
Research
/Security News
Weaponizing Discord for Command and Control Across npm, PyPI, and RubyGems.org
Socket researchers uncover how threat actors weaponize Discord across the npm, PyPI, and RubyGems ecosystems to exfiltrate sensitive data.
@quintype/prerender-node
Advanced tools
express middleware for serving prerendered javascript-rendered pages for SEO
Google, Facebook, Twitter, and Bing are constantly trying to view your website... but Google is the only crawler that executes a meaningful amount of JavaScript and Google even admits that they can execute JavaScript weeks after actually crawling. Prerender allows you to serve the full HTML of your website back to Google and other crawlers so that they don't have to execute any JavaScript. Google recommends using Prerender.io to prevent indexation issues on sites with large amounts of JavaScript.
Prerender is perfect for Angular SEO, React SEO, Vue SEO, and any other JavaScript framework.
This middleware intercepts requests to your Node.js website from crawlers, and then makes a call to the (external) Prerender Service to get the static HTML instead of the JavaScript for that page. That HTML is then returned to the crawler.
via npm:
$ npm install prerender-node --save
And when you set up your express app, add:
app.use(require('prerender-node'));
or if you have an account on prerender.io and want to use your token:
app.use(require('prerender-node').set('prerenderToken', 'YOUR_TOKEN'));
Note
If you're testing locally, you'll need to run the prerender server locally so that it has access to your server.
This middleware is tested with Express3 and Express4, but has no explicit dependency on either.
The best way to test the prerendered page is to set the User Agent of your browser to Googlebot's user agent and visit your URL directly. If you View Source on that URL, you should see the static HTML version of the page with the <script>
tags removed from the page. If you still see <script>
tags then that means the middleware isn't set up properly yet.
Note
If you're testing locally, you'll need to run the prerender server locally so that it has access to your server.
GET
request to the prerender service for the page's prerendered HTMLWhitelist a single url path or multiple url paths. Compares using regex, so be specific when possible. If a whitelist is supplied, only urls containing a whitelist path will be prerendered.
app.use(require('prerender-node').whitelisted('^/search'));
app.use(require('prerender-node').whitelisted(['/search', '/users/.*/profile']));
Blacklist a single url path or multiple url paths. Compares using regex, so be specific when possible. If a blacklist is supplied, all url's will be prerendered except ones containing a blacklist path.
app.use(require('prerender-node').blacklisted('^/search'));
app.use(require('prerender-node').blacklisted(['/search', '/users/.*/profile']));
This method is intended to be used for caching, but could be used to save analytics or anything else you need to do for each crawler request. If you return a string from beforeRender, the middleware will serve that to the crawler (with status 200
) instead of making a request to the prerender service. If you return an object the middleware will look for a status
and body
property (defaulting to 200
and ""
respectively) and serve those instead.
app.use(require('prerender-node').set('beforeRender', function(req, done) {
// do whatever you need to do
done();
}));
This method is intended to be used for caching, but could be used to save analytics or anything else you need to do for each crawler request. This method is a noop and is called after the prerender service returns HTML.
app.use(require('prerender-node').set('afterRender', function(err, req, prerender_res) {
// do whatever you need to do
}));
Option to hard-set the protocol. Useful for sites that are available on both http and https.
app.use(require('prerender-node').set('protocol', 'https'));
Option to hard-set the host. Useful for sites that are behind a load balancer or internal reverse proxy.
For example, your internal URL looks like http://internal-host.com/
and you might want it to instead send
a request to Prerender.io with your real domain in place of internal-host.com
.
app.use(require('prerender-node').set('host', 'example.com'));
Option to forward headers from request to prerender.
app.use(require('prerender-node').set('forwardHeaders', true));
Option to add options to the request sent to the prerender server.
app.use(require('prerender-node').set('prerenderServerRequestOptions', {}));
This express middleware is ready to be used with redis or memcached to return prerendered pages in milliseconds.
When setting up the middleware, you can add a beforeRender
function and afterRender
function for caching.
Here's an example testing a local redis cache:
$ npm install redis
var redis = require("redis"),
client = redis.createClient();
prerender.set('beforeRender', function(req, done) {
client.get(req.url, done);
}).set('afterRender', function(err, req, prerender_res) {
client.set(req.url, prerender_res.body)
});
or
var redis = require("redis"),
client = redis.createClient(),
cacheableStatusCodes = {200: true, 302: true, 404: true};
prerender.set('beforeRender', function(req, done) {
client.hmget(req.url, 'body', 'status', function (err, fields) {
if (err) return done(err);
done(err, {body: fields[0], status: fields[1]});
});
}).set('afterRender', function(err, req, prerender_res) {
// Don't cache responses that might be temporary like 500 or 504.
if (cacheableStatusCodes[prerender_res.statusCode]) {
client.hmset(req.url, 'body', prerender_res.body, 'status', prerender_res.statusCode);
}
});
We host a Prerender server at prerender.io so that you can work on more important things, but if you've deployed the prerender service on your own... set the PRERENDER_SERVICE_URL
environment variable so that this middleware points there instead. Otherwise, it will default to the service already deployed by prerender.io.
$ export PRERENDER_SERVICE_URL=<new url>
Or on heroku:
$ heroku config:set PRERENDER_SERVICE_URL=<new url>
As an alternative, you can pass prerenderServiceUrl
in the options object during initialization of the middleware
app.use(require('prerender-node').set('prerenderServiceUrl', '<new url>'));
We love any contributions! Feel free to create issues, pull requests, or middleware for other languages/frameworks!
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2013 Todd Hooper <todd@prerender.io>
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
FAQs
express middleware for serving prerendered javascript-rendered pages for SEO
The npm package @quintype/prerender-node receives a total of 282 weekly downloads. As such, @quintype/prerender-node popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @quintype/prerender-node demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 29 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
/Security News
Socket researchers uncover how threat actors weaponize Discord across the npm, PyPI, and RubyGems ecosystems to exfiltrate sensitive data.
Security News
Socket now integrates with Bun 1.3’s Security Scanner API to block risky packages at install time and enforce your organization’s policies in local dev and CI.
Research
The Socket Threat Research Team is tracking weekly intrusions into the npm registry that follow a repeatable adversarial playbook used by North Korean state-sponsored actors.