Test web APIs with the HttpRepl
The HTTP Read-Eval-Print Loop (REPL) is:
- A lightweight, cross-platform command-line tool that's supported everywhere .NET Core is supported.
- Used for making HTTP requests to test ASP.NET Core web APIs (and non-ASP.NET Core web APIs) and view their results.
- Capable of testing web APIs hosted in any environment, including localhost and Azure App Service.
The following HTTP verbs are supported:
To follow along, view or download the sample ASP.NET Core web API (how to download).
Prerequisites
Installation
To install the HttpRepl, run the following command:
dotnet tool install -g Microsoft.dotnet-httprepl
A .NET Core Global Tool is installed from the Microsoft.dotnet-httprepl NuGet package.
Note
By default the architecture of the .NET binaries to install represents the currently running OS architecture. To specify a different OS architecture, see dotnet tool install, --arch option. For more information, see GitHub issue dotnet/AspNetCore.Docs #29262.
On macOS, update the path:
export PATH="$HOME/.dotnet/tools:$PATH"
Usage
After successful installation of the tool, run the following command to start the HttpRepl:
httprepl
To view the available HttpRepl commands, run one of the following commands:
httprepl -h
httprepl --help
The following output is displayed:
Usage:
httprepl [<BASE_ADDRESS>] [options]
Arguments:
<BASE_ADDRESS> - The initial base address for the REPL.
Options:
-h|--help - Show help information.
Once the REPL starts, these commands are valid:
Setup Commands:
Use these commands to configure the tool for your API server
connect Configures the directory structure and base address of the api server
set header Sets or clears a header for all requests. e.g. `set header content-type application/json`
HTTP Commands:
Use these commands to execute requests against your application.
GET get - Issues a GET request
POST post - Issues a POST request
PUT put - Issues a PUT request
DELETE delete - Issues a DELETE request
PATCH patch - Issues a PATCH request
HEAD head - Issues a HEAD request
OPTIONS options - Issues a OPTIONS request
Navigation Commands:
The REPL allows you to navigate your URL space and focus on specific APIs that you are working on.
ls Show all endpoints for the current path
cd Append the given directory to the currently selected path, or move up a path when using `cd ..`
Shell Commands:
Use these commands to interact with the REPL shell.
clear Removes all text from the shell
echo [on/off] Turns request echoing on or off, show the request that was made when using request commands
exit Exit the shell
REPL Customization Commands:
Use these commands to customize the REPL behavior.
pref [get/set] Allows viewing or changing preferences, e.g. 'pref set editor.command.default 'C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft VS Code\\Code.exe'`
run Runs the script at the given path. A script is a set of commands that can be typed with one command per line
ui Displays the Swagger UI page, if available, in the default browser
Use `help <COMMAND>` for more detail on an individual command. e.g. `help get`.
For detailed tool info, see https://aka.ms/http-repl-doc.
The HttpRepl offers command completion. Pressing the Tab key iterates through the list of commands that complete the characters or API endpoint that you typed. The following sections outline the available CLI commands.
Connect to the web API
Connect to a web API by running the following command:
httprepl <ROOT URI>
<ROOT URI>
is the base URI for the web API. For example:
httprepl https://localhost:5001
Alternatively, run the following command at any time while the HttpRepl is running:
connect <ROOT URI>
For example:
(Disconnected)> connect https://localhost:5001
Manually point to the OpenAPI description for the web API
The connect command above will attempt to find the OpenAPI description automatically. If for some reason it's unable to do so, you can specify the URI of the OpenAPI description for the web API by using the --openapi
option:
connect <ROOT URI> --openapi <OPENAPI DESCRIPTION ADDRESS>
For example:
(Disconnected)> connect https://localhost:5001 --openapi /swagger/v1/swagger.json
Enable verbose output for details on OpenAPI description searching, parsing, and validation
Specifying the --verbose
option with the connect
command will produce more details when the tool searches for the OpenAPI description, parses, and validates it.
connect <ROOT URI> --verbose
For example:
(Disconnected)> connect https://localhost:5001 --verbose
Checking https://localhost:5001/swagger.json... 404 NotFound
Checking https://localhost:5001/swagger/v1/swagger.json... 404 NotFound
Checking https://localhost:5001/openapi.json... Found
Parsing... Successful (with warnings)
The field 'info' in 'document' object is REQUIRED [#/info]
The field 'paths' in 'document' object is REQUIRED [#/paths]
Navigate the web API
View available endpoints
To list the different endpoints (controllers) at the current path of the web API address, run the ls
or dir
command:
https://localhost:5001/> ls
The following output format is displayed:
. []
Fruits [get|post]
People [get|post]
https://localhost:5001/>
The preceding output indicates that there are two controllers available: Fruits
and People
. Both controllers support parameterless HTTP GET and POST operations.
Navigating into a specific controller reveals more detail. For example, the following command's output shows the Fruits
controller also supports HTTP GET, PUT, and DELETE operations. Each of these operations expects an id
parameter in the route:
https://localhost:5001/fruits> ls
. [get|post]
.. []
{id} [get|put|delete]
https://localhost:5001/fruits>
Alternatively, run the ui
command to open the web API's Swagger UI page in a browser. For example:
https://localhost:5001/> ui
Navigate to an endpoint
To navigate to a different endpoint on the web API, run the cd
command:
https://localhost:5001/> cd people
The path following the cd
command is case insensitive. The following output format is displayed:
/people [get|post]
https://localhost:5001/people>
Customize the HttpRepl
The HttpRepl's default colors can be customized. Additionally, a default text editor can be defined. The HttpRepl preferences are persisted across the current session and are honored in future sessions. Once modified, the preferences are stored in the following file:
The .httpreplprefs file is loaded on startup and not monitored for changes at runtime. Manual modifications to the file take effect only after restarting the tool.
View the settings
To view the available settings, run the pref get
command. For example:
https://localhost:5001/> pref get
The preceding command displays the available key-value pairs:
colors.json=Green
colors.json.arrayBrace=BoldCyan
colors.json.comma=BoldYellow
colors.json.name=BoldMagenta
colors.json.nameSeparator=BoldWhite
colors.json.objectBrace=Cyan
colors.protocol=BoldGreen
colors.status=BoldYellow
Set color preferences
Response colorization is currently supported for JSON only. To customize the default HttpRepl tool coloring, locate the key corresponding to the color to be changed. For instructions on how to find the keys, see the View the settings section. For example, change the colors.json
key value from Green
to White
as follows:
https://localhost:5001/people> pref set colors.json White
Only the allowed colors may be used. Subsequent HTTP requests display output with the new coloring.
When specific color keys aren't set, more generic keys are considered. To demonstrate this fallback behavior, consider the following example:
- If
colors.json.name
doesn't have a value,colors.json.string
is used. - If
colors.json.string
doesn't have a value,colors.json.literal
is used. - If
colors.json.literal
doesn't have a value,colors.json
is used. - If
colors.json
doesn't have a value, the command shell's default text color (AllowedColors.None
) is used.
Set indentation size
Response indentation size customization is currently supported for JSON only. The default size is two spaces. For example:
[
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Apple"
},
{
"id": 2,
"name": "Orange"
},
{
"id": 3,
"name": "Strawberry"
}
]
To change the default size, set the formatting.json.indentSize
key. For example, to always use four spaces:
pref set formatting.json.indentSize 4
Subsequent responses honor the setting of four spaces:
[
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Apple"
},
{
"id": 2,
"name": "Orange"
},
{
"id": 3,
"name": "Strawberry"
}
]
Set the default text editor
By default, the HttpRepl has no text editor configured for use. To test web API methods requiring an HTTP request body, a default text editor must be set. The HttpRepl tool launches the configured text editor for the sole purpose of composing the request body. Run the following command to set your preferred text editor as the default:
pref set editor.command.default "<EXECUTABLE>"
In the preceding command, <EXECUTABLE>
is the full path to the text editor's executable file. For example, run the following command to set Visual Studio Code as the default text editor:
To launch the default text editor with specific CLI arguments, set the editor.command.default.arguments
key. For example, assume Visual Studio Code is the default text editor and that you always want the HttpRepl to open Visual Studio Code in a new session with extensions disabled. Run the following command:
pref set editor.command.default.arguments "--disable-extensions --new-window"
Tip
If your default editor is Visual Studio Code, you'll usually want to pass the -w
or --wait
argument to force Visual Studio Code to wait for you to close the file before returning.
Set the OpenAPI Description search paths
By default, the HttpRepl has a set of relative paths that it uses to find the OpenAPI description when executing the connect
command without the --openapi
option. These relative paths are combined with the root and base paths specified in the connect
command. The default relative paths are:
swagger.json
swagger/v1/swagger.json
/swagger.json
/swagger/v1/swagger.json
openapi.json
/openapi.json
To use a different set of search paths in your environment, set the swagger.searchPaths
preference. The value must be a pipe-delimited list of relative paths. For example:
pref set swagger.searchPaths "swagger/v2/swagger.json|swagger/v3/swagger.json"
Instead of replacing the default list altogether, the list can also be modified by adding or removing paths.
To add one or more search paths to the default list, set the swagger.addToSearchPaths
preference. The value must be a pipe-delimited list of relative paths. For example:
pref set swagger.addToSearchPaths "openapi/v2/openapi.json|openapi/v3/openapi.json"
To remove one or more search paths from the default list, set the swagger.addToSearchPaths
preference. The value must be a pipe-delimited list of relative paths. For example:
pref set swagger.removeFromSearchPaths "swagger.json|/swagger.json"
Test HTTP GET requests
Synopsis
get <PARAMETER> [-F|--no-formatting] [-h|--header] [--response:body] [--response:headers] [-s|--streaming]
Arguments
PARAMETER
The route parameter, if any, expected by the associated controller action method.
Options
The following options are available for the get
command:
-F|--no-formatting
A flag whose presence suppresses HTTP response formatting.
-h|--header
Sets an HTTP request header. The following two value formats are supported:
{header}={value}
{header}:{value}
--response:body
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response body should be written. For example,
--response:body "C:\response.json"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.--response:headers
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response headers should be written. For example,
--response:headers "C:\response.txt"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.-s|--streaming
A flag whose presence enables streaming of the HTTP response.
Example
To issue an HTTP GET request:
Run the
get
command on an endpoint that supports it:https://localhost:5001/people> get
The preceding command displays the following output format:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 Date: Fri, 21 Jun 2019 03:38:45 GMT Server: Kestrel Transfer-Encoding: chunked [ { "id": 1, "name": "Scott Hunter" }, { "id": 2, "name": "Scott Hanselman" }, { "id": 3, "name": "Scott Guthrie" } ] https://localhost:5001/people>
Retrieve a specific record by passing a parameter to the
get
command:https://localhost:5001/people> get 2
The preceding command displays the following output format:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 Date: Fri, 21 Jun 2019 06:17:57 GMT Server: Kestrel Transfer-Encoding: chunked [ { "id": 2, "name": "Scott Hanselman" } ] https://localhost:5001/people>
Test HTTP POST requests
Synopsis
post <PARAMETER> [-c|--content] [-f|--file] [-h|--header] [--no-body] [-F|--no-formatting] [--response] [--response:body] [--response:headers] [-s|--streaming]
Arguments
PARAMETER
The route parameter, if any, expected by the associated controller action method.
Options
-F|--no-formatting
A flag whose presence suppresses HTTP response formatting.
-h|--header
Sets an HTTP request header. The following two value formats are supported:
{header}={value}
{header}:{value}
--response:body
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response body should be written. For example,
--response:body "C:\response.json"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.--response:headers
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response headers should be written. For example,
--response:headers "C:\response.txt"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.-s|--streaming
A flag whose presence enables streaming of the HTTP response.
-c|--content
Provides an inline HTTP request body. For example,
-c "{\"id\":2,\"name\":\"Cherry\"}"
.-f|--file
Provides a path to a file containing the HTTP request body. For example,
-f "C:\request.json"
.--no-body
Indicates that no HTTP request body is needed.
Example
To issue an HTTP POST request:
Run the
post
command on an endpoint that supports it:https://localhost:5001/people> post -h Content-Type=application/json
In the preceding command, the
Content-Type
HTTP request header is set to indicate a request body media type of JSON. The default text editor opens a .tmp file with a JSON template representing the HTTP request body. For example:{ "id": 0, "name": "" }
Tip
To set the default text editor, see the Set the default text editor section.
Modify the JSON template to satisfy model validation requirements:
{ "id": 0, "name": "Scott Addie" }
Save the .tmp file, and close the text editor. The following output appears in the command shell:
HTTP/1.1 201 Created Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 Date: Thu, 27 Jun 2019 21:24:18 GMT Location: https://localhost:5001/people/4 Server: Kestrel Transfer-Encoding: chunked { "id": 4, "name": "Scott Addie" } https://localhost:5001/people>
Test HTTP PUT requests
Synopsis
put <PARAMETER> [-c|--content] [-f|--file] [-h|--header] [--no-body] [-F|--no-formatting] [--response] [--response:body] [--response:headers] [-s|--streaming]
Arguments
PARAMETER
The route parameter, if any, expected by the associated controller action method.
Options
-F|--no-formatting
A flag whose presence suppresses HTTP response formatting.
-h|--header
Sets an HTTP request header. The following two value formats are supported:
{header}={value}
{header}:{value}
--response:body
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response body should be written. For example,
--response:body "C:\response.json"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.--response:headers
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response headers should be written. For example,
--response:headers "C:\response.txt"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.-s|--streaming
A flag whose presence enables streaming of the HTTP response.
-c|--content
Provides an inline HTTP request body. For example,
-c "{\"id\":2,\"name\":\"Cherry\"}"
.-f|--file
Provides a path to a file containing the HTTP request body. For example,
-f "C:\request.json"
.--no-body
Indicates that no HTTP request body is needed.
Example
To issue an HTTP PUT request:
Optional: Run the
get
command to view the data before modifying it:https://localhost:5001/fruits> get HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2019 00:07:32 GMT Server: Kestrel Transfer-Encoding: chunked [ { "id": 1, "data": "Apple" }, { "id": 2, "data": "Orange" }, { "id": 3, "data": "Strawberry" } ]
Run the
put
command on an endpoint that supports it:https://localhost:5001/fruits> put 2 -h Content-Type=application/json
In the preceding command, the
Content-Type
HTTP request header is set to indicate a request body media type of JSON. The default text editor opens a .tmp file with a JSON template representing the HTTP request body. For example:{ "id": 0, "name": "" }
Tip
To set the default text editor, see the Set the default text editor section.
Modify the JSON template to satisfy model validation requirements:
{ "id": 2, "name": "Cherry" }
Save the .tmp file, and close the text editor. The following output appears in the command shell:
[main 2019-06-28T17:27:01.805Z] update#setState idle HTTP/1.1 204 No Content Date: Fri, 28 Jun 2019 17:28:21 GMT Server: Kestrel
Optional: Issue a
get
command to see the modifications. For example, if you typed "Cherry" in the text editor, aget
returns the following output:https://localhost:5001/fruits> get HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2019 00:08:20 GMT Server: Kestrel Transfer-Encoding: chunked [ { "id": 1, "data": "Apple" }, { "id": 2, "data": "Cherry" }, { "id": 3, "data": "Strawberry" } ] https://localhost:5001/fruits>
Test HTTP DELETE requests
Synopsis
delete <PARAMETER> [-F|--no-formatting] [-h|--header] [--response] [--response:body] [--response:headers] [-s|--streaming]
Arguments
PARAMETER
The route parameter, if any, expected by the associated controller action method.
Options
-F|--no-formatting
A flag whose presence suppresses HTTP response formatting.
-h|--header
Sets an HTTP request header. The following two value formats are supported:
{header}={value}
{header}:{value}
--response:body
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response body should be written. For example,
--response:body "C:\response.json"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.--response:headers
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response headers should be written. For example,
--response:headers "C:\response.txt"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.-s|--streaming
A flag whose presence enables streaming of the HTTP response.
Example
To issue an HTTP DELETE request:
Optional: Run the
get
command to view the data before modifying it:https://localhost:5001/fruits> get HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2019 00:07:32 GMT Server: Kestrel Transfer-Encoding: chunked [ { "id": 1, "data": "Apple" }, { "id": 2, "data": "Orange" }, { "id": 3, "data": "Strawberry" } ]
Run the
delete
command on an endpoint that supports it:https://localhost:5001/fruits> delete 2
The preceding command displays the following output format:
HTTP/1.1 204 No Content Date: Fri, 28 Jun 2019 17:36:42 GMT Server: Kestrel
Optional: Issue a
get
command to see the modifications. In this example, aget
returns the following output:https://localhost:5001/fruits> get HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 Date: Sat, 22 Jun 2019 00:16:30 GMT Server: Kestrel Transfer-Encoding: chunked [ { "id": 1, "data": "Apple" }, { "id": 3, "data": "Strawberry" } ] https://localhost:5001/fruits>
Test HTTP PATCH requests
Synopsis
patch <PARAMETER> [-c|--content] [-f|--file] [-h|--header] [--no-body] [-F|--no-formatting] [--response] [--response:body] [--response:headers] [-s|--streaming]
Arguments
PARAMETER
The route parameter, if any, expected by the associated controller action method.
Options
-F|--no-formatting
A flag whose presence suppresses HTTP response formatting.
-h|--header
Sets an HTTP request header. The following two value formats are supported:
{header}={value}
{header}:{value}
--response:body
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response body should be written. For example,
--response:body "C:\response.json"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.--response:headers
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response headers should be written. For example,
--response:headers "C:\response.txt"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.-s|--streaming
A flag whose presence enables streaming of the HTTP response.
-c|--content
Provides an inline HTTP request body. For example,
-c "{\"id\":2,\"name\":\"Cherry\"}"
.-f|--file
Provides a path to a file containing the HTTP request body. For example,
-f "C:\request.json"
.--no-body
Indicates that no HTTP request body is needed.
Test HTTP HEAD requests
Synopsis
head <PARAMETER> [-F|--no-formatting] [-h|--header] [--response] [--response:body] [--response:headers] [-s|--streaming]
Arguments
PARAMETER
The route parameter, if any, expected by the associated controller action method.
Options
-F|--no-formatting
A flag whose presence suppresses HTTP response formatting.
-h|--header
Sets an HTTP request header. The following two value formats are supported:
{header}={value}
{header}:{value}
--response:body
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response body should be written. For example,
--response:body "C:\response.json"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.--response:headers
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response headers should be written. For example,
--response:headers "C:\response.txt"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.-s|--streaming
A flag whose presence enables streaming of the HTTP response.
Test HTTP OPTIONS requests
Synopsis
options <PARAMETER> [-F|--no-formatting] [-h|--header] [--response] [--response:body] [--response:headers] [-s|--streaming]
Arguments
PARAMETER
The route parameter, if any, expected by the associated controller action method.
Options
-F|--no-formatting
A flag whose presence suppresses HTTP response formatting.
-h|--header
Sets an HTTP request header. The following two value formats are supported:
{header}={value}
{header}:{value}
--response:body
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response body should be written. For example,
--response:body "C:\response.json"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.--response:headers
Specifies a file to which the HTTP response headers should be written. For example,
--response:headers "C:\response.txt"
. The file is created if it doesn't exist.-s|--streaming
A flag whose presence enables streaming of the HTTP response.
Set HTTP request headers
To set an HTTP request header, use one of the following approaches:
Set inline with the HTTP request. For example:
https://localhost:5001/people> post -h Content-Type=application/json
With the preceding approach, each distinct HTTP request header requires its own
-h
option.Set before sending the HTTP request. For example:
https://localhost:5001/people> set header Content-Type application/json
When setting the header before sending a request, the header remains set for the duration of the command shell session. To clear the header, provide an empty value. For example:
https://localhost:5001/people> set header Content-Type
Test secured endpoints
The HttpRepl supports the testing of secured endpoints in the following ways:
- Via the default credentials of the logged in user.
- Through the use of HTTP request headers.
Default credentials
Consider a web API you're testing that's hosted in IIS and secured with Windows authentication. You want the credentials of the user running the tool to flow across to the HTTP endpoints being tested. To pass the default credentials of the logged in user:
Set the
httpClient.useDefaultCredentials
preference totrue
:pref set httpClient.useDefaultCredentials true
Exit and restart the tool before sending another request to the web API.
Default proxy credentials
Consider a scenario in which the web API you're testing is behind a proxy secured with Windows authentication. You want the credentials of the user running the tool to flow to the proxy. To pass the default credentials of the logged in user:
Set the
httpClient.proxy.useDefaultCredentials
preference totrue
:pref set httpClient.proxy.useDefaultCredentials true
Exit and restart the tool before sending another request to the web API.
HTTP request headers
Examples of supported authentication and authorization schemes include:
- basic authentication
- JWT bearer tokens
- digest authentication
For example, you can send a bearer token to an endpoint with the following command:
set header Authorization "bearer <TOKEN VALUE>"
To access an Azure-hosted endpoint or to use the Azure REST API, you need a bearer token. Use the following steps to obtain a bearer token for your Azure subscription via the Azure CLI. The HttpRepl sets the bearer token in an HTTP request header. A list of Azure App Service Web Apps is retrieved.
Sign in to Azure:
az login
Get your subscription ID with the following command:
az account show --query id
Copy your subscription ID and run the following command:
az account set --subscription "<SUBSCRIPTION ID>"
Get your bearer token with the following command:
az account get-access-token --query accessToken
Connect to the Azure REST API via the HttpRepl:
httprepl https://management.azure.com
Set the
Authorization
HTTP request header:https://management.azure.com/> set header Authorization "bearer <ACCESS TOKEN>"
Navigate to the subscription:
https://management.azure.com/> cd subscriptions/<SUBSCRIPTION ID>
Get a list of your subscription's Azure App Service Web Apps:
https://management.azure.com/subscriptions/{SUBSCRIPTION ID}> get providers/Microsoft.Web/sites?api-version=2016-08-01
The following response is displayed:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Cache-Control: no-cache Content-Length: 35948 Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2019 23:04:03 GMT Expires: -1 Pragma: no-cache Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=31536000; includeSubDomains X-Content-Type-Options: nosniff x-ms-correlation-request-id: <em>xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx</em> x-ms-original-request-ids: <em>xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx;xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx</em> x-ms-ratelimit-remaining-subscription-reads: 11999 x-ms-request-id: xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx x-ms-routing-request-id: WESTUS:xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx:xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxx { "value": [ <AZURE RESOURCES LIST> ] }
Toggle HTTP request display
By default, display of the HTTP request being sent is suppressed. It's possible to change the corresponding setting for the duration of the command shell session.
Enable request display
View the HTTP request being sent by running the echo on
command. For example:
https://localhost:5001/people> echo on
Request echoing is on
Subsequent HTTP requests in the current session display the request headers. For example:
https://localhost:5001/people> post
[main 2019-06-28T18:50:11.930Z] update#setState idle
Request to https://localhost:5001...
POST /people HTTP/1.1
Content-Length: 41
Content-Type: application/json
User-Agent: HTTP-REPL
{
"id": 0,
"name": "Scott Addie"
}
Response from https://localhost:5001...
HTTP/1.1 201 Created
Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
Date: Fri, 28 Jun 2019 18:50:21 GMT
Location: https://localhost:5001/people/4
Server: Kestrel
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
{
"id": 4,
"name": "Scott Addie"
}
https://localhost:5001/people>
Disable request display
Suppress display of the HTTP request being sent by running the echo off
command. For example:
https://localhost:5001/people> echo off
Request echoing is off
Run a script
If you frequently execute the same set of HttpRepl commands, consider storing them in a text file. Commands in the file take the same form as commands executed manually on the command line. The commands can be executed in a batched fashion using the run
command. For example:
Create a text file containing a set of newline-delimited commands. To illustrate, consider a people-script.txt file containing the following commands:
set base https://localhost:5001 ls cd People ls get 1
Execute the
run
command, passing in the text file's path. For example:https://localhost:5001/> run C:\http-repl-scripts\people-script.txt
The following output appears:
https://localhost:5001/> set base https://localhost:5001 Using OpenAPI description at https://localhost:5001/swagger/v1/swagger.json https://localhost:5001/> ls . [] Fruits [get|post] People [get|post] https://localhost:5001/> cd People /People [get|post] https://localhost:5001/People> ls . [get|post] .. [] {id} [get|put|delete] https://localhost:5001/People> get 1 HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8 Date: Fri, 12 Jul 2019 19:20:10 GMT Server: Kestrel Transfer-Encoding: chunked { "id": 1, "name": "Scott Hunter" } https://localhost:5001/People>
Clear the output
To remove all output written to the command shell by the HttpRepl tool, run the clear
or cls
command. To illustrate, imagine the command shell contains the following output:
httprepl https://localhost:5001
(Disconnected)> set base "https://localhost:5001"
Using OpenAPI description at https://localhost:5001/swagger/v1/swagger.json
https://localhost:5001/> ls
. []
Fruits [get|post]
People [get|post]
https://localhost:5001/>
Run the following command to clear the output:
https://localhost:5001/> clear
After running the preceding command, the command shell contains only the following output:
https://localhost:5001/>