cacheable-request
Wrap native HTTP requests with RFC compliant cache support
RFC 7234 compliant HTTP caching for native Node.js HTTP/HTTPS requests. Caching works out of the box in memory or is easily pluggable with a wide range of storage adapters.
Note: This is a low level wrapper around the core HTTP modules, it's not a high level request library.
Features
- Only stores cacheable responses as defined by RFC 7234
- Fresh cache entries are served directly from cache
- Stale cache entries are revalidated with
If-None-Match
/If-Modified-Since
headers - 304 responses from revalidation requests use cached body
- Updates
Age
header on cached responses - Can completely bypass cache on a per request basis
- In memory cache by default
- Official support for Redis, MongoDB, SQLite, PostgreSQL and MySQL storage adapters
- Easily plug in your own or third-party storage adapters
- If DB connection fails, cache is automatically bypassed (disabled by default)
- Adds cache support to any existing HTTP code with minimal changes
- Uses http-cache-semantics internally for HTTP RFC 7234 compliance
Install
npm install --save cacheable-request
Usage
const http = require('http');
const CacheableRequest = require('cacheable-request');
const req = http.request('http://example.com', cb);
req.end();
const cacheableRequest = new CacheableRequest(http.request);
const cacheReq = cacheableRequest('http://example.com', cb);
cacheReq.on('request', req => req.end());
const cacheableRequest = new CacheableRequest(https.request);
const cacheableRequest = new CacheableRequest(electron.net);
Storage Adapters
cacheable-request
uses Keyv to support a wide range of storage adapters.
For example, to use Redis as a cache backend, you just need to install the official Redis Keyv storage adapter:
npm install --save @keyv/redis
And then you can pass CacheableRequest
your connection string:
const cacheableRequest = new CacheableRequest(http.request, 'redis://user:pass@localhost:6379');
View all official Keyv storage adapters.
Keyv also supports anything that follows the Map API so it's easy to write your own storage adapter or use a third-party solution.
e.g The following are all valid storage adapters
const storageAdapter = new Map();
const storageAdapter = require('./my-storage-adapter');
const QuickLRU = require('quick-lru');
const storageAdapter = new QuickLRU({ maxSize: 1000 });
const cacheableRequest = new CacheableRequest(http.request, storageAdapter);
View the Keyv docs for more information on how to use storage adapters.
API
new cacheableRequest(request, [storageAdapter])
Returns the provided request function wrapped with cache support.
request
Type: function
Request function to wrap with cache support. Should be http.request
or a similar API compatible request function.
storageAdapter
Type: Keyv storage adapter
Default: new Map()
A Keyv storage adapter instance, or connection string if using with an official Keyv storage adapter.
Instance
cacheableRequest(opts, [cb])
Returns an event emitter.
opts
Type: object
, string
Any of the default request functions options plus:
opts.cache
Type: boolean
Default: true
If the cache should be used. Setting this to false will completely bypass the cache for the current request.
opts.strictTtl
Type: boolean
Default: false
If set to false
, after a cached resource's TTL expires it is kept in the cache and will be revalidated on the next request with If-None-Match
/If-Modified-Since
headers.
If set to true
once a cached resource has expired it is deleted and will have to be re-requested.
opts.automaticFailover
Type: boolean
Default: false
When set to true
, if the DB connection fails we will automatically fallback to a network request. DB errors will still be emitted to notify you of the problem even though the request callback may succeed.
cb
Type: function
The callback function which will receive the response as an argument.
The response can be either a Node.js HTTP response stream or a responselike object. The response will also have a fromCache
property set with a boolean value.
.on('request', request)
request
event to get the request object of the request.
Note: This event will only fire if an HTTP request is actually made, not when a response is retrieved from cache. However, you should always handle the request
event to end the request and handle any potential request errors.
.on('response', response)
response
event to get the response object from the HTTP request or cache.
.on('error', error)
error
event emitted in case of an error with the cache.
Errors emitted here will be an instance of CacheableRequest.RequestError
or CacheableRequest.CacheError
. You will only ever receive a RequestError
if the request function throws (normally caused by invalid user input). Normal request errors should be handled inside the request
event.
To properly handle all error scenarios you should use the following pattern:
cacheableRequest('example.com', cb)
.on('error', err => {
if (err instanceof CacheableRequest.CacheError) {
handleCacheError(err);
} else if (err instanceof CacheableRequest.RequestError) {
handleRequestError(err);
}
})
.on('request', req => {
req.on('error', handleRequestError);
req.end();
});
Note: Database connection errors are emitted here, however cacheable-request
will attempt to re-request the resource and bypass the cache on a connection error. Therefore a database connection error doesn't necessarily mean the request won't be fulfilled.
License
MIT © Luke Childs