This is a handy little helper that puts HTTP reference at your fingertips, when you're on the CLI, when you need it.
Because I can never remember what the bloody http status codes mean, or the details of methods, or whatever. It's annoying!
Well it boils down to 2 things:
- If I use the browser then it means that I have to use the mouse, or a track pad or something.
- I'm a little bored on a Friday night. There's some rubbish film on. Quite frankly I'm a little bored.
- If I make it good enough then people will give me stars. This, as everyone knows, is a proxy for love and it will make up for many deficiencies in my life.
- My attention to detail is incredible. I therefore invite you to sponsor me using the links at the top of the page. :)
$ go get github.com/dnnrly/httpref/cmd/httpref
$ httpref 1
1xx Informational response
100 Continue
101 Switching
102 Processing
103 Early hints
$ httpref 200
200 - OK
The HTTP 200 OK success status response code indicates that the request has succeeded. A 200 response is cacheable by default.
The meaning of a success depends on the HTTP request method:
GET: The resource has been fetched and is transmitted in the message body.
HEAD: The entity headers are in the message body.
POST: The resource describing the result of the action is transmitted in the message body.
TRACE: The message body contains the request message as received by the server.
The successful result of a PUT or a DELETE is often not a 200 OK but a 204 No Content (or a 201 Created when the resource is uploaded for the first time).
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Status/200
deps
- downloads all of the deps you need to build, test, and releasebuild
- builds your applicationtest
- runs unit testsci-test
- run tests for CI validationacceptance-test
- run the acceptance testslint
- run lintingupdate
- update Go dependenciesclean
- clean project dependenciesclean-deps
- remove all of the build dependencies too