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@refactorjs/http-proxy

http-proxy alternative

  • 0.1.4
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  • npm
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Http Proxy

An Alternative to HTTP Proxy

Description

This is meant as a project to convert node-http-proxy/http-proxy to typescript. While also incorporating some of the pull requests that were left unanswered/uncomitted that were useful.

Development

Running tests for development:

$ npm install
$ npm run build
$ npm run test

Options

ProxySever | createProxyServer | createServer | createProxy supports the following options:

  • target: string - url string to be parsed with the url module

  • forward: string - url string to be parsed with the url module

  • agent: object - object to be passed to http(s).request (see Node's https agent and http agent objects)

  • ssl: object - object to be passed to https.createServer()

  • ws: boolean- if you want to proxy websockets

  • xfwd: boolean - adds x-forward headers

  • secure: boolean - if you want to verify the SSL Certs

  • toProxy: boolean - passes the absolute URL as the path (useful for proxying to proxies)

  • prependPath: boolean - Default: true - specify whether you want to prepend the target's path to the proxy path

  • ignorePath: boolean - Default: false - specify whether you want to ignore the proxy path of the incoming request (note: you will have to append / manually if required).

  • localAddress: string Local interface string to bind for outgoing connections

  • changeOrigin: boolean - Default: false - changes the origin of the host header to the target URL

  • preserveHeaderKeyCase: boolean - Default: false - specify whether you want to keep letter case of response header key

  • auth: string - Basic authentication i.e. 'user:password' to compute an Authorization header.

  • hostRewrite: string - rewrites the location hostname on (201/301/302/307/308) redirects.

  • autoRewrite: boolean - rewrites the location host/port on (201/301/302/307/308) redirects based on requested host/port. Default: false.

  • protocolRewrite: http|https|null - rewrites the location protocol on (201/301/302/307/308) redirects to 'http' or 'https'.

  • cookieDomainRewrite: false|string|object - 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, use cookieDomainRewrite: "".
    • 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:
    cookieDomainRewrite: {
        "unchanged.domain": "unchanged.domain",
        "old.domain": "new.domain",
        "*": ""
    }
    
  • cookiePathRewrite: false|string|object - rewrites path of set-cookie headers. Possible values:

    • false (default): disable cookie rewriting
    • string: new path, for example cookiePathRewrite: "/newPath/". To remove the path, use cookiePathRewrite: "". To set path to root use cookiePathRewrite: "/".
    • 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:
    cookiePathRewrite: {
        "/unchanged.path/": "/unchanged.path/",
        "/old.path/": "/new.path/",
        "*": ""
    }
    
  • cookieRemoveSecure: boolean - specify if you want to remove the secure flag from the cookie

  • mergeCookies: boolean - allows to merge set-cookie headers from passed response and response from target. Default: false.

  • headers: object - object with extra headers to be added to target requests.

  • outgoingHeaders: object - object with extra headers to be added to proxy requests.

  • proxyTimeout: number timeout (in millis) for outgoing proxy requests

  • timeout: number timeout (in millis) for incoming requests

  • followRedirects: boolean - Default: false - specify whether you want to follow redirects

  • forcePasses: boolean - if set to true the web passes will be run even if selfHandleResponse is also set to true. (Default: false)

  • selfHandleResponse: boolean - 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

  • createWsClientTransformStream: function|null if set, this function will be called with three arguments req, proxyReq and proxyRes and should return a Duplex stream, data from the client websocket will be piped through this stream before being piped to the server, allowing you to influence the request data.

  • createWsServerTransformStream: function|null if set, this function will be called with three arguments req, proxyReq and proxyRes and should return a Duplex stream, data from the server websocket will be piped through this stream before being piped to the client, allowing you to influence the response data.

  • buffer: 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:

    import streamify from 'stream-array'
    import { ProxyServer } from '@refactorjs/http-proxy'
    const proxy = new ProxyServer();
    
    export function (req, res, next) {
        proxy.web(req, res, {
            target: 'http://localhost:4003/',
            buffer: streamify(req.rawBody)
        }, next);
    }
    
NOTE:

options.ws and options.ssl are optional. options.target and options.forward cannot both be missing.

If you are using the listen method, the following options are also applicable:

  • ssl: object - object to be passed to https.createServer()
  • ws: boolean - if you want to proxy websockets

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Package last updated on 11 Oct 2022

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