This document covers the following topics:
For an explanation of the symbols used in the syntax diagram, see Syntax Symbols.
Belongs to Function Group: Internet and XML
The REQUEST DOCUMENT
statement gives you the means to
access an external system, see Statements for Internet and XML
Access in the Programming
Guide.
For information on Unicode support, see Statements in the Unicode and Code Page Support documentation.
Under the HTTP Protocol, a server uses cookies to maintain state information on the client workstation.
REQUEST DOCUMENT
is implemented using internet option
settings. This means that, depending on the security settings, cookies will be
used.
If the internet option setting Disabled
is set, no cookies
will be sent, even if a cookie header (operand4/operand5
)
is sent.
For server environments, do not use the internet option setting
Prompt
. This setting leads to a "hanging" server,
because no client will be able to answer the prompt.
In mainframe environments, cookies are not supported and are ignored.
Cookies are handled automatically by the Windows API. This means that, if cookies are enabled in the browser, all incoming cookies will be saved and sent automatically with the next request.
Operand Definition Table:
Operand | Possible Structure | Possible Formats | Referencing Permitted | Dynamic Definition | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
operand1
|
C | S | A | no | yes | ||||||||||||||
operand2
|
C | S | A | no | yes | ||||||||||||||
operand3
|
C | S | A | no | yes | ||||||||||||||
operand4
|
C | S | A | no | yes | ||||||||||||||
operand5
|
C | S | A | N | P | I | F | D | T | L | no | yes | |||||||
operand6
|
C | S | A | U | N | P | I | F | B | D | T | L | no | yes | |||||
operand7
|
C | S | A | no | yes | ||||||||||||||
operand8
|
C | S | A | no | yes | ||||||||||||||
operand9
|
C | S | A | N | P | I | F | D | T | L | no | yes | |||||||
operand10
|
S | A | no | yes | |||||||||||||||
operand11
|
C | S | A | no | yes | ||||||||||||||
operand12
|
S | A | N | P | I | F | B | D | T | L | no | yes | |||||||
operand13
|
S | A | U | B | no | yes | |||||||||||||
operand14
|
C | S | A | no | yes | ||||||||||||||
operand15 |
C | S | A | no | yes | ||||||||||||||
operand16 |
S | I4 | no | yes | |||||||||||||||
operand17 |
S | I4 | no | no |
Syntax Element Description:
Syntax Element | Description | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DOCUMENT FROM
operand1
|
Location of Document:
Note: |
|||||||
WITH |
WITH Clause:
This clause may be used to specify optional user/password, header and data details for the request. |
|||||||
USER
operand2
|
User Name:
|
|||||||
PASSWORD
operand3
|
User Password:
|
|||||||
HEADER {[[NAME]
operand4 [VALUE]
operand5]}...
|
Header Clause:
Note: Header Name for
operand4:
Header names must not contain a carriage return (CR), a line feed
(LF) or a colon (:). This will not be checked by the Header Value for
operand5:
Header values are not allowed to contain CR/LF. This will not be
checked by the General Information on Headers:
For a HTTP request, some headers are required, for example:
Request-Method or Content-Type. These headers will be automatically generated
depending on the parameters given with the See also Automatically Generated Headers. |
|||||||
DATA |
DATA Clause:
You may specify either a specific |
|||||||
ALL
operand6
|
See Encoding of Incoming/Outgoing Data, DATA ALL Clause. |
|||||||
[ENCODED [[IN]
CODEPAGE operand7] |
See Encoding of Incoming/Outgoing Data, DATA ALL Clause. |
|||||||
{[NAME]
operand8 [VALUE]
operand9}... |
DATA Variable Name and Value:
Restriction:
If
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
See also General Note for URL-Encoding. | ||||||||
RETURN |
RETURN Clause:
This clause can be used to specify the |
|||||||
HEADER [ALL
operand10] |
RETURN HEADER ALL Clause:
When this clause is specified,
The first line contains the status information and all following lines contain the headers as pairs of name and value. The names always end in a colon (:) and the values end in a linefeed (LF). Internally, all carriage returns/line feeds (CR/LF) are transformed into line feeds (LF). |
|||||||
HEADER [[NAME]
operand11] [VALUE]
operand12]... |
RETURN HEADER NAME/VALUE Clause:
When this clause is specified, only specific header information is returned.
Return Header Name for
For compatibility with the web interface, header names can be written with underscore (_) instead of dash (-) characters. Internally, the underscore is replaced by a dash. If
HTTP/1.0 200 OK |
|||||||
RETURN
PAGE |
RETURN PAGE Clause:
You can use the See Encoding of Incoming/Outgoing Data, RETURN PAGE Clause below. |
|||||||
PAGE
operand13 |
See Encoding of Incoming/Outgoing Data, RETURN PAGE Clause below. |
|||||||
[ENCODED [[FOR TYPE[S]
operand14...] [IN] CODEPAGE
operand15]] |
See Encoding of Incoming/Outgoing Data, RETURN PAGE Clause below. |
|||||||
If the value of
See Encoding of Incoming/Outgoing Data, RETURN PAGE Clause below. |
||||||||
RESPONSE
operand16 |
RESPONSE Clause:
The
|
|||||||
GIVING
operand17 |
GIVING Clause:
|
The following values are supported for
operand5
: HEAD
,
POST
, GET
, and PUT
.
The following table shows the automatic calculation of Request-Method depending on the given operands:
Operand | Request Method | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
HEAD | POST | GET | PUT | |
WITH HEADER (operand4/operand5) |
optional | optional | optional | optional |
WITH DATA (operand7/operand8) |
not specified | specified | not specified | only with option ALL
(operand6) |
RETURN HEADER (operand10 to operand12) |
specified | optional | optional | optional |
RETURN PAGE (operand13) |
not specified | specified | specified | optional |
If the request method is POST
, a content-type
header has to be delivered with the HTTP request. If no content-type is set
explicitly, the automatically generated value of
operand5
is:
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
Note:
It is possible to overwrite the automatically generated headers.
Natural will not check them for errors. Unexpected errors may occur.
When sending POST
data with the content type
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
, certain characters must be
represented by means of URL-encoding, which means substituting the character
with %hexadecimal-character-code. The full details
of when and why URL-encoding is necessary are discussed in RFC 1630, RFC 1738
and RFC 1808. Some basic details are given here. All non-ASCII characters (that
is, valid ISO 8859/1 characters that are not also ASCII characters) must be
URL-encoded, for example, the file köln.html
would appear in an
URL as k%F6ln.html
.
Some characters are considered to be "unsafe" when web pages are requested by e-mail.
These characters are:
Character | URL-Encoding Syntax |
---|---|
the tab character | %09 |
the space character | %20 |
[ | %5B |
\ | %5C |
] | %5D |
^ | %5E |
` | %60 |
{ | %7B |
| | %7C |
} | %7D |
~ | %7E |
When writing URLs, you should URL-encode these characters.
Some characters have special meanings in URLs, such as the colon (:) that separates the URL scheme from the rest of the URL, the double slash (//) that indicates that the URL conforms to the Common Internet Scheme syntax and the percent sign (%). Generally, when these characters appear as parts of file names, they must be URL-encoded to distinguish them from their special meaning in URLs (this is a simplification, read the RFCs for full details).
These characters are:
Character | URL-Encoding Syntax |
---|---|
" | %22 |
# | %23 |
% | %25 |
& | %26 |
+ | %2B |
, | %2C |
/ | %2F |
: | %3A |
< | %3C |
= | %3D |
> | %3E |
? | %3F |
@ | %40 |
Status | Value | Response |
---|---|---|
STATUS CONTINUE |
100 |
OK to continue with request |
STATUS SWITCH_PROTOCOLS |
101 |
Server has switched protocols in upgrade header |
STATUS OK |
200 |
Request completed |
STATUS CREATED |
201 |
Object created, reason = new URL |
STATUS ACCEPTED |
202 |
Async completion (TBS) |
STATUS PARTIAL |
203 |
Partial completion |
STATUS NO_CONTENT |
204 |
No info to return |
STATUS RESET_CONTENT |
205 |
Request completed, but clear form |
STATUS PARTIAL_CONTENT |
206 |
Partial GET fulfilled
|
STATUS AMBIGUOUS |
300 |
Server could not decide what to return |
STATUS MOVED |
301 |
Object permanently moved |
STATUS REDIRECT |
302 |
Object temporarily moved |
STATUS REDIRECT_METHOD |
303 |
Redirection w/o new access method |
STATUS NOT_MODIFIED |
304 |
If-modified-since was not modified |
STATUS USE_PROXY |
305 |
Redirection to proxy, location header specifies proxy to use |
STATUS REDIRECT_KEEP_VERB |
307 |
HTTP/1.1: keep same verb |
STATUS BAD_REQUEST |
400 |
Invalid syntax |
STATUS DENIED |
401 |
Access denied |
STATUS PAYMENT_REQ |
402 |
Payment required |
STATUS FORBIDDEN |
403 |
Request forbidden |
STATUS NOT_FOUND |
404 |
Object not found |
STATUS BAD_METHOD |
405 |
Method is not allowed |
STATUS NONE_ACCEPTABLE |
406 |
No response acceptable to client found |
STATUS PROXY_AUTH_REQ |
407 |
Proxy authentication required |
STATUS REQUEST_TIMEOUT |
408 |
Server timed out waiting for request |
STATUS CONFLICT |
409 |
User should resubmit with more info |
STATUS GONE |
410 |
The resource is no longer available |
STATUS LENGTH_REQUIRED |
411 |
The server refused to accept request w/o a length |
STATUS PRECOND_FAILED |
412 |
Precondition given in request failed |
STATUS REQUEST_TOO_LARGE |
413 |
Request entity was too large |
STATUS URL_TOO_LONG |
414 |
Request URL too long |
STATUS UNSUPPORTED_MEDIA |
415 |
Unsupported media type |
STATUS SERVER_ERROR |
500 |
Internal server error |
STATUS NOT_SUPPORTED |
501 |
"Required" not supported |
STATUS BAD_GATEWAY |
502 |
Error response received from gateway |
STATUS SERVICE_UNAVAIL |
503 |
Temporarily overloaded |
STATUS GATEWAY_TIMEOUT |
504 |
Timed out waiting for gateway |
STATUS VERSION_NOT_SUP |
505 |
HTTP version not supported |
Redirection means that the requested URL has moved. As a response, the
Return Header with the name LOCATION
will be displayed. This
header contains the URL where the requested page has moved to. A new
REQUEST DOCUMENT
request can be used to retrieve the page
moved.
HTTP browsers redirect automatically to the new URL, but the
REQUEST DOCUMENT
statement does not handle redirection
automatically.
The response Access Denied
means that the requested page
can only be accessed if a valid user ID and password are provided with the
request. As a response, the Return Header with the name
WWW-AUTHENTICATE
will be delivered with the realm needed for this
request.
HTTP browsers normally display a dialog with user ID and password, but
with the REQUEST DOCUMENT
statement, no dialog is displayed.
Data transfer with the REQUEST DOCUMENT
statement normally
does not involve any code page conversion. If you want to have the outgoing
and/or incoming data encoded in a specific code page, you can use the
DATA ALL
clause and/or the RETURN PAGE
clause to
specify this.
For the encoding of outgoing data, the DATA ALL
clause is
used:
ALL operand6
[ENCODED [[IN ]
CODEPAGE
operand7]]
|
Syntax Element Description:
Syntax Element | Description |
---|---|
ALL
operand6 |
operand6
is a complete document that is to be sent. This value is normally needed for
the automatically HTTP request method PUT (see
Automatically Generated
Headers).
|
[ENCODED [[IN] CODEPAGE
operand7]] |
operand6
will be encoded from the default code page (value of system variable
*CODEPAGE )
to the code page given in operand7.
|
For the encoding of incoming data, the RETURN PAGE
clause
is used:
[PAGE
operand13 [ENCODED
[[FOR TYPE [S ] operand14...] [IN ] CODEPAGE
operand15]]]
|
As a response of an HTTP/HTTPS request, incoming data may contain
binary data (for example, image/gif) or character data (for example,
text/html). Together with the response, the REQUEST DOCUMENT
statement receives a parameter which specifies the type of content of the
requested document (mime-type). This parameter may contain information about
the code page in which the document is encoded.
This clause provides an automatic conversion to the default code page
(value of system variable *CODEPAGE
)
of the Natural session.
Syntax Element Description:
Syntax Element | Description |
---|---|
RETURN PAGE
operand13 |
No encoding at all of the returned page will be done; that is, the page will remain encoded as delivered from the http server. |
RETURN PAGE
operand13 ENCODED |
If the returned mime-type contains an encoding,
operand13 will be encoded from this
code page to the default code page (A/B) or (U). See note below.
|
RETURN PAGE
operand13 ENCODED [IN] CODEPAGE
operand15 |
If the returned mime-type does not contain an
encoding, then operand13 will be
encoded from the code page defined with
operand15 to the default code page
(value of system variable *CODEPAGE )
(A/B) or (U).
|
RETURN PAGE
operand13 [ENCODED [[FOR TYPE[S]
operand14...] [IN] CODEPAGE
operand15]] |
If the returned mime-type does not contain an
encoding, then an additional check is performed if the returned mime-type
matches one of the types given with
operand14 . If a match occurs,
operand13 will be encoded from the code
page defined with operand15 to the
default code page (A/B) or (U).
|
Note:
"Returned mime-type contains an encoding" means that
the http server returns a content-type header with a charset=
clause, for example: charset=ISO-8859-1
.
Note:
There is an example dialog V5-RDOC
for this statement
in the example library SYSEXV
.
REQUEST DOCUMENT FROM "http://bolsap1:5555/invoke/sap.demo/handle_RFC_XML_POST" WITH USER #User PASSWORD #Password DATA NAME 'XMLData' VALUE #Queryxml NAME 'repServerName' VALUE 'NT2' RETURN PAGE #Resultxml RESPONSE #rc
REQUEST DOCUMENT FROM "http://pcnatweb:8080" RETURN PAGE #Resultxml RESPONSE #rc
REQUEST DOCUMENT FROM "http://pcnatweb" RESPONSE #rc
REQUEST DOCUMENT FROM "http://pcnatweb/cgi-bin/nwwcgi.exe/sysweb/nat-env" WITH DATA NAME 'XMLData' VALUE #Queryxml NAME 'repServerName' VALUE 'NT2' RETURN PAGE #Resultxml RESPONSE #rc
REQUEST DOCUMENT FROM "http://pcnatweb/test.txt" WITH DATA ALL #document RETURN PAGE #Resultxml RESPONSE #rc