# HTTP requests

The `Fetcher` class provides rapid and lightweight HTTP requests using the high-performance `curl_cffi` library with a lot of stealth capabilities.

!!! success "Prerequisites"

    1. You've completed or read the [Fetchers basics](../fetching/choosing.md) page to understand what the [Response object](../fetching/choosing.md#response-object) is and which fetcher to use.
    2. You've completed or read the [Querying elements](../parsing/selection.md) page to understand how to find/extract elements from the [Selector](../parsing/main_classes.md#selector)/[Response](../fetching/choosing.md#response-object) object.
    3. You've completed or read the [Main classes](../parsing/main_classes.md) page to know what properties/methods the [Response](../fetching/choosing.md#response-object) class is inheriting from the [Selector](../parsing/main_classes.md#selector) class.

## Basic Usage
You have one primary way to import this Fetcher, which is the same for all fetchers.

```python
>>> from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher
```
Check out how to configure the parsing options [here](choosing.md#parser-configuration-in-all-fetchers)

### Shared arguments
All methods for making requests here share some arguments, so let's discuss them first.

- **url**: The targeted URL
- **stealthy_headers**: If enabled (default), it creates and adds real browser headers. It also sets a Google referer header.
- **follow_redirects**: Controls redirect behavior. **Defaults to `"safe"`**, which follows redirects but rejects those targeting internal/private IPs (SSRF protection). Pass `True` to follow all redirects without restriction, or `False` to disable redirects entirely.
- **timeout**: The number of seconds to wait for each request to be finished. **Defaults to 30 seconds**.
- **retries**: The number of retries that the fetcher will do for failed requests. **Defaults to three retries**.
- **retry_delay**: Number of seconds to wait between retry attempts. **Defaults to 1 second**.
- **impersonate**: Impersonate specific browsers' TLS fingerprints. Accepts browser strings or a list of them like `"chrome110"`, `"firefox102"`, `"safari15_5"` to use specific versions or `"chrome"`, `"firefox"`, `"safari"`, `"edge"` to automatically use the latest version available. This makes your requests appear to come from real browsers at the TLS level. If you pass it a list of strings, it will choose a random one with each request. **Defaults to the latest available Chrome version.**
- **http3**: Use HTTP/3 protocol for requests. **Defaults to False**. It might be problematic if used with `impersonate`.
- **cookies**: Cookies to use in the request. Can be a dictionary of `name→value` or a list of dictionaries.
- **proxy**: As the name implies, the proxy for this request is used to route all traffic (HTTP and HTTPS). The format accepted here is `http://username:password@localhost:8030`.
- **proxy_auth**: HTTP basic auth for proxy, tuple of (username, password).
- **proxies**: Dict of proxies to use. Format: `{"http": proxy_url, "https": proxy_url}`.
- **proxy_rotator**: A `ProxyRotator` instance for automatic proxy rotation. Cannot be combined with `proxy` or `proxies`.
- **headers**: Headers to include in the request. Can override any header generated by the `stealthy_headers` argument
- **max_redirects**: Maximum number of redirects. **Defaults to 30**, use -1 for unlimited.
- **verify**: Whether to verify HTTPS certificates. **Defaults to True**.
- **cert**: Tuple of (cert, key) filenames for the client certificate.
- **selector_config**: A dictionary of custom parsing arguments to be used when creating the final `Selector`/`Response` class.

!!! note "Notes:"

    1. The currently available browsers to impersonate are (`"edge"`, `"chrome"`, `"chrome_android"`, `"safari"`, `"safari_beta"`, `"safari_ios"`, `"safari_ios_beta"`, `"firefox"`, `"tor"`)<br/>
    2. The available browsers to impersonate, along with their corresponding versions, are automatically displayed in the argument autocompletion and updated with each `curl_cffi` update.<br/>
    3. If any of the arguments `impersonate` or `stealthy_headers` are enabled, the fetchers will automatically generate real browser headers that match the browser version used.

Other than this, for further customization, you can pass any arguments that `curl_cffi` supports for any method if that method doesn't already support them.

### HTTP Methods
There are additional arguments for each method, depending on the method, such as `params` for GET requests and `data`/`json` for POST/PUT/DELETE requests.

Examples are the best way to explain this:

> Hence: `OPTIONS` and `HEAD` methods are not supported.
#### GET
```python
>>> from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher
>>> # Basic GET
>>> page = Fetcher.get('https://example.com')
>>> page = Fetcher.get('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/get', stealthy_headers=True)
>>> page = Fetcher.get('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/get', proxy='http://username:password@localhost:8030')
>>> # With parameters
>>> page = Fetcher.get('https://example.com/search', params={'q': 'query'})
>>>
>>> # With headers
>>> page = Fetcher.get('https://example.com', headers={'User-Agent': 'Custom/1.0'})
>>> # Basic HTTP authentication
>>> page = Fetcher.get("https://example.com", auth=("my_user", "password123"))
>>> # Browser impersonation
>>> page = Fetcher.get('https://example.com', impersonate='chrome')
>>> # HTTP/3 support
>>> page = Fetcher.get('https://example.com', http3=True)
```
And for asynchronous requests, it's a small adjustment 
```python
>>> from scrapling.fetchers import AsyncFetcher
>>> # Basic GET
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.get('https://example.com')
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.get('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/get', stealthy_headers=True)
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.get('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/get', proxy='http://username:password@localhost:8030')
>>> # With parameters
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.get('https://example.com/search', params={'q': 'query'})
>>>
>>> # With headers
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.get('https://example.com', headers={'User-Agent': 'Custom/1.0'})
>>> # Basic HTTP authentication
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.get("https://example.com", auth=("my_user", "password123"))
>>> # Browser impersonation
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.get('https://example.com', impersonate='chrome110')
>>> # HTTP/3 support
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.get('https://example.com', http3=True)
```
Needless to say, the `page` object in all cases is [Response](choosing.md#response-object) object, which is a [Selector](../parsing/main_classes.md#selector) as we said, so you can use it directly
```python
>>> page.css('.something.something')

>>> page = Fetcher.get('https://api.github.com/events')
>>> page.json()
[{'id': '<redacted>',
  'type': 'PushEvent',
  'actor': {'id': '<redacted>',
   'login': '<redacted>',
   'display_login': '<redacted>',
   'gravatar_id': '',
   'url': 'https://api.github.com/users/<redacted>',
   'avatar_url': 'https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/<redacted>'},
  'repo': {'id': '<redacted>',
...
```
#### POST
```python
>>> from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher
>>> # Basic POST
>>> page = Fetcher.post('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/post', data={'key': 'value'}, params={'q': 'query'})
>>> page = Fetcher.post('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/post', data={'key': 'value'}, stealthy_headers=True)
>>> page = Fetcher.post('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/post', data={'key': 'value'}, proxy='http://username:password@localhost:8030', impersonate="chrome")
>>> # Another example of form-encoded data
>>> page = Fetcher.post('https://example.com/submit', data={'username': 'user', 'password': 'pass'}, http3=True)
>>> # JSON data
>>> page = Fetcher.post('https://example.com/api', json={'key': 'value'})
```
And for asynchronous requests, it's a small adjustment
```python
>>> from scrapling.fetchers import AsyncFetcher
>>> # Basic POST
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.post('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/post', data={'key': 'value'})
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.post('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/post', data={'key': 'value'}, stealthy_headers=True)
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.post('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/post', data={'key': 'value'}, proxy='http://username:password@localhost:8030', impersonate="chrome")
>>> # Another example of form-encoded data
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.post('https://example.com/submit', data={'username': 'user', 'password': 'pass'}, http3=True)
>>> # JSON data
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.post('https://example.com/api', json={'key': 'value'})
```
#### PUT
```python
>>> from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher
>>> # Basic PUT
>>> page = Fetcher.put('https://example.com/update', data={'status': 'updated'})
>>> page = Fetcher.put('https://example.com/update', data={'status': 'updated'}, stealthy_headers=True, impersonate="chrome")
>>> page = Fetcher.put('https://example.com/update', data={'status': 'updated'}, proxy='http://username:password@localhost:8030')
>>> # Another example of form-encoded data
>>> page = Fetcher.put("https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/put", data={'key': ['value1', 'value2']})
```
And for asynchronous requests, it's a small adjustment
```python
>>> from scrapling.fetchers import AsyncFetcher
>>> # Basic PUT
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.put('https://example.com/update', data={'status': 'updated'})
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.put('https://example.com/update', data={'status': 'updated'}, stealthy_headers=True, impersonate="chrome")
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.put('https://example.com/update', data={'status': 'updated'}, proxy='http://username:password@localhost:8030')
>>> # Another example of form-encoded data
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.put("https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/put", data={'key': ['value1', 'value2']})
```

#### DELETE
```python
>>> from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher
>>> page = Fetcher.delete('https://example.com/resource/123')
>>> page = Fetcher.delete('https://example.com/resource/123', stealthy_headers=True, impersonate="chrome")
>>> page = Fetcher.delete('https://example.com/resource/123', proxy='http://username:password@localhost:8030')
```
And for asynchronous requests, it's a small adjustment
```python
>>> from scrapling.fetchers import AsyncFetcher
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.delete('https://example.com/resource/123')
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.delete('https://example.com/resource/123', stealthy_headers=True, impersonate="chrome")
>>> page = await AsyncFetcher.delete('https://example.com/resource/123', proxy='http://username:password@localhost:8030')
```

## Session Management

For making multiple requests with the same configuration, use the `FetcherSession` class. It can be used in both synchronous and asynchronous code without issue; the class automatically detects and changes the session type, without requiring a different import.

The `FetcherSession` class can accept nearly all the arguments that the methods can take, which enables you to specify a config for the entire session and later choose a different config for one of the requests effortlessly, as you will see in the following examples.

```python
from scrapling.fetchers import FetcherSession

# Create a session with default configuration
with FetcherSession(
    impersonate='chrome',
    http3=True,
    stealthy_headers=True,
    timeout=30,
    retries=3
) as session:
    # Make multiple requests with the same settings and the same cookies
    page1 = session.get('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/get')
    page2 = session.post('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/post', data={'key': 'value'})
    page3 = session.get('https://api.github.com/events')

    # All requests share the same session and connection pool
```

You can also use a `ProxyRotator` with `FetcherSession` for automatic proxy rotation across requests:

```python
from scrapling.fetchers import FetcherSession, ProxyRotator

rotator = ProxyRotator([
    'http://proxy1:8080',
    'http://proxy2:8080',
    'http://proxy3:8080',
])

with FetcherSession(proxy_rotator=rotator, impersonate='chrome') as session:
    # Each request automatically uses the next proxy in rotation
    page1 = session.get('https://example.com/page1')
    page2 = session.get('https://example.com/page2')

    # You can check which proxy was used via the response metadata
    print(page1.meta['proxy'])
```

You can also override the session proxy (or rotator) for a specific request by passing `proxy=` directly to the request method:

```python
with FetcherSession(proxy='http://default-proxy:8080') as session:
    # Uses the session proxy
    page1 = session.get('https://example.com/page1')

    # Override the proxy for this specific request
    page2 = session.get('https://example.com/page2', proxy='http://special-proxy:9090')
```

And here's an async example

```python
async with FetcherSession(impersonate='firefox', http3=True) as session:
    # All standard HTTP methods available
    response = await session.get('https://example.com')
    response = await session.post('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/post', json={'data': 'value'})
    response = await session.put('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/put', data={'update': 'info'})
    response = await session.delete('https://scrapling.requestcatcher.com/delete')
```
or better
```python
import asyncio
from scrapling.fetchers import FetcherSession

# Async session usage
async with FetcherSession(impersonate="safari") as session:
    urls = ['https://example.com/page1', 'https://example.com/page2']

    tasks = [
        session.get(url) for url in urls
    ]

    pages = await asyncio.gather(*tasks)
```

The `Fetcher` class uses `FetcherSession` to create a temporary session with each request you make.

### Session Benefits

- **A lot faster**: 10 times faster than creating a single session for each request
- **Cookie persistence**: Automatic cookie handling across requests
- **Resource efficiency**: Better memory and CPU usage for multiple requests
- **Centralized configuration**: Single place to manage request settings

## Examples
Some well-rounded examples to aid newcomers to Web Scraping

### Basic HTTP Request

```python
from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher

# Make a request
page = Fetcher.get('https://example.com')

# Check the status
if page.status == 200:
    # Extract title
    title = page.css('title::text').get()
    print(f"Page title: {title}")

    # Extract all links
    links = page.css('a::attr(href)').getall()
    print(f"Found {len(links)} links")
```

### Product Scraping

```python
from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher

def scrape_products():
    page = Fetcher.get('https://example.com/products')
    
    # Find all product elements
    products = page.css('.product')
    
    results = []
    for product in products:
        results.append({
            'title': product.css('.title::text').get(),
            'price': product.css('.price::text').re_first(r'\d+\.\d{2}'),
            'description': product.css('.description::text').get(),
            'in_stock': product.has_class('in-stock')
        })
    
    return results
```

### Downloading Files

```python
from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher

page = Fetcher.get('https://raw.githubusercontent.com/D4Vinci/Scrapling/main/images/main_cover.png')
with open(file='main_cover.png', mode='wb') as f:
   f.write(page.body)
```

### Pagination Handling

```python
from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher

def scrape_all_pages():
    base_url = 'https://example.com/products?page={}'
    page_num = 1
    all_products = []
    
    while True:
        # Get current page
        page = Fetcher.get(base_url.format(page_num))
        
        # Find products
        products = page.css('.product')
        if not products:
            break
            
        # Process products
        for product in products:
            all_products.append({
                'name': product.css('.name::text').get(),
                'price': product.css('.price::text').get()
            })
            
        # Next page
        page_num += 1
        
    return all_products
```

### Form Submission

```python
from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher

# Submit login form
response = Fetcher.post(
    'https://example.com/login',
    data={
        'username': 'user@example.com',
        'password': 'password123'
    }
)

# Check login success
if response.status == 200:
    # Extract user info
    user_name = response.css('.user-name::text').get()
    print(f"Logged in as: {user_name}")
```

### Table Extraction

```python
from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher

def extract_table():
    page = Fetcher.get('https://example.com/data')
    
    # Find table
    table = page.css('table')[0]
    
    # Extract headers
    headers = [
        th.text for th in table.css('thead th')
    ]
    
    # Extract rows
    rows = []
    for row in table.css('tbody tr'):
        cells = [td.text for td in row.css('td')]
        rows.append(dict(zip(headers, cells)))
        
    return rows
```

### Navigation Menu

```python
from scrapling.fetchers import Fetcher

def extract_menu():
    page = Fetcher.get('https://example.com')
    
    # Find navigation
    nav = page.css('nav')[0]
    
    menu = {}
    for item in nav.css('li'):
        links = item.css('a')
        if links:
            link = links[0]
            menu[link.text] = {
                'url': link['href'],
                'has_submenu': bool(item.css('.submenu'))
            }
            
    return menu
```

## When to Use

Use `Fetcher` when:

- Need rapid HTTP requests.
- Want minimal overhead.
- Don't need JavaScript execution (the website can be scraped through requests).
- Need some stealth features (ex, the targeted website is using protection but doesn't use JavaScript challenges).

Use `FetcherSession` when:

- Making multiple requests to the same or different sites.
- Need to maintain cookies/authentication between requests.
- Want connection pooling for better performance.
- Require consistent configuration across requests.
- Working with APIs that require a session state.

Use other fetchers when:

- Need browser automation.
- Need advanced anti-bot/stealth capabilities.
- Need JavaScript support or interacting with dynamic content