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Using your Client's send_request Method

In this doc, we will be showing how to build your own http requests and how to send these requests directly to the service using the send_request method.

Here's how to get started:

>>> from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
>>> from azure.example.service import ExampleClient
>>> from azure.core.rest import HttpRequest, HttpResponse
>>> client = ExampleClient(endpoint="https://www.example.org/", credential=DefaultAzureCredential())
>>> request = HttpRequest(method="GET", url="https://www.example.org")
>>> request
<HttpRequest [GET], url: "https://www.example.org">
>>> response = client.send_request(request)
>>> response
<HttpResponse: 200 OK, Content-Type: text/plain>
>>> response.raise_for_status()
>>> response.text()
'Happy to see you!'

Code Snippets

End-to-end code snippets for creating and sending requests with send_request:

  1. Sync client
  2. Async client

Steps To Make a Call

  1. Create a request
  2. Send the request
  3. Handle the response

We will go into each step in the following sections. To initialize and authenticate your client, please follow your client's README examples.

1. Create a Request

First, we will go over how to create the HttpRequest you want to be sent to the service.

We will be making a POST request with a JSON body. The following code snippet uses a relative url, which will be relative to your client's endpoint. You can also pass in a full-path url, and we will honor that full path.

from azure.core.rest import HttpRequest

# this URL is relative to the endpoint we passed our client
request = HttpRequest(
    method="POST",
    url="/helloWorld",
    json={"document": "Hello world!"},
    params={"language": "en"}
)

2. Send the Request

Now, we pass this request to your client's send_request method. This actually makes the network call.

from azure.example.service import ExampleClient

response = client.send_request(request) # makes the network call

3. Handle the Response

Our send_request call returns an HttpResponse.

Error handling

The response you get back from send_request will not automatically raise if your response is an error. If you wish to raise an error if your response is bad, call .raise_for_status() on your returned response.

try:
    response.raise_for_status()  # raises an error if your response is not good
except HttpResponseError as e:
    print(str(e))

JSON response

If the response you get back should be a json object, you can call .json() on your response to get it json-deserialized.

Putting this all together, see our code snippets for how you can deal with your response object


response = client.send_request(request)
try:
    response.raise_for_status()  # raises an error if your response is not good
    json_response = response.json()  # get your response as a json object
    # Now play with your JSON response!

except HttpResponseError as e:
    print(str(e))

Examples

Sync Client

from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
from azure.example.service import ExampleClient
from azure.core.rest import HttpRequest, HttpResponse
from azure.core.exceptions import HttpResponseError

client = ExampleClient(
    endpoint="https://example.org",
    credential=DefaultAzureCredential()
)

request = HttpRequest(
    method="POST",
    url="/helloWorld",
    json={"document": "Hello world!"},
    params={"language": "en"}
)

response = client.send_request(request)  # returns an azure.core.rest.HttpResponse

try:
    response.raise_for_status()
    json_response = response.json()
    # Play with your response!
    print(json_response["language"])
except HttpResponseError:
    print(str(e))

Async Client

from azure.identity.aio import DefaultAzureCredential
from azure.example.service.aio import ExampleClient
from azure.core.rest import HttpRequest, AsyncHttpResponse
from azure.core.exceptions import HttpResponseError

request = HttpRequest(
    method="POST",
    url="/helloWorld",
    json={"document": "Hello world!"},
    params={"language": "en"}
)

with DefaultAzureCredential() as credential:
    with ExampleClient(endpoint="https://example.org", credential=credential) as client:
        response = await client.send_request(request)

        try:
            response.raise_for_status()
            await response.load_body()
            json_response = response.json()  # returns an azure.core.rest.AsyncHttpResponse
            # Play with your response!
            print(json_response["language"])
        except HttpResponseError:
            print(str(e))

Troubleshooting

Errors

All errors thrown by .raise_for_error() are exceptions defined in azure-core.

Logging

Our clients also have logging support. They use the standard logging library for logging. Basic information about HTTP sessions (URLs, headers, etc.) is logged at INFO level.

Detailed DEBUG level logging, including request/response bodies and un-redacted headers, can be enabled on a client with the logging_enable keyword argument.

from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
from azure.example.service import ExampleClient

client = ExampleClient(
    endpoint="https://example.org",
    credential=DefaultAzureCredential(),
    logging_enable=True
)

File an Issue

You can file issues here in our repo.