@golevelup/nestjs-stripe
Interacting with the Stripe API or consuming Stripe webhooks in your NestJS applications is now easy as pie 🥧
Features
-
💉 Injectable Stripe client for interacting with the Stripe API in Controllers and Providers
-
🎉 Optionally exposes an API endpoint from your NestJS application at to be used for webhook event processing from Stripe. Defaults to /stripe/webhook/
but can be easily configured
-
🔒 Automatically validates that the event payload was actually sent from Stripe using the configured webhook signing secret
-
🕵️ Discovers providers from your application decorated with StripeWebhookHandler
and routes incoming events to them
-
🧭 Route events to logical services easily simply by providing the Stripe webhook event type
Getting Started
Install
NPM
- Install the package along with the stripe peer dependency
npm install --save @golevelup/nestjs-stripe stripe
YARN
- Install the package using yarn with the stripe peer dependency
yarn add @golevelup/nestjs-stripe stripe
Import
Import and add StripeModule
to the imports
section of the consuming module (most likely AppModule
). Your Stripe API key is required, and you can optionally include a webhook configuration if you plan on consuming Stripe webhook events inside your app.
import { StripeModule } from '@golevelup/nestjs-stripe';
@Module({
imports: [
StripeModule.forRoot(StripeModule, {
apiKey: '123',
webhookConfig: {
stripeWebhookSecret: 'abc',
},
}),
],
})
export class AppModule {
}
Configuration
The Stripe Module supports both the forRoot
and forRootAsync
patterns for configuration, so you can easily retrieve the necessary config values from a ConfigService
or other provider.
Injectable Providers
The module exposes two injectable providers with accompanying decorators for your convenience. These can be provided to the constructors of controllers and other providers:
@InjectStripeClient() stripeClient: Stripe
@InjectStripeModuleConfig() config: StripeModuleConfig
Consuming Webhooks
Included API Endpoint
This module will automatically add a new API endpoint to your NestJS application for processing webhooks. By default, the route for this endpoint will be stripe/webhook
but you can modify this to use a different prefix using the controllerPrefix
property of the webhookConfig
when importing the module.
⚠️ Configure Raw Request Body Handling
If you would like your NestJS application to be able to process incoming webhooks, it is essential that Stripe has access to the raw request payload.
By default, NestJS is configured to use JSON body parsing middleware which will transform the request before it can be validated by the Stripe library. The easiest solution is to also include the @golevelup/nestjs-webhooks
package and follow the steps for setting up simple body parsing.
Simply provide either stripe/webhook
or the API route you chose when configuring the module. For example:
export class AppModule implements NestModule {
configure(consumer: MiddlewareConsumer) {
applyRawBodyOnlyTo(consumer, {
method: RequestMethod.ALL,
path: 'stripe/webhook',
});
}
}
Failure to give Stripe access to the raw body will result in nasty runtime errors when events are sent to your endpoint
Decorate Methods For Processing Webhook Events
Exposing provider/service methods to be used for processing Stripe events is easy! Simply use the provided decorator and indicate the event type that the handler should receive.
Review the Stripe documentation for more information about the types of events available.
@Injectable()
class PaymentCreatedService {
@StripeWebhookHandler('payment_intent.created')
handlePaymentIntentCreated(evt: StripeEvent) {
}
}
Webhook Controller Decorators
You can also pass any class decorator to the decorators
property of the webhookConfig
object as a part of the module configuration. This could be used in situations like when using the @nestjs/throttler
package and needing to apply the @ThrottlerSkip()
decorator, or when you have a global guard but need to skip routes with certain metadata.
StripeModule.forRoot(StripeModule, {
apiKey: '123',
webhookConfig: {
stripeWebhookSecret: 'super-secret',
decorators: [ThrottlerSkip()],
},
}),
Configure Webhooks in the Stripe Dashboard
Follow the instructions from the Stripe Documentation for remaining integration steps such as testing your integration with the CLI before you go live and properly configuring the endpoint from the Stripe dashboard so that the correct events are sent to your NestJS app.
Contribute
Contributions welcome! Read the contribution guidelines first.
License
MIT License