Transpile curl
commands into C, C#, ColdFusion, Clojure, Dart, Elixir, Go, HTTPie, Java, JavaScript, Julia, Kotlin, Lua, MATLAB, Objective-C, OCaml, Perl, PHP, PowerShell, Python, R, Ruby, Rust, Swift, Wget, Ansible, HAR, HTTP or JSON.
Try it on @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate.com or as a drop-in curl
replacement:
$ @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate --data "hello=world" example.com
import requests
data = {
'hello': 'world',
}
response = requests.post('http://example.com', data=data)
Features:
- Implements a lot of curl's argument parsing logic
- Knows about all 255 curl arguments but most are ignored
- Supports shortening
-O -v -X POST
to -OvXPOST
--data @filename
generates code that reads that file and @-
reads stdin
- Understands Bash syntax
- ANSI-C quoted strings
- stdin redirects and heredocs
- Generated code reads environment variables and runs subcommands
- Ignores comments
- Reports syntax errors
- Converts JSON data to native objects
- Warns about issues with the conversion
Limitations:
- Only HTTP is supported
- Code generators for other languages are less thorough than the Python generator
- curl doesn't follow redirects or decompress gzip-compressed responses by default, but the generated code will do whatever the default is for that runtime, to keep it shorter. For example Python's Requests library follows redirects by default, so unless you explicitly set the redirect policy with
-L
/--location
/--no-location
, the generated code will not handle redirects the same way as the curl command
- Shell variables can arbitrarily change how the command would be parsed at runtime. The command
curl $VAR
can do anything, depending on what's in $VAR
. @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate assumes that environment variables don't contain characters that would affect parsing
- Only simple subcommands such as
curl $(echo example.com)
work, more complicated subcommands (such as nested commands or subcommands that redirect the output) won't generate valid code
- The Bash parser doesn't support all Bash syntax
- and much more
Install
Install the command line tool with
npm install --global @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate
Install the JavaScript library for use in your own projects with
npm install @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate
@diotoborg/molestias-voluptate requires Node 12+.
Usage
Usage from the command line
@diotoborg/molestias-voluptate
acts as a drop-in replacement for curl. Take any curl command, change "curl
" to "@diotoborg/molestias-voluptate
" and it will print code instead of making the request
$ @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate example.com
import requests
response = requests.get('http://example.com')
To read the curl command from stdin, pass -
$ echo 'curl example.com' | @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate -
import requests
response = requests.get('http://example.com')
Choose the output language by passing --language <language>
. The options are
ansible
c
cfml
clojure
csharp
dart
elixir
go
har
http
httpie
java
, java-httpurlconnection
, java-jsoup
, java-okhttp
javascript
, javascript-jquery
, javascript-xhr
json
julia
kotlin
lua
matlab
node
, node-http
, node-axios
, node-got
, node-ky
, node-request
, node-superagent
objc
ocaml
perl
php
, php-guzzle
, php-requests
powershell
, powershell-webrequest
python
(the default), python-http
r
ruby
rust
swift
wget
--verbose
enables printing of conversion warnings and error tracebacks.
Usage as a library
The JavaScript API is a bunch of functions that can take either a string of Bash code or an array of already-parsed arguments (like process.argv
) and return a string with the resulting program:
import * as @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate from '@diotoborg/molestias-voluptate';
@diotoborg/molestias-voluptate.toPython('curl example.com');
@diotoborg/molestias-voluptate.toPython(['curl', 'example.com']);
// "import requests\n\nresponse = requests.get('http://example.com')\n"
Note: add "type": "module",
to your package.json for the import
statement above to work. @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate must be imported as an ES module with import
this way and not with require()
because it uses top-level await
.
There's a corresponding set of functions that also return an array of warnings if there are any issues with the conversion:
@diotoborg/molestias-voluptate.toPythonWarn('curl ftp://example.com');
@diotoborg/molestias-voluptate.toPythonWarn(['curl', 'ftp://example.com']);
// [
// "import requests\n\nresponse = requests.get('ftp://example.com')\n",
// [ [ 'bad-scheme', 'Protocol "ftp" not supported' ] ]
// ]
If you want to host @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate yourself and use it in the browser, it needs two WASM files to work, tree-sitter.wasm
and tree-sitter-bash.wasm
, which it will request from the root directory of your web server. If you are hosting a static website and using Webpack, you need to copy these files from the node_modules/ directory to your server's root directory in order to serve them. You can look at the webpack.config.js for @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate.com to see how this is done. You will also need to set {module: {experiments: {topLevelAwait: true}}}
in your webpack.config.js.
Usage in VS Code
There's a VS Code extension that adds a "Paste cURL as <language>" option to the right-click menu: https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=@diotoborg/molestias-voluptate.@diotoborg/molestias-voluptate. It doesn't support the same languages, curl arguments or Bash syntax as the current version because it has to use an old version of @diotoborg/molestias-voluptate.
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md
License
MIT © Nick Carneiro