HTTP request and diff tools

There're two separate CLIs provided:

xdiff

Configuration

You can configure multiple profiles for xdiff. Each profile is identified by a name. Inside a profile you can define the details of the two requests (method, url, query params, request headers, request body), and also what part of the response should be skipped for comparison (currently only headers could be skipped).

```yaml

rust: request1: method: GET url: https://www.rust-lang.org/ headers: user-agent: Aloha params: hello: world request2: method: GET url: https://www.rust-lang.org/ params: {} response: skip_headers: - set-cookie - date - via - x-amz-cf-id ```

You could put the configuration in ~/.config/xdiff.yml, or /etc/xdiff.yml, or ~/xdiff.yml. The xdiff CLI will look for configuration from these paths.

How to use xdiff?

You can use cargo install xdiff to install it (need help to install rust toolchain?). Once finished you shall be able to use it.

```bash ➜ xdiff --help xdiff 0.4.1 A CLI to diff two requests based on predefined profiles.

USAGE: xdiff

OPTIONS: -h, --help Print help information -V, --version Print version information

SUBCOMMANDS: help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s) parse parse a URL and print the generated diff config run diff two API responses based on a given profile

➜ xdiff run --help xdiff-run diff two API responses based on a given profile

USAGE: xdiff run [OPTIONS] --profile

OPTIONS: -c, --config Path to the config file -e Extra parameters to pass to the API -h, --help Print help information -p, --profile API profile to use ```

An example:

bash xdiff run -p todo -c requester/fixtures/diff.yml -e a=1 -e b=2

This will use the todo profile in the diff.yml defined in requester/fixtures, and add extra params for query string with a=1, b=2. Output look like this:

screenshot

If you find writing the config file tedious, you can use the xdiff parse subcommand to parse a URL and print the generated config.

```bash ➜ xdiff parse ✔ Url1 · https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1?a=1 ✔ Url2 · https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/2?b=2 ✔ Give this a profile name · todo

✔ Select response headers to skip · date, x-ratelimit-limit, x-ratelimit-remaining, x-ratelimit-reset, vary, cache-control, expires, etag, via, cf-cache-status, expect-ct, report-to, cf-ray

todo: request1: url: https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1 params: a: '100' request2: url: https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/2 params: c: '200' response: skip_headers: - date - x-ratelimit-limit - x-ratelimit-remaining - x-ratelimit-reset - vary - cache-control - expires - etag - via - cf-cache-status - expect-ct - report-to - cf-ray ```

xreq

since xdiff needs to send and format request so this logic was extracted as a separate CLI xreq.

Configuration

You can configure multiple profiles for xreq. Each profile is identified by a name. Inside a profile you can define the details of the request (method, url, query params, request headers, request body).

```yaml

rust: url: https://www.rust-lang.org/ post: url: https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/comments params: postId: 1 ```

You could put the configuration in ~/.config/xreq.yml, or /etc/xreq.yml, or ~/xreq.yml. The xreq CLI will look for configuration from these paths.

How to use xreq?

You can use cargo install xreq to install it. Once finished you shall be able to use it.

```bash ➜ xreq --help xreq 0.4.1 A CLI to send complicated request based on predefined profiles.

USAGE: xreq

OPTIONS: -h, --help Print help information -V, --version Print version information

SUBCOMMANDS: help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s) parse parse a URL and print the generated request config run Send API request based on a given profile

➜ xreq run --help xreq-run Send API request based on a given profile

USAGE: xreq run [OPTIONS] --profile

OPTIONS: -c, --config Path to the config file -e Extra parameters to pass to the API. If no prefix, it will be used for querystring; If prefix is '@', it will be used for body; If prefix is '%', it will be used for header -h, --help Print help information -p, --profile API profile to use

```

An example:

bash xreq run -p post -c requester/fixtures/req.yml -e a=1 -e b=2

This will use the todo profile in the req.yml defined in requester/fixtures, and add extra params for query string with a=1, b=2. Output look like this:

screenshot

You could also use tools like jq to process its output. When xreq detected a pipe, it will skip printing status/headers, and skip the colorized format on http body. For example:

bash xreq -p post -c requester/fixtures/req.yml -e a=1 -e b=2 | jq ".[] | select (.id < 3)"

Output:

screenshot

If you find writing the config file tedious, you can use the xreq parse subcommand to parse a URL and print the generated config.

```bash ➜ xreq parse ✔ Url to parse · https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1?a=1&b=2

✔ Give this url a profile name · todo

todo: url: https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1 params: a: '1' b: '2' ```