Advanced HTTP requests in node.js and browsers, using Servie.
Installation
npm install popsicle --save
Usage
import { fetch } from "popsicle";
const res = await fetch("http://example.com");
const data = await res.text();
Popsicle is a universal package, meaning node.js and browsers are supported without any configuration. This means the primary endpoint requires some dom
types in TypeScript. When in a node.js or browser only environments prefer importing popsicle/dist/{node,browser}
instead.
Popsicle re-exports Request
, Response
, Headers
and AbortController
from servie
. The fetch
function accepts the same arguments as Request
and returns a promise that resolves to Response
. You can use the Signal
event emitter (from AbortController#signal
) to listen to request life cycle events.
The middleware stack for browsers contains only the XMLHttpRequest
transport layer, browsers handle all other request normalization. This means a smaller and faster package for browsers.
The middleware stack for node.js includes normalization to act similar to browsers:
Important: If you are doing anything non-trivial with Popsicle, please override the User-Agent
and respect robots.txt
.
Recipes
Aborting a Request
import { fetch, AbortController } from "popsicle";
const controller = new AbortController();
setTimeout(() => controller.abort(), 500);
const res = fetch("http://example.com", {
signal: controller.signal,
});
Errors
Transports can return an error. The built-in codes are documented below:
- EUNAVAILABLE Unable to connect to the remote URL
- EINVALID Request URL is invalid (browsers)
- EMAXREDIRECTS Maximum number of redirects exceeded (node.js)
- EBLOCKED The request was blocked (HTTPS -> HTTP) (browsers)
- ECSP Request violates the documents Content Security Policy (browsers)
- ETYPE Invalid transport type (browsers)
Customization
Build the functionality you require by composing middleware functions and using toFetch
. See src/node.ts
for an example.
Plugins
Creating Plugins
See Throwback for more information:
type Plugin = (
req: Request,
next: () => Promise<Response>,
) => Promise<Response>;
TypeScript
This project is written using TypeScript and publishes the types to NPM alongside the package.
Related Projects
- Superagent - HTTP requests for node and browsers
- Fetch - Browser polyfill for promise-based HTTP requests
- Axios - HTTP request API based on Angular's
$http
service
License
MIT