Elixir - problems with https URLs
Asked Answered
P

2

8

I'm new to Elixir and Erlang and having some issues with accessing https URLs. I've tried the Elixir-specific HTTPotion and Erlang's :inets module.

So from the iex console (Interactive Elixir):

With HTTPotion:

HTTPotion.start
HTTPotion.get("https://api.github.com")

With :inets:

:inets.start
:ssl.start
:httpc.request('https://api.github.com')

In both cases I get a giant stacktrace that essential says there is a bad match somewhere and that a state machine is terminating. I don't get this when accessing http URLs. What am I missing? Thanks.

Edit - here is the error message from HTTPotion:

iex(40)> HTTPotion.get("https://api.github.com") 
** (Protocol.UndefinedError) protocol String.Chars not implemented for {:EXIT, {{{{:badmatch, ""}, [{:ssl_handshake, :dec_hello_extensions, 2, [file: 'ssl_handshake.erl', line: 1737]}, {:ssl_handshake, :decode_handshake, 3, [file: 'ssl_handshake.erl', line: 926]}, {:tls_handshake, :get_tls_handshake_aux, 3, [file: 'tls_handshake.erl', line: 155]}, {:tls_connection, :next_state, 4, [file: 'tls_connection.erl', line: 433]}, {:gen_fsm, :handle_msg, 7, [file: 'gen_fsm.erl', line: 503]}, {:proc_lib, :init_p_do_apply, 3, [file: 'proc_lib.erl', line: 237]}]}, {:gen_fsm, :sync_send_all_state_event, [#PID<0.227.0>, {:start, 5000}, :infinity]}}, {:gen_server, :call, [#PID<0.226.0>, {:send_req, {{:url, 'https://api.github.com', 'api.github.com', 443, :undefined, :undefined, '/', :https, :hostname}, [], :get, "", [], 5000}}, 5000]}}}
       (elixir) lib/string/chars.ex:3: String.Chars.impl_for!/1
       (elixir) lib/string/chars.ex:17: String.Chars.to_string/1
    (httpotion) lib/httpotion.ex:157: HTTPotion.request/5
iex(40)> 
16:50:10.640 [error] ** State machine #PID<0.227.0> terminating 
** Last message in was {:tcp, #Port<0.7454>,
 <<22, 3, 3, 0, 93, 2, 0, 0, 89, 3, 3, 84, 40, 158, 178, 2, 216, 45, 226, 183, 79, 42, 199, 205, 19, 31, 63, 223, 138, 208, 132, 186, 28, 129, 123, 235, 1, 142, 90, 243, 25, 70, 210, 32, 199, 56, 251, 131, ...>>}
** When State == :hello
**      Data  == [data: [{'StateData',
   {:state, :client, {#Reference<0.0.0.1360>, #PID<0.226.0>}, :gen_tcp,
    :tls_connection, :tcp, :tcp_closed, :tcp_error, 'api.github.com', 443,
    #Port<0.7454>,
    {:ssl_options, :tls, [{3, 3}, {3, 2}, {3, 1}, {3, 0}], :verify_none,
     {#Function<7.50551058/3 in :ssl.handle_verify_options/2>, []},
     #Function<8.50551058/1 in :ssl.handle_verify_options/2>, false, false,
     :undefined, 1, "", '***', "", '***', '***', '***', "", '***', :undefined,
     :undefined, '***', '***',
     [<<192, 36>>, <<192, 40>>, <<192, 38>>, <<192, 42>>, <<0, 107>>,
      <<0, 106>>, <<0, 61>>, <<192, 35>>, <<192, 39>>, <<192, 37>>, <<192, 41>>, 
      <<0, 103>>, <<0, ...>>, <<...>>, ...],
     #Function<1.50551058/4 in :ssl.handle_options/1>, true, 268435456, false,
     :undefined, false, :undefined, :undefined, true, :undefined, false},
    {:socket_options, :binary, 0, 0, 0, false}, '***', '***', '***', 49168,
    '***', 61463, :ssl_session_cache, {3, 3}, false, :undefined,
    {:undefined, :undefined}, :undefined, :undefined, '***', '***', '***',
    :undefined, '***', '***', '***', 53269, #Reference<0.0.0.1363>, :undefined,
    '***', {false, :first}, {#PID<0.226.0>, #Reference<0.0.0.1361>},
    #Reference<0.0.0.1364>, {[], []}, false, true, false, false, :undefined,
    :undefined, :undefined}}]]
** Reason for termination = 
** {{:badmatch, ""},
 [{:ssl_handshake, :dec_hello_extensions, 2,
   [file: 'ssl_handshake.erl', line: 1737]},
  {:ssl_handshake, :decode_handshake, 3,
   [file: 'ssl_handshake.erl', line: 926]},
  {:tls_handshake, :get_tls_handshake_aux, 3,
   [file: 'tls_handshake.erl', line: 155]},
  {:tls_connection, :next_state, 4, [file: 'tls_connection.erl', line: 433]},
  {:gen_fsm, :handle_msg, 7, [file: 'gen_fsm.erl', line: 503]},
  {:proc_lib, :init_p_do_apply, 3, [file: 'proc_lib.erl', line: 237]}]}


16:50:10.642 [error] GenServer #PID<0.226.0> terminating
Last message: {:send_req, {{:url, 'https://api.github.com', 'api.github.com', 443, :undefined, :undefined, '/', :https, :hostname}, [], :get, "", [], 5000}}
State: {:state, 'api.github.com', 443, :undefined, #Reference<0.0.0.1352>, false, :undefined, [], true, :undefined, false, [], {[], []}, :undefined, :idle, :undefined, "", 0, 0, [], :undefined, :undefined, :undefined, :undefined, false, :undefined, :undefined, "", :undefined, false, 188446, 0, :undefined}
** (exit) exited in: :gen_fsm.sync_send_all_state_event(#PID<0.227.0>, {:start, 5000}, :infinity)
    ** (EXIT) an exception was raised:
        ** (MatchError) no match of right hand side value: ""
            (ssl) ssl_handshake.erl:1737: :ssl_handshake.dec_hello_extensions/2
            (ssl) ssl_handshake.erl:926: :ssl_handshake.decode_handshake/3
            (ssl) tls_handshake.erl:155: :tls_handshake.get_tls_handshake_aux/3
            (ssl) tls_connection.erl:433: :tls_connection.next_state/4
            (stdlib) gen_fsm.erl:503: :gen_fsm.handle_msg/7
            (stdlib) proc_lib.erl:237: :proc_lib.init_p_do_apply/3

nil
iex(41)> 
Peseta answered 28/9, 2014 at 22:59 Comment(4)
It would help a lot if you could share this stacktrace message. Do you have ibrowse in your dependencies?Bozovich
Posted the error message from HTTPotion. Yes, ibrowse is in my mix.exs file ({:ibrowse, github: "cmullaparthi/ibrowse", tag: "v4.1.0"}). I start the iex console with "iex -S mix".Peseta
It seems to be a simple ssl error: {:EXIT, {{{{:badmatch, ""}, [{:ssl_handshake, :dec_hello_extensions,Roborant
I can type in the same URL api.github.com in a browser and get a valid JSON response back. Why would using the Elixir or Erlang client throw an error? Am I calling the function wrong? Do I need to specify additional information?Peseta
P
9

Mystery solved. I posted this question to the Elixir-lang group and this is a known bug in Erlang OTP 17.3. The solution is to apply a patch, wait for the next version, or downgrade to OTP 17.1.

Details here: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/elixir-lang-talk/xsAEzCfmRoQ

Peseta answered 29/9, 2014 at 7:27 Comment(1)
Given that 17.1 contains regressions on wildcards. The safest choice is to upgrade to 17.4 or 17.3.4 as mentioned in some of the answers below.Metrist
R
1

Either downgrade to Erlang 17.1 or use the latest release tag "OTP-17.3.4" from GitHub - https://github.com/erlang/otp/releases

Incase you choose to use the "OTP-17.3.4" release tag from GitHub, then once you download the source and untar/unzip it, run ./otp_build autoconf, before you run the usual build instructions (./configure, make, make install).

17.3.4 is an internal release and hence no releases are available on the official Erlang site. [source: https://twitter.com/brucify/status/537240367239016448]. Although, I do see that Erlang Solutions site has builds called 17.3 rev2.

Receivership answered 30/11, 2014 at 11:23 Comment(0)

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