |
| -> Auth |
Basic authentication. This consists of a plain username and password.
Example (note the use of TLS):
let opts =defaults&auth?~basicAuth"user" "pass"getWithopts "https://httpbin.org/basic-auth/user/pass"
Note here the use of the ?~ setter to turn an Auth
into a Maybe Auth, to make the type of the RHS compatible with
the auth lens.
>>>let opts = defaults & auth ?~ basicAuth "user" "pass">>>r <- getWith opts "https://httpbin.org/basic-auth/user/pass">>>r ^? responseBody . key "authenticated"Just (Bool True)
Arguments
| :: ByteString | Consumer token |
| -> ByteString | Consumer secret |
| -> ByteString | OAuth token |
| -> ByteString | OAuth token secret |
| -> Auth |
OAuth1 authentication. This consists of a consumer token, a consumer secret, a token and a token secret
oauth2Bearer :: ByteString -> Auth Source #
An OAuth2 bearer token. This is treated by many services as the equivalent of a username and password.
Example (note the use of TLS):
let opts =defaults&auth?~oauth2Bearer"1234abcd"getWithopts "https://public-api.wordpress.com/rest/v1/me/"
oauth2Token :: ByteString -> Auth Source #
A not-quite-standard OAuth2 bearer token (that seems to be used only by GitHub). This will be treated by whatever services accept it as the equivalent of a username and password.
Example (note the use of TLS):
let opts =defaults&auth?~oauth2Token"abcd1234"getWithopts "https://api.github.com/user"
awsAuth :: AWSAuthVersion -> ByteString -> ByteString -> Auth Source #
awsFullAuth :: AWSAuthVersion -> ByteString -> ByteString -> Maybe ByteString -> Maybe (ByteString, ByteString) -> Auth Source #
Arguments
| :: AWSAuthVersion | Signature version (V4) |
| -> ByteString | AWS AccessKeyId |
| -> ByteString | AWS SecretAccessKey |
| -> ByteString | AWS STS SessionToken |
| -> Auth |
Proxy settings
Define a HTTP proxy, consisting of a hostname and port number.
Constructors
| Proxy ByteString Int |
Using a manager with defaults
Payloads for POST and PUT
A product type for representing more complex payload types.
Constructors
| Raw :: ContentType -> RequestBody -> Payload |
URL-encoded form data
A key/value pair for an application/x-www-form-urlencoded
POST request body.
Constructors
| (:=) :: FormValue v => ByteString -> v -> FormParam infixr 3 |
A type that can be rendered as the value portion of a key/value
pair for use in an application/x-www-form-urlencoded POST
body. Intended for use with the FormParam type.
The instances for String, strict Text, and lazy
Text are all encoded using UTF-8 before being
URL-encoded.
The instance for Maybe gives an empty string on Nothing,
and otherwise uses the contained type's instance.
Minimal complete definition
Instances
Multipart form data
partName :: Lens' Part Text Source #
A lens onto the name of the input element associated with
part of a multipart form upload.
partFileName :: Lens' Part (Maybe String) Source #
A lens onto the filename associated with part of a multipart form upload.
partContentType :: Traversal' Part (Maybe MimeType) Source #
A lens onto the content-type associated with part of a multipart form upload.
partGetBody :: Lens' Part (IO RequestBody) Source #
A lens onto the code that fetches the data associated with part of a multipart form upload.
Smart constructors
Arguments
| :: forall (m :: Type -> Type). Applicative m | |
| => Text | Name of the corresponding <input>. |
| -> ByteString | The body for this |
| -> PartM m |
Make a Part whose content is a strict ByteString.
The Part does not have a file name or content type associated
with it.
Arguments
| :: forall (m :: Type -> Type). Applicative m | |
| => Text | Name of the corresponding <input>. |
| -> ByteString | The body for this |
| -> PartM m |
Make a Part whose content is a lazy ByteString.
The Part does not have a file name or content type associated
with it.
Make a Part whose content is a strict Text, encoded as
UTF-8.
The Part does not have a file name or content type associated
with it.
Make a Part whose content is a String, encoded as UTF-8.
The Part does not have a file name or content type associated
with it.
Arguments
| :: Text | Name of the corresponding <input>. |
| -> FilePath | The name of the local file to upload. |
| -> Part |
Make a Part from a file.
The entire file will reside in memory at once. If you want
constant memory usage, use partFileSource.
The FilePath supplied will be used as the file name of the
Part. If you do not want to reveal this name to the server, you
must remove it prior to uploading.
The Part does not have a content type associated with it.
Responses
A simple representation of the HTTP response.
Since 0.1.0
Instances
| Functor Response | |
| Foldable Response | |
Defined in Network.HTTP.Client.Types Methods fold :: Monoid m => Response m -> m # foldMap :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> Response a -> m # foldMap' :: Monoid m => (a -> m) -> Response a -> m # foldr :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Response a -> b # foldr' :: (a -> b -> b) -> b -> Response a -> b # foldl :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> Response a -> b # foldl' :: (b -> a -> b) -> b -> Response a -> b # foldr1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> Response a -> a # foldl1 :: (a -> a -> a) -> Response a -> a # elem :: Eq a => a -> Response a -> Bool # maximum :: Ord a => Response a -> a # minimum :: Ord a => Response a -> a # | |
| Traversable Response | |
Defined in Network.HTTP.Client.Types | |
| Show body => Show (Response body) | |
responseBody :: Lens (Response body0) (Response body1) body0 body1 Source #
A lens onto the body of a response.
r <-get"http://httpbin.org/get" print (r^.responseBody)
Arguments
| :: HeaderName | Header name to match. |
| -> Traversal' (Response body) ByteString |
A lens onto all matching named headers in an HTTP response.
To access exactly one header (the result will be the empty string if
there is no match), use the (^.) operator.
r <-get"http://httpbin.org/get" print (r^.responseHeader"Content-Type")
To access at most one header (the result will be Nothing if there
is no match), use the (^?) operator.
r <-get"http://httpbin.org/get" print (r^?responseHeader"Content-Transfer-Encoding")
To access all (zero or more) matching headers, use the
(^..) operator.
r <-get"http://httpbin.org/get" print (r^..responseHeader"Set-Cookie")
Arguments
| :: ByteString | Parameter name to match. |
| -> ByteString | Parameter value to match. |
| -> Fold (Response body) Link |
A fold over Link headers, matching on both parameter name
and value.
For example, here is a Link header returned by the GitHub search API.
Link: <https://api.github.com/search/code?q=addClass+user%3Amozilla&page=2>; rel="next", <https://api.github.com/search/code?q=addClass+user%3Amozilla&page=34>; rel="last"
And here is an example of how we can retrieve the URL for the next link
programatically.
r <-get"https://api.github.com/search/code?q=addClass+user:mozilla" print (r^?responseLink"rel" "next" .linkURL)
Arguments
| :: ByteString | Name of cookie to match. |
| -> Fold (Response body) Cookie |
responseHeaders :: Lens' (Response body) ResponseHeaders Source #
A lens onto all headers in an HTTP response.
responseCookieJar :: Lens' (Response body) CookieJar Source #
A lens onto all cookies set in the response.
HTTP Status.
Only the statusCode is used for comparisons.
Please use mkStatus to create status codes from code and message, or the Enum instance or the
status code constants (like ok200). There might be additional record members in the future.
Note that the Show instance is only for debugging.
statusMessage :: Lens' Status ByteString Source #
A lens onto the textual description of an HTTP status.
data HistoriedResponse body #
A datatype holding information on redirected requests and the final response.
Since 0.4.1
Instances
hrFinalRequest :: Lens' (HistoriedResponse body) Request Source #
A lens onto the final request of a historied response.
hrFinalResponse :: Lens' (HistoriedResponse body) (Response body) Source #
A lens onto the final response of a historied response.
hrRedirects :: Lens' (HistoriedResponse body) [(Request, Response ByteString)] Source #
A lens onto the list of redirects of a historied response.
Link headers
An element of a Link header.
linkParams :: Lens' Link [(ByteString, ByteString)] Source #
A lens onto the parameters of a Link element.
Decoding responses
Instances
| Show JSONError Source # | |
| Exception JSONError Source # | |
Defined in Network.Wreq.Internal.Types Methods toException :: JSONError -> SomeException # fromException :: SomeException -> Maybe JSONError # displayException :: JSONError -> String # | |
asJSON :: (MonadThrow m, FromJSON a) => Response ByteString -> m (Response a) Source #
Convert the body of an HTTP response from JSON to a suitable Haskell type.
In this example, we use asJSON in the IO monad, where it will
throw a JSONError exception if conversion to the desired type
fails.
{-# LANGUAGE DeriveGeneric #-}
import GHC.Generics (Generic)
{- This Haskell type corresponds to the structure of a
response body from httpbin.org. -}
data GetBody = GetBody {
headers :: Map Text Text
, args :: Map Text Text
, origin :: Text
, url :: Text
} deriving (Show, Generic)
-- Get GHC to derive a FromJSON instance for us.
instance FromJSON GetBody
{- The fact that we want a GetBody below will be inferred by our
use of the "headers" accessor function. -}
foo = do
r <- asJSON =<< get "http://httpbin.org/get"
print (headers (r ^. responseBody))
If we use asJSON in the Either monad, it will return Left
with a JSONError payload if conversion fails, and Right with a
Response whose responseBody is the converted value on success.
asValue :: MonadThrow m => Response ByteString -> m (Response Value) Source #
Cookies
These are only the most frequently-used cookie-related lenses. See Network.Wreq.Lens for the full accounting of them all.
cookieName :: Lens' Cookie ByteString Source #
A lens onto the name of a cookie.
cookieValue :: Lens' Cookie ByteString Source #
A lens onto the value of a cookie.
cookieDomain :: Lens' Cookie ByteString Source #
A lens onto the domain of a cookie.
cookiePath :: Lens' Cookie ByteString Source #
A lens onto the path of a cookie.
Parsing responses
atto :: Parser a -> Fold ByteString a Source #
Turn an attoparsec Parser into a Fold.
Both headers and bodies can contain complicated data that we may need to parse.
Example: when responding to an OPTIONS request, a server may return the list of verbs it supports in any order, up to and including changing the order on every request (which httpbin.org /actually does/!). To deal with this possibility, we parse the list, then sort it.
>>>import Data.Attoparsec.ByteString.Char8 as A>>>import Data.List (sort)>>>>>>let comma = skipSpace >> "," >> skipSpace>>>let verbs = A.takeWhile isAlpha_ascii `sepBy` comma>>>>>>r <- options "http://httpbin.org/get">>>r ^. responseHeader "Allow" . atto verbs . to sort["GET","HEAD","OPTIONS"]