Adapters¶ ↑
The Faraday
Adapter interface determines how a Faraday
request is turned into a Faraday
response object. Adapters are typically implemented with common Ruby HTTP clients, but can have custom implementations. Adapters can be configured either globally or per Faraday
Connection through the configuration block.
For example, consider using httpclient
as an adapter. Note that faraday-httpclient must be installed beforehand.
If you want to configure it globally, do the following:
require 'faraday' require 'faraday/httpclient' Faraday.default_adapter = :httpclient
If you want to configure it per Faraday
Connection, do the following:
require 'faraday' require 'faraday/httpclient' conn = Faraday.new do |f| f.adapter :httpclient end
Fantastic adapters and where to find them¶ ↑
Except for the default Net::HTTP adapter and the Test Adapter adapter, which is for test purposes only, adapters are distributed separately from Faraday
and need to be manually installed. They are usually available as gems, or bundled with HTTP clients.
While most adapters use a common Ruby HTTP client library, adapters can also have completely custom implementations.
If you’re just getting started you can find a list of featured adapters in Awesome Faraday. Anyone can create a Faraday
adapter and distribute it. If you’re interested learning more, check how to build your own!