anthropics/httpcore
forked from encode/httpcore
Captured source
source ↗anthropics/httpcore
Description: A minimal HTTP client. ⚙️
Language: Python
License: BSD-3-Clause
Stars: 16
Forks: 15
Open issues: 0
Created: 2025-12-09T14:17:23Z
Pushed: 2026-06-08T04:42:54Z
Default branch: anthropic-1.0.9
Fork: yes
Parent repository: encode/httpcore
Archived: no
README:
HTTP Core
*This is an Anthropic fork from httpcore v1.0.9*
 
> *Do one thing, and do it well.*
The HTTP Core package provides a minimal low-level HTTP client, which does one thing only. Sending HTTP requests.
It does not provide any high level model abstractions over the API, does not handle redirects, multipart uploads, building authentication headers, transparent HTTP caching, URL parsing, session cookie handling, content or charset decoding, handling JSON, environment based configuration defaults, or any of that Jazz.
Some things HTTP Core does do:
- Sending HTTP requests.
- Thread-safe / task-safe connection pooling.
- HTTP(S) proxy & SOCKS proxy support.
- Supports HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2.
- Provides both sync and async interfaces.
- Async backend support for
asyncioandtrio.
Requirements
Python 3.8+
Installation
For HTTP/1.1 only support, install with:
$ pip install httpcore
There are also a number of optional extras available...
$ pip install httpcore['asyncio,trio,http2,socks']
Sending requests
Send an HTTP request:
import httpcore
response = httpcore.request("GET", "https://www.example.com/")
print(response)
#
print(response.status)
# 200
print(response.headers)
# [(b'Accept-Ranges', b'bytes'), (b'Age', b'557328'), (b'Cache-Control', b'max-age=604800'), ...]
print(response.content)
# b'\n\n\nExample Domain\n\n\n ...'The top-level httpcore.request() function is provided for convenience. In practice whenever you're working with httpcore you'll want to use the connection pooling functionality that it provides.
import httpcore
http = httpcore.ConnectionPool()
response = http.request("GET", "https://www.example.com/")Once you're ready to get going, head over to the documentation.
Motivation
You *probably* don't want to be using HTTP Core directly. It might make sense if you're writing something like a proxy service in Python, and you just want something at the lowest possible level, but more typically you'll want to use a higher level client library, such as httpx.
The motivation for httpcore is:
- To provide a reusable low-level client library, that other packages can then build on top of.
- To provide a *really clear interface split* between the networking code and client logic,
so that each is easier to understand and reason about in isolation.
Dependencies
The httpcore package has the following dependencies...
h11certifi
And the following optional extras...
anyio- Required bypip install httpcore['asyncio'].trio- Required bypip install httpcore['trio'].h2- Required bypip install httpcore['http2'].socksio- Required bypip install httpcore['socks'].
Versioning
We use SEMVER for our versioning policy.
For changes between package versions please see our [project changelog](CHANGELOG.md).
We recommend pinning your requirements either the most current major version, or a more specific version range:
pip install 'httpcore==1.*'
Notability
notability 2.0/10Low-star fork by notable lab.