Documentation

requests.get() function

requests.get() is experimental and subject to change at any time.

requests.get() makes a http GET request. This identical to calling request.do(method: "GET", ...).

Deprecated

Experimental requests.get is deprecated in favor of requests.get.

Function type signature
(
    url: string,
    ?body: bytes,
    ?config: {A with timeout: duration, insecureSkipVerify: bool},
    ?headers: [string:string],
    ?params: [string:[string]],
) => {statusCode: int, headers: [string:string], duration: duration, body: bytes}

For more information, see Function type signatures.

Parameters

url

(Required) URL to request. This should not include any query parameters.

params

Set of key value pairs to add to the URL as query parameters. Query parameters will be URL encoded. All values for a key will be appended to the query.

headers

Set of key values pairs to include on the request.

body

Data to send with the request.

config

Set of options to control how the request should be performed.

Examples

Make a GET request

import "experimental/http/requests"

response = requests.get(url: "http://example.com")

requests.peek(response: response)

Make a GET request and decode the JSON response

import "experimental/http/requests"
import "experimental/json"
import "array"

response = requests.get(url: "https://api.agify.io", params: ["name": ["nathaniel"]])

// api.agify.io returns JSON with the form
//
// {
//    name: string,
//    age: number,
//    count: number,
// }
//
// Define a data variable that parses the JSON response body into a Flux record.
data = json.parse(data: response.body)

// Use array.from() to construct a table with one row containing our response data.
// We do not care about the count so only include name and age.
array.from(rows: [{name: data.name, age: data.age}])

View example output


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The future of Flux

Flux is going into maintenance mode. You can continue using it as you currently are without any changes to your code.

Flux is going into maintenance mode and will not be supported in InfluxDB 3.0. This was a decision based on the broad demand for SQL and the continued growth and adoption of InfluxQL. We are continuing to support Flux for users in 1.x and 2.x so you can continue using it with no changes to your code. If you are interested in transitioning to InfluxDB 3.0 and want to future-proof your code, we suggest using InfluxQL.

For information about the future of Flux, see the following: