1.9 KiB
title, order, status
| title | order | status |
|---|---|---|
| C11. Use the Progress Callback | 11 | draft |
To display download or upload progress, pass a DownloadProgress or UploadProgress callback. Both take two arguments: (current, total).
Download progress
httplib::Client cli("http://localhost:8080");
auto res = cli.Get("/large-file",
[](size_t current, size_t total) {
auto percent = (total > 0) ? (current * 100 / total) : 0;
std::cout << "\rDownloading: " << percent << "% ("
<< current << "/" << total << ")" << std::flush;
return true; // return false to abort
});
std::cout << std::endl;
The callback fires each time data arrives. total comes from the Content-Length header — if the server doesn't send one, it may be 0. In that case, you can't compute a percentage, so just display bytes received.
Upload progress
Uploads work the same way. Pass an UploadProgress as the last argument to Post() or Put().
httplib::Client cli("http://localhost:8080");
std::string body = load_large_body();
auto res = cli.Post("/upload", body, "application/octet-stream",
[](size_t current, size_t total) {
auto percent = current * 100 / total;
std::cout << "\rUploading: " << percent << "%" << std::flush;
return true;
});
std::cout << std::endl;
Cancel mid-transfer
Return false from the callback to abort the transfer. This is how you wire up a "Cancel" button in a UI — flip a flag, and the next progress tick stops the transfer.
std::atomic<bool> cancelled{false};
auto res = cli.Get("/large-file",
[&](size_t current, size_t total) {
return !cancelled.load();
});
Note:
ContentReceiverand the progress callback can be used together. When you want to stream to a file and show progress at the same time, pass both.
For a concrete example of saving to a file, see C01. Get the response body / save to a file.