body
Body parsing
Originally taken from npm-www
Example
var textBody = require("body")
var jsonBody = require("body/json")
var formBody = require("body/form")
var anyBody = require("body/any")
var http = require("http")
var sendJson = require("send-data/json")
http.createServer(function handleRequest(req, res) {
function send(err, body) {
sendJson(req, res, body)
}
if (req.url === "/body") {
textBody(req, send)
} else if (req.url === "/form") {
formBody(req, {}, send)
} else if (req.url === "/json") {
jsonBody(req, res, send)
} else if (req.url === "/any") {
anyBody(req, res, {}, send)
}
})
body
simply parses the request body and returns it in the callback. jsonBody
and formBody
call JSON.parse and querystring.parse respectively on the body.
anyBody will detect the content-type of the request and use the appropiate body method.
Example generators
You can use body
with generators as the body functions will
return a continuable if you don't pass a callback.
var http = require("http")
var Router = require("routes-router")
var jsonBody = require("body/json")
var formBody = require("body/form")
var async = require("gens")
var app = Router({
errorHandler: function (req, res, err) {
res.statusCode = 500
res.end(err.message)
}
})
app.addRoute("/json", async(function* (req, res) {
var body = yield jsonBody(req, res)
res.setHeader("content-type", "application/json")
res.end(JSON.stringify(body))
}))
app.addRoute("/form", async(function* (req, res) {
var body = yield formBody(req, res)
res.setHeader("content-type", "application/json")
res.end(JSON.stringify(body))
}))
http.createServer(app).listen(8080)
Documentation
textBody(req, res?, opts?, cb<Error, String>)
textBody := (
req: HttpRequest,
res?: HttpResponse,
opts?: {
limit?: Number,
encoding?: String
},
cb: Callback<err: Error, bodyPayload: String>
) => void
textBody
allows you to get the body from any readable stream.
It will read the entire content of the stream into memory and
give it back to you in the callback.
limit
: You can set opts.limit
to a custom number to change the
limit at which textBody
gives up. By default it will only
read a 1MB body, if a stream contains more then 1MB it returns
an error. This prevents someone attacking your HTTP server
with an infinite body causing an out of memory attack.encoding
: You can set encoding
. All encodings that are valid on a
Buffer
are
valid options. It defaults to 'utf8'
var textBody = require("body")
var http = require("http")
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
textBody(req, res, function (err, body) {
if (err) {
res.statusCode = 500
return res.end("NO U")
}
res.end(body)
})
}).listen(8080)
formBody(req, res?, opts?, cb<Error, Any>)
formBody := (
req: HttpRequest,
res?: HttpResponse,
opts?: {
limit?: Number,
encoding?: String,
querystring: {
parse: (String, Callback<Error, Any>) => void
}
},
cb: Callback<err: Error, bodyPayload: Any>
) => void
formBody
allows you to get the body of a readable stream. It
does the same as textBody
but assumes the content is querystring
encoded and parses just like it was a <form> submit.
limit
: same as textBody
encoding
: same as textBody
querystring
: You can pass a custom querystring parser if
you want. It should have a parse
method that takes a
string and a callback. It should return the value in the
callback or a parsing error
var formBody = require("body/form")
var http = require("http")
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
formBody(req, res, function (err, body) {
if (err) {
res.statusCode = 500
return res.end("NO U")
}
res.setHeader("content-type", "application/json")
res.end(JSON.stringify(body))
})
}).listen(8080)
jsonBody(req, res?, opts?, cb<Error, Any>)
jsonBody := (
req: HttpRequest,
res?: HttpResponse,
opts?: {
limit?: Number,
encoding?: String,
reviver?: (Any) => Any
JSON?: {
parse: (String, reviver?: Function, Callback<Error, Any>) => void
}
},
cb: Callback<err: Error, bodyPayload: Any>
) => void
jsonBody
allows you to get the body of a readable stream. It
does the same as textbody
but assumes the content it a JSON
value and parses it using JSON.parse
. If JSON.parse
throws
an exception then it calls the callback with the exception.
limit
: same as textBody
encoding
: same as textBody
reviver
: A reviver function that will be passed to JSON.parse
as the second argumentJSON
: You can pass a custom JSON parser if you want.
It should have a parse
method that takes a string, an
optional reviver and a callback. It should return the value
in the callback or a parsing error.
var jsonBody = require("body/json")
var http = require("http")
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
jsonBody(req, res, function (err, body) {
if (err) {
res.statusCode = 500
return res.end("NO U")
}
res.setHeader("content-type", "application/json")
res.end(JSON.stringify(body))
})
}).listen(8080)
anyBody(req, res?, opts?, cb<Error, Any>)
anyBody := (
req: HttpRequest,
res?: HttpResponse,
opts?: {
limit?: Number,
encoding?: String,
reviver?: (Any) => Any
JSON?: {
parse: (String, reviver?: Function, Callback<Error, Any>) => void
},
querystring: {
parse: (String, Callback<Error, Any>) => void
}
},
cb: Callback<err: Error, bodyPayload: Any>
) => void
anyBody
allows you to get the body of a HTTPRequest. It
does the same as textBody
except it parses the content-type
header and uses either the jsonBody or the formBody function.
This allows you to write POST route handlers that work with
both ajax and html form submits.
limit
: same as textBody
encoding
: same as textBody
reviver
: same as jsonBody
JSON
: same as jsonBody
querystring
: same as formBody
var anyBody = require("body/any")
var http = require("http")
http.createServer(function (req, res) {
anyBody(req, res, function (err, body) {
if (err) {
res.statusCode = 500
return res.end("NO U")
}
res.setHeader("content-type", "application/json")
res.end(JSON.stringify(body))
})
}).listen(8080)
Installation
npm install body
Tests
npm test
Contributors
MIT Licenced