⚡ The one-liner node.js http-proxy middleware for connect, express, next.js and more
Installations
npm install http-proxy-middleware
Developer Guide
Typescript
Yes
Module System
CommonJS
Min. Node Version
^14.15.0 || ^16.10.0 || >=18.0.0
Node Version
22.9.0
NPM Version
10.8.3
Score
83.3
Supply Chain
100
Quality
81.3
Maintenance
100
Vulnerability
100
License
Releases
Contributors
Languages
TypeScript (98.82%)
JavaScript (1.18%)
Developer
chimurai
Download Statistics
Total Downloads
3,395,227,710
Last Day
747,194
Last Week
10,139,175
Last Month
61,870,705
Last Year
705,791,317
GitHub Statistics
10,828 Stars
469 Commits
854 Forks
119 Watching
11 Branches
37 Contributors
Package Meta Information
Latest Version
3.0.3
Package Id
http-proxy-middleware@3.0.3
Unpacked Size
79.48 kB
Size
22.78 kB
File Count
61
NPM Version
10.8.3
Node Version
22.9.0
Publised On
06 Oct 2024
Total Downloads
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
3,395,227,710
Last day
-74.2%
747,194
Compared to previous day
Last week
-33.9%
10,139,175
Compared to previous week
Last month
-6.8%
61,870,705
Compared to previous month
Last year
1.4%
705,791,317
Compared to previous year
Daily Downloads
Weekly Downloads
Monthly Downloads
Yearly Downloads
Dev Dependencies
31
http-proxy-middleware
Node.js proxying made simple. Configure proxy middleware with ease for connect, express, next.js and many more.
Powered by the popular Nodejitsu http-proxy
.
⚠️ Note
This page is showing documentation for version v3.x.x (release notes)
See MIGRATION.md for details on how to migrate from v2.x.x to v3.x.x
If you're looking for older documentation. Go to:
- https://github.com/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/tree/v2.0.4#readme
- https://github.com/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/tree/v0.21.0#readme
TL;DR
Proxy /api
requests to http://www.example.org
:bulb: Tip: Set the option changeOrigin
to true
for name-based virtual hosted sites.
1// typescript 2 3import * as express from 'express'; 4import type { Request, Response, NextFunction } from 'express'; 5 6import { createProxyMiddleware } from 'http-proxy-middleware'; 7import type { Filter, Options, RequestHandler } from 'http-proxy-middleware'; 8 9const app = express(); 10 11const proxyMiddleware = createProxyMiddleware<Request, Response>({ 12 target: 'http://www.example.org/api', 13 changeOrigin: true, 14 }), 15 16app.use('/api', proxyMiddleware); 17 18app.listen(3000); 19 20// proxy and keep the same base path "/api" 21// http://127.0.0.1:3000/api/foo/bar -> http://www.example.org/api/foo/bar 22
All http-proxy
options can be used, along with some extra http-proxy-middleware
options.
Table of Contents
- Install
- Basic usage
- Express Server Example
- Options
http-proxy
eventshttp-proxy
options- WebSocket
- Intercept and manipulate requests
- Intercept and manipulate responses
- Node.js 17+: ECONNREFUSED issue with IPv6 and localhost (#705)
- Debugging
- Working examples
- Recipes
- Compatible servers
- Tests
- Changelog
- License
Install
1npm install --save-dev http-proxy-middleware
Basic usage
Create and configure a proxy middleware with: createProxyMiddleware(config)
.
1const { createProxyMiddleware } = require('http-proxy-middleware'); 2 3const apiProxy = createProxyMiddleware({ 4 target: 'http://www.example.org', 5 changeOrigin: true, 6}); 7 8// 'apiProxy' is now ready to be used as middleware in a server.
-
options.target: target host to proxy to. (protocol + host)
-
options.changeOrigin: for virtual hosted sites
-
see full list of
http-proxy-middleware
configuration options
Express Server Example
An example with express
server.
1// include dependencies 2const express = require('express'); 3const { createProxyMiddleware } = require('http-proxy-middleware'); 4 5const app = express(); 6 7// create the proxy 8/** @type {import('http-proxy-middleware/dist/types').RequestHandler<express.Request, express.Response>} */ 9const exampleProxy = createProxyMiddleware({ 10 target: 'http://www.example.org/api', // target host with the same base path 11 changeOrigin: true, // needed for virtual hosted sites 12}); 13 14// mount `exampleProxy` in web server 15app.use('/api', exampleProxy); 16app.listen(3000);
app.use(path, proxy)
If you want to use the server's app.use
path
parameter to match requests.
Use pathFilter
option to further include/exclude requests which you want to proxy.
1app.use( 2 createProxyMiddleware({ 3 target: 'http://www.example.org/api', 4 changeOrigin: true, 5 pathFilter: '/api/proxy-only-this-path', 6 }), 7);
app.use
documentation:
- express: http://expressjs.com/en/4x/api.html#app.use
- connect: https://github.com/senchalabs/connect#mount-middleware
- polka: https://github.com/lukeed/polka#usebase-fn
Options
http-proxy-middleware options:
pathFilter
(string, []string, glob, []glob, function)
Narrow down which requests should be proxied. The path
used for filtering is the request.url
pathname. In Express, this is the path
relative to the mount-point of the proxy.
-
path matching
createProxyMiddleware({...})
- matches any path, all requests will be proxied whenpathFilter
is not configured.createProxyMiddleware({ pathFilter: '/api', ...})
- matches paths starting with/api
-
multiple path matching
createProxyMiddleware({ pathFilter: ['/api', '/ajax', '/someotherpath'], ...})
-
wildcard path matching
For fine-grained control you can use wildcard matching. Glob pattern matching is done by micromatch. Visit micromatch or glob for more globbing examples.
createProxyMiddleware({ pathFilter: '**', ...})
matches any path, all requests will be proxied.createProxyMiddleware({ pathFilter: '**/*.html', ...})
matches any path which ends with.html
createProxyMiddleware({ pathFilter: '/*.html', ...})
matches paths directly under path-absolutecreateProxyMiddleware({ pathFilter: '/api/**/*.html', ...})
matches requests ending with.html
in the path of/api
createProxyMiddleware({ pathFilter: ['/api/**', '/ajax/**'], ...})
combine multiple patternscreateProxyMiddleware({ pathFilter: ['/api/**', '!**/bad.json'], ...})
exclusion
Note: In multiple path matching, you cannot use string paths and wildcard paths together.
-
custom matching
For full control you can provide a custom function to determine which requests should be proxied or not.
1/** 2 * @return {Boolean} 3 */ 4const pathFilter = function (path, req) { 5 return path.match('^/api') && req.method === 'GET'; 6}; 7 8const apiProxy = createProxyMiddleware({ 9 target: 'http://www.example.org', 10 pathFilter: pathFilter, 11});
pathRewrite
(object/function)
Rewrite target's url path. Object-keys will be used as RegExp to match paths.
1// rewrite path 2pathRewrite: {'^/old/api' : '/new/api'} 3 4// remove path 5pathRewrite: {'^/remove/api' : ''} 6 7// add base path 8pathRewrite: {'^/' : '/basepath/'} 9 10// custom rewriting 11pathRewrite: function (path, req) { return path.replace('/api', '/base/api') } 12 13// custom rewriting, returning Promise 14pathRewrite: async function (path, req) { 15 const should_add_something = await httpRequestToDecideSomething(path); 16 if (should_add_something) path += "something"; 17 return path; 18}
router
(object/function)
Re-target option.target
for specific requests.
1// Use `host` and/or `path` to match requests. First match will be used. 2// The order of the configuration matters. 3router: { 4 'integration.localhost:3000' : 'http://127.0.0.1:8001', // host only 5 'staging.localhost:3000' : 'http://127.0.0.1:8002', // host only 6 'localhost:3000/api' : 'http://127.0.0.1:8003', // host + path 7 '/rest' : 'http://127.0.0.1:8004' // path only 8} 9 10// Custom router function (string target) 11router: function(req) { 12 return 'http://127.0.0.1:8004'; 13} 14 15// Custom router function (target object) 16router: function(req) { 17 return { 18 protocol: 'https:', // The : is required 19 host: '127.0.0.1', 20 port: 8004 21 }; 22} 23 24// Asynchronous router function which returns promise 25router: async function(req) { 26 const url = await doSomeIO(); 27 return url; 28}
plugins
(Array)
1const simpleRequestLogger = (proxyServer, options) => { 2 proxyServer.on('proxyReq', (proxyReq, req, res) => { 3 console.log(`[HPM] [${req.method}] ${req.url}`); // outputs: [HPM] GET /users 4 }); 5}, 6 7const config = { 8 target: `http://example.org`, 9 changeOrigin: true, 10 plugins: [simpleRequestLogger], 11};
ejectPlugins
(boolean) default: false
If you're not satisfied with the pre-configured plugins, you can eject them by configuring ejectPlugins: true
.
NOTE: register your own error handlers to prevent server from crashing.
1// eject default plugins and manually add them back
2
3const {
4 debugProxyErrorsPlugin, // subscribe to proxy errors to prevent server from crashing
5 loggerPlugin, // log proxy events to a logger (ie. console)
6 errorResponsePlugin, // return 5xx response on proxy error
7 proxyEventsPlugin, // implements the "on:" option
8} = require('http-proxy-middleware');
9
10createProxyMiddleware({
11 target: `http://example.org`,
12 changeOrigin: true,
13 ejectPlugins: true,
14 plugins: [debugProxyErrorsPlugin, loggerPlugin, errorResponsePlugin, proxyEventsPlugin],
15});
logger
(Object)
Configure a logger to output information from http-proxy-middleware: ie. console
, winston
, pino
, bunyan
, log4js
, etc...
Only info
, warn
, error
are used internally for compatibility across different loggers.
If you use winston
, make sure to enable interpolation: https://github.com/winstonjs/winston#string-interpolation
See also logger recipes (recipes/logger.md) for more details.
1createProxyMiddleware({ 2 logger: console, 3});
http-proxy
events
Subscribe to http-proxy events with the on
option:
1createProxyMiddleware({
2 target: 'http://www.example.org',
3 on: {
4 proxyReq: (proxyReq, req, res) => {
5 /* handle proxyReq */
6 },
7 proxyRes: (proxyRes, req, res) => {
8 /* handle proxyRes */
9 },
10 error: (err, req, res) => {
11 /* handle error */
12 },
13 },
14});
-
option.on.error: function, subscribe to http-proxy's
error
event for custom error handling.1function onError(err, req, res, target) { 2 res.writeHead(500, { 3 'Content-Type': 'text/plain', 4 }); 5 res.end('Something went wrong. And we are reporting a custom error message.'); 6}
-
option.on.proxyRes: function, subscribe to http-proxy's
proxyRes
event.1function onProxyRes(proxyRes, req, res) { 2 proxyRes.headers['x-added'] = 'foobar'; // add new header to response 3 delete proxyRes.headers['x-removed']; // remove header from response 4}
-
option.on.proxyReq: function, subscribe to http-proxy's
proxyReq
event.1function onProxyReq(proxyReq, req, res) { 2 // add custom header to request 3 proxyReq.setHeader('x-added', 'foobar'); 4 // or log the req 5}
-
option.on.proxyReqWs: function, subscribe to http-proxy's
proxyReqWs
event.1function onProxyReqWs(proxyReq, req, socket, options, head) { 2 // add custom header 3 proxyReq.setHeader('X-Special-Proxy-Header', 'foobar'); 4}
-
option.on.open: function, subscribe to http-proxy's
open
event.1function onOpen(proxySocket) { 2 // listen for messages coming FROM the target here 3 proxySocket.on('data', hybridParseAndLogMessage); 4}
-
option.on.close: function, subscribe to http-proxy's
close
event.1function onClose(res, socket, head) { 2 // view disconnected websocket connections 3 console.log('Client disconnected'); 4}
http-proxy
options
The following options are provided by the underlying http-proxy library.
-
option.target: url string to be parsed with the url module
-
option.forward: url string to be parsed with the url module
-
option.agent: object to be passed to http(s).request (see Node's https agent and http agent objects)
-
option.ssl: object to be passed to https.createServer()
-
option.ws: true/false: if you want to proxy websockets
-
option.xfwd: true/false, adds x-forward headers
-
option.secure: true/false, if you want to verify the SSL Certs
-
option.toProxy: true/false, passes the absolute URL as the
path
(useful for proxying to proxies) -
option.prependPath: true/false, Default: true - specify whether you want to prepend the target's path to the proxy path
-
option.ignorePath: true/false, Default: false - specify whether you want to ignore the proxy path of the incoming request (note: you will have to append / manually if required).
-
option.localAddress : Local interface string to bind for outgoing connections
-
option.changeOrigin: true/false, Default: false - changes the origin of the host header to the target URL
-
option.preserveHeaderKeyCase: true/false, Default: false - specify whether you want to keep letter case of response header key
-
option.auth : Basic authentication i.e. 'user:password' to compute an Authorization header.
-
option.hostRewrite: rewrites the location hostname on (301/302/307/308) redirects.
-
option.autoRewrite: rewrites the location host/port on (301/302/307/308) redirects based on requested host/port. Default: false.
-
option.protocolRewrite: rewrites the location protocol on (301/302/307/308) redirects to 'http' or 'https'. Default: null.
-
option.cookieDomainRewrite: rewrites domain of
set-cookie
headers. Possible values:-
false
(default): disable cookie rewriting -
String: new domain, for example
cookieDomainRewrite: "new.domain"
. To remove the domain, usecookieDomainRewrite: ""
. -
Object: mapping of domains to new domains, use
"*"
to match all domains.
For example keep one domain unchanged, rewrite one domain and remove other domains:1cookieDomainRewrite: { 2 "unchanged.domain": "unchanged.domain", 3 "old.domain": "new.domain", 4 "*": "" 5}
-
-
option.cookiePathRewrite: rewrites path of
set-cookie
headers. Possible values:-
false
(default): disable cookie rewriting -
String: new path, for example
cookiePathRewrite: "/newPath/"
. To remove the path, usecookiePathRewrite: ""
. To set path to root usecookiePathRewrite: "/"
. -
Object: mapping of paths to new paths, use
"*"
to match all paths. For example, to keep one path unchanged, rewrite one path and remove other paths:1cookiePathRewrite: { 2 "/unchanged.path/": "/unchanged.path/", 3 "/old.path/": "/new.path/", 4 "*": "" 5}
-
-
option.headers: object, adds request headers. (Example:
{host:'www.example.org'}
) -
option.proxyTimeout: timeout (in millis) when proxy receives no response from target
-
option.timeout: timeout (in millis) for incoming requests
-
option.followRedirects: true/false, Default: false - specify whether you want to follow redirects
-
option.selfHandleResponse true/false, if set to true, none of the webOutgoing passes are called and it's your responsibility to appropriately return the response by listening and acting on the
proxyRes
event -
option.buffer: stream of data to send as the request body. Maybe you have some middleware that consumes the request stream before proxying it on e.g. If you read the body of a request into a field called 'req.rawbody' you could restream this field in the buffer option:
1'use strict'; 2 3const streamify = require('stream-array'); 4const HttpProxy = require('http-proxy'); 5const proxy = new HttpProxy(); 6 7module.exports = (req, res, next) => { 8 proxy.web( 9 req, 10 res, 11 { 12 target: 'http://127.0.0.1:4003/', 13 buffer: streamify(req.rawBody), 14 }, 15 next, 16 ); 17};
WebSocket
1// verbose api 2createProxyMiddleware({ pathFilter: '/', target: 'http://echo.websocket.org', ws: true });
External WebSocket upgrade
In the previous WebSocket examples, http-proxy-middleware relies on a initial http request in order to listen to the http upgrade
event. If you need to proxy WebSockets without the initial http request, you can subscribe to the server's http upgrade
event manually.
1const wsProxy = createProxyMiddleware({ target: 'ws://echo.websocket.org', changeOrigin: true }); 2 3const app = express(); 4app.use(wsProxy); 5 6const server = app.listen(3000); 7server.on('upgrade', wsProxy.upgrade); // <-- subscribe to http 'upgrade'
Intercept and manipulate requests
Intercept requests from downstream by defining onProxyReq
in createProxyMiddleware
.
Currently the only pre-provided request interceptor is fixRequestBody
, which is used to fix proxied POST requests when bodyParser
is applied before this middleware.
Example:
1const { createProxyMiddleware, fixRequestBody } = require('http-proxy-middleware'); 2 3const proxy = createProxyMiddleware({ 4 /** 5 * Fix bodyParser 6 **/ 7 on: { 8 proxyReq: fixRequestBody, 9 }, 10});
Intercept and manipulate responses
Intercept responses from upstream with responseInterceptor
. (Make sure to set selfHandleResponse: true
)
Responses which are compressed with brotli
, gzip
and deflate
will be decompressed automatically. The response will be returned as buffer
(docs) which you can manipulate.
With buffer
, response manipulation is not limited to text responses (html/css/js, etc...); image manipulation will be possible too. (example)
NOTE: responseInterceptor
disables streaming of target's response.
Example:
1const { createProxyMiddleware, responseInterceptor } = require('http-proxy-middleware'); 2 3const proxy = createProxyMiddleware({ 4 /** 5 * IMPORTANT: avoid res.end being called automatically 6 **/ 7 selfHandleResponse: true, // res.end() will be called internally by responseInterceptor() 8 9 /** 10 * Intercept response and replace 'Hello' with 'Goodbye' 11 **/ 12 on: { 13 proxyRes: responseInterceptor(async (responseBuffer, proxyRes, req, res) => { 14 const response = responseBuffer.toString('utf8'); // convert buffer to string 15 return response.replace('Hello', 'Goodbye'); // manipulate response and return the result 16 }), 17 }, 18});
Check out interception recipes for more examples.
Node.js 17+: ECONNREFUSED issue with IPv6 and localhost (#705)
Node.js 17+ no longer prefers IPv4 over IPv6 for DNS lookups.
E.g. It's not guaranteed that localhost
will be resolved to 127.0.0.1
– it might just as well be ::1
(or some other IP address).
If your target server only accepts IPv4 connections, trying to proxy to localhost
will fail if resolved to ::1
(IPv6).
Ways to solve it:
- Change
target: "http://localhost"
totarget: "http://127.0.0.1"
(IPv4). - Change the target server to (also) accept IPv6 connections.
- Add this flag when running
node
:node index.js --dns-result-order=ipv4first
. (Not recommended.)
Note: There’s a thing called Happy Eyeballs which means connecting to both IPv4 and IPv6 in parallel, which Node.js doesn’t have, but explains why for example
curl
can connect.
Debugging
Configure the DEBUG
environment variable enable debug logging.
See debug
project for more options.
1DEBUG=http-proxy-middleware* node server.js 2 3$ http-proxy-middleware proxy created +0ms 4$ http-proxy-middleware proxying request to target: 'http://www.example.org' +359ms
Working examples
View and play around with working examples.
- Browser-Sync (example source)
- express (example source)
- connect (example source)
- WebSocket (example source)
- Response Manipulation (example source)
Recipes
View the recipes for common use cases.
Compatible servers
http-proxy-middleware
is compatible with the following servers:
- connect
- express
- next.js
- fastify
- browser-sync
- lite-server
- polka
- grunt-contrib-connect
- grunt-browser-sync
- gulp-connect
- gulp-webserver
Sample implementations can be found in the server recipes.
Tests
Run the test suite:
1# install dependencies 2$ yarn 3 4# linting 5$ yarn lint 6$ yarn lint:fix 7 8# building (compile typescript to js) 9$ yarn build 10 11# unit tests 12$ yarn test 13 14# code coverage 15$ yarn cover 16 17# check spelling mistakes 18$ yarn spellcheck
Changelog
License
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2015-2024 Steven Chim
Stable Version
Stable Version
3.0.3
HIGH
2
7.5/10
Summary
Denial of service in http-proxy-middleware
Affected Versions
>= 3.0.0, < 3.0.3
Patched Versions
3.0.3
7.5/10
Summary
Denial of service in http-proxy-middleware
Affected Versions
< 2.0.7
Patched Versions
2.0.7
Reason
no dangerous workflow patterns detected
Reason
9 commit(s) and 4 issue activity found in the last 90 days -- score normalized to 10
Reason
no binaries found in the repo
Reason
license file detected
Details
- Info: project has a license file: LICENSE:0
- Info: FSF or OSI recognized license: MIT License: LICENSE:0
Reason
packaging workflow detected
Details
- Info: Project packages its releases by way of GitHub Actions.: .github/workflows/publish.yml:6
Reason
2 existing vulnerabilities detected
Details
- Warn: Project is vulnerable to: GHSA-mwcw-c2x4-8c55
- Warn: Project is vulnerable to: GHSA-7gfc-8cq8-jh5f
Reason
Found 2/30 approved changesets -- score normalized to 0
Reason
detected GitHub workflow tokens with excessive permissions
Details
- Info: jobLevel 'contents' permission set to 'read': .github/workflows/publish.yml:11
- Warn: no topLevel permission defined: .github/workflows/ci.yml:1
- Warn: no topLevel permission defined: .github/workflows/publish.yml:1
- Info: no jobLevel write permissions found
Reason
dependency not pinned by hash detected -- score normalized to 0
Details
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:11: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:13: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:17: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:40: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:42: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:46: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:73: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:75: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:79: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:102: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:104: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:108: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: third-party GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:124: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:132: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: third-party GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/ci.yml:133: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/ci.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/publish.yml:14: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/publish.yml/master?enable=pin
- Warn: GitHub-owned GitHubAction not pinned by hash: .github/workflows/publish.yml:15: update your workflow using https://app.stepsecurity.io/secureworkflow/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware/publish.yml/master?enable=pin
- Info: 0 out of 15 GitHub-owned GitHubAction dependencies pinned
- Info: 0 out of 2 third-party GitHubAction dependencies pinned
Reason
no effort to earn an OpenSSF best practices badge detected
Reason
security policy file not detected
Details
- Warn: no security policy file detected
- Warn: no security file to analyze
- Warn: no security file to analyze
- Warn: no security file to analyze
Reason
project is not fuzzed
Details
- Warn: no fuzzer integrations found
Reason
SAST tool is not run on all commits -- score normalized to 0
Details
- Warn: 0 commits out of 30 are checked with a SAST tool
Score
5
/10
Last Scanned on 2024-12-23
The Open Source Security Foundation is a cross-industry collaboration to improve the security of open source software (OSS). The Scorecard provides security health metrics for open source projects.
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> The one-liner node.js http-proxy middleware solution for Nuxt.js using [http-proxy-middleware](https://github.com/chimurai/http-proxy-middleware)