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HTTP basics

HTTP is a protocol that is easy to learn the basics of. A client connects to a server—and it is always the client that takes the initiative—sends a request and receives a response. Both the request and the response consist of headers and a body. There can be little or a lot of information going in both directions.

An HTTP request sent by a client starts with a request line, followed by headers and then optionally a body. The most common HTTP request is probably the GET request which asks the server to return a specific resource, and this request does not contain a body.

When a client connects to 'example.com' and asks for the '/' resource, it sends a GET without a request body:

GET / HTTP/1.1
User-agent: curl/2000
Host: example.com

…the server could respond with something like below, with response headers and a response body ('hello'). The first line in the response also contains the response code and the specific version the server supports:

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Server: example-server/1.1
Content-Length: 5
Content-Type: plain/text

hello

If the client would instead send a request with a small request body ('hello'), it could look like this:

POST / HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
User-agent: curl/2000
Content-Length: 5

hello

A server always responds to an HTTP request unless something is wrong.

The URL converted to a request

When an HTTP client is given a URL to operate on, that URL is then used, picked apart and those parts are used in various places in the outgoing request to the server. Let's take an example URL:

https://www.example.com/path/to/file
  • https means that curl uses TLS to the remote port 443 (which is the default port number when no specified is used in the URL).

  • www.example.com is the hostname that curl resolves to one or more IP addresses to connect to. This hostname is also used in the HTTP request in the Host: header.

  • /path/to/file is used in the HTTP request to tell the server which exact document/resources curl wants to fetch