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Calendink/Provider/tdd/http_client_component.md
2026-03-28 15:38:38 -04:00

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HTTP Client Component for Calendink Client

Authored by Antigravity (Claude Opus 4.6) Date: 2026-03-28


1. What (Goal)

Create a reusable ESP-IDF component (components/http_client/) that provides a simple, synchronous HTTP client API for the Calendink Client firmware. The component must:

  • Wrap ESP-IDF's esp_http_client in a clean C++ API with ergonomic result types.
  • Support GET requests returning either text (JSON) or binary (PNG image) data.
  • Support POST requests sending a JSON body and receiving a JSON response.
  • Build full URLs from path fragments using the Provider's address resolved via mDNS (calendink.local).
  • Be shared across projects via the components/ directory, usable by any Calendink device firmware.

The initial test integration will run in the Client's main.cpp after WiFi connects:

  1. Register the devicePOST /api/devices/register with the Client's own WiFi MAC address.
  2. Fetch the screen imageGET /api/devices/screen.png?mac=XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX, download the PNG and log the received size.

2. Why (Reasoning)

2.1. Why a Shared Component?

The Client firmware needs to talk to the Provider over HTTP. This is a fundamental capability that will be used by every Client feature going forward (screen polling, status reporting, configuration sync). Placing it in components/http_client/ follows the established pattern (network, led) and makes it available to any future Calendink firmware project.

2.2. Why Synchronous?

The Client firmware has a simple execution model: boot → connect WiFi → register → poll screen → sleep → repeat. There is no concurrent UI or web server to keep responsive. A synchronous (blocking) API is:

  • Simpler to use correctly — no callbacks, no state machines.
  • Easier to reason about memory lifetime — buffers are allocated and freed in the same scope.
  • Sufficient for the single-task polling loop the Client will run.

If async requests are needed later (e.g., for a multi-task architecture), _async variants can be added without breaking the existing API.

2.3. Why mDNS Instead of Hardcoded IP?

The Provider already advertises itself as calendink.local via mDNS (CONFIG_CALENDINK_MDNS_HOSTNAME). Using mDNS for discovery:

  • Eliminates configuration coupling — no need to update Client firmware when the Provider's DHCP lease changes.
  • Plug-and-play — a freshly flashed Client finds the Provider automatically on the same network.
  • Fallback — if mDNS resolution fails, the Client can fall back to a Kconfig-configured static IP (configured in the Client project, not the component).

The mDNS resolution happens once at startup and is cached. The mdns component dependency is lightweight (~15 KB flash).

2.4. Why Download the Full Image?

The ESP32-C6 has ~320 KB of internal SRAM. A typical screen PNG is 50200 KB depending on content complexity. For the 4-level grayscale 480×800 display, most PNGs land around 2080 KB (LodePNG with simple content compresses well). This fits comfortably in internal RAM.

If a particular PNG exceeds available heap, the http_get_binary() function will return ESP_ERR_NO_MEM — the caller can handle this gracefully. For the initial test, we'll attempt the full download and log the result either way.

3. How (Implementation Details)

3.1. Component File Structure

components/http_client/
├── CMakeLists.txt          # Component registration
├── idf_component.yml       # Component manifest
├── http_client.hpp         # Public API header
└── http_client.cpp         # Implementation

No Kconfig.projbuild in the component itself — the Provider address configuration belongs to the consumer (Client project). The component only provides the URL builder and HTTP functions.

3.2. API Surface

// ── Result Types ──────────────────────────────────────────────

struct http_text_response_t {
    int         status_code;    // HTTP status (200, 404, 500, etc.)
    char       *body;           // Heap-allocated, null-terminated (caller frees)
    size_t      body_len;       // Byte length (excluding null terminator)
};

struct http_binary_response_t {
    int         status_code;
    uint8_t    *data;           // Heap-allocated binary buffer (caller frees)
    size_t      data_len;       // Byte length
};

// ── Functions ─────────────────────────────────────────────────

// Build "http://<host>:<port><path>" from a host, port, and path.
// Returns heap-allocated string; caller must free().
char *http_build_url(const char *host, uint16_t port, const char *path);

// GET a text/JSON resource. Blocks until complete.
esp_err_t http_get_text(const char *url, http_text_response_t *out);

// GET a binary resource (e.g. PNG). Blocks until complete.
esp_err_t http_get_binary(const char *url, http_binary_response_t *out);

// POST JSON body, receive JSON response. Blocks until complete.
esp_err_t http_post_json(const char *url, const char *json_body,
                         http_text_response_t *out);

Design note: http_build_url takes host/port as parameters rather than reading Kconfig directly. This keeps the component generic — the caller (Client main.cpp) passes its own Kconfig values or mDNS-resolved addresses. The component has zero Kconfig of its own.

3.3. Implementation Details

Event Handler — Accumulating Response Body

esp_http_client delivers data in chunks via an event callback. We use a single internal handler that accumulates chunks into a dynamically growing buffer:

HTTP_EVENT_ON_DATA → realloc(buffer, current_len + new_len) → memcpy

The buffer pointer is passed through the user_data field of esp_http_client_config_t. A small internal struct tracks the buffer, length, and capacity:

struct http_receive_buffer_t {
    char   *buf;
    size_t  len;
    size_t  capacity;
};

Timeout

Default: 10 seconds (timeout_ms = 10000). Sufficient for even the largest PNG response from the Provider (encoding + transfer). Can be made configurable later if needed.

Memory Safety

  • Output struct is zeroed at function entry — on any error path, the caller gets a clean struct with null pointers.
  • On esp_http_client_perform() failure, any partially accumulated buffer is freed immediately.
  • On success, ownership of the buffer transfers to the caller (documented: "caller must free()").

Logging

Uses kTagHttpClient = "HTTP_CLIENT" — unique tag per Unity Build convention (though this component is not Unity Build, keeping the convention consistent is good practice for when the Client eventually adopts it).

Key log points:

  • ESP_LOGI — request start (method + URL), response status + size
  • ESP_LOGW — non-2xx status codes
  • ESP_LOGE — connection failures, allocation failures

3.4. Client Integration

Kconfig (in Client/main/Kconfig.projbuild — NOT in the component)

menu "Calendink Client"

    config CALENDINK_PROVIDER_MDNS_HOSTNAME
        string "Provider mDNS Hostname"
        default "calendink"
        help
            The mDNS hostname of the Provider device.
            The Client resolves <hostname>.local to find the Provider IP.

    config CALENDINK_PROVIDER_PORT
        int "Provider HTTP Port"
        default 80
        help
            The HTTP port of the Calendink Provider.

    config CALENDINK_PROVIDER_FALLBACK_IP
        string "Provider Fallback IP (if mDNS fails)"
        default ""
        help
            Static IP to use if mDNS resolution fails. Leave empty to
            disable fallback (the Client will retry mDNS).

endmenu

Client File Structure

Provider communication logic is in its own file, not in main.cpp:

Client/main/
├── CMakeLists.txt        # SRCS: main.cpp, provider.cpp
├── Kconfig.projbuild     # Provider connection settings
├── idf_component.yml     # Dependencies: network, led, http_client, espressif/mdns
├── main.cpp              # Boot, NVS, WiFi connect → calls test_provider_communication()
├── provider.hpp          # Header for provider communication
└── provider.cpp          # mDNS resolution, device registration, screen fetch

provider.cpp Test Flow

After network connects (WiFi or Ethernet):

1. Resolve Provider IP via mdns_query_a("calendink", 5000, &addr)
   - On success: use resolved IP
   - On failure: runtime check strlen(CONFIG_CALENDINK_PROVIDER_FALLBACK_IP) > 0
     - If set: use fallback IP
     - If empty: abort with error log

2. Get own MAC via get_mac_address(mac_bytes) from the network component
   - Returns Ethernet MAC if connected via Ethernet, WiFi MAC if via WiFi
   - Format as "XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX"

3. POST /api/devices/register
   - Body: {"mac": "XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX"}
   - Log: status code + response body
   - Free response

4. GET /api/devices/screen.png?mac=XX:XX:XX:XX:XX:XX
   - Download full PNG into memory
   - Log: status code + received byte count
   - Free response

Dependencies Added to Client

File Change
Client/main/idf_component.yml Add http_client (local path) + espressif/mdns: ^1.4.1 (managed)
Client/main/CMakeLists.txt Add http_client and mdns to PRIV_REQUIRES

Network Component Changes

get_mac_address(uint8_t *mac_out) was added to network.hpp / network.cpp. It uses esp_netif_get_mac() on whichever interface is active — Ethernet preferred, WiFi fallback. This keeps all esp_wifi usage inside the network component.

3.5. Component Build Configuration

idf_component_register(SRCS "http_client.cpp"
                       INCLUDE_DIRS "." "../shared"
                       PRIV_REQUIRES esp_http_client)
  • INCLUDE_DIRS "." — consumers #include "http_client.hpp"
  • "../shared" — for types.hpp (type aliases, internal macro)
  • PRIV_REQUIRES esp_http_client — ESP-IDF's built-in HTTP client

The mdns dependency is on the Client, not the component — the component is agnostic to how the caller discovers the host.

3.6. Provider API Contracts (Reference)

These are the two endpoints the Client will call. They already exist and require no changes.

POST /api/devices/register

Request:  {"mac": "AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF"}
Response: {"status": "ok", "mac": "AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF"}          (201-equivalent, new device)
          {"status": "already_registered", "mac": "AA:BB:..."}   (200, already known)
Error:    400 if missing mac, 500 if device slots full

GET /api/devices/screen.png?mac=AA:BB:CC:DD:EE:FF

Response: image/png binary (4-level grayscale, 480×800)
Error:    400 if missing mac param, 404 if device not registered, 500 on render failure

4. Summary

We add a new shared component http_client that wraps esp_http_client in a simple synchronous API with http_get_text(), http_get_binary(), and http_post_json(). The component is generic — it takes host/port/path and knows nothing about mDNS or Kconfig. The Client firmware integrates it by resolving the Provider via mDNS (calendink.local), registering itself, and fetching its screen image as a connectivity test. No Provider-side changes are needed.

5. Implementation Notes (Post-Development)

Decisions Made During Implementation

  1. File separation — Provider communication logic was extracted from main.cpp into provider.cpp/provider.hpp to keep main.cpp focused on boot/init (~78 lines). This follows the pattern of keeping main lean.

  2. Fallback IP check — The original plan used a #if preprocessor check to test if the fallback IP string was non-empty. This doesn't work because Kconfig string values can't be indexed in preprocessor expressions. Changed to a runtime strlen() check, which the compiler optimizes away when the string is a compile-time constant.

  3. Interface-agnostic MACget_mac_address() was added to the network component using esp_netif_get_mac() (instead of esp_wifi_get_mac()). It checks s_eth_netif first, then s_wifi_netif, making it work for both Ethernet and WiFi connections without the caller needing to know which is active.

  4. mDNS as managed component — The Client uses espressif/mdns: ^1.4.1 from the ESP-IDF component registry (specified in idf_component.yml) rather than a local path, since it's an official Espressif component.

  5. No esp_wifi in Client — The Client project has no direct dependency on esp_wifi. All WiFi/Ethernet access goes through the network component. This was a deliberate architectural decision to keep the Client decoupled from transport details.

Verified On-Device

  • mDNS resolution of calendink.local → Provider IP
  • POST /api/devices/register → 200 with device MAC
  • GET /api/devices/screen.png?mac=XX → 200 with PNG binary data

Created by Antigravity (Claude Opus 4.6) - 2026-03-28 Updated: 2026-03-28 — Post-implementation notes added