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The 'cookie' npm package is a simple, lightweight utility for parsing and serializing cookies in Node.js. It is designed to work with the HTTP server's cookie headers to read and write cookies on the server side.
Parse Cookie Header
This feature allows you to parse the Cookie header string into an object where each property is a cookie name and its value is the cookie value. It automatically handles URL-encoded cookie values.
const cookie = require('cookie');
const cookies = cookie.parse('foo=bar; equation=E%3Dmc%5E2');
Serialize Cookie
This feature lets you serialize a cookie name-value pair into a Set-Cookie header string with optional attributes such as `HttpOnly`, `Max-Age`, and others. It is useful for setting cookies in HTTP responses.
const cookie = require('cookie');
const serializedCookie = cookie.serialize('foo', 'bar', { httpOnly: true, maxAge: 60 * 60 * 24 });
js-cookie is a simple, lightweight JavaScript API for handling cookies. It works well in all browsers and provides a clean API for cookie manipulation. Unlike 'cookie', js-cookie is primarily designed for client-side use and does not have built-in support for Node.js environments.
tough-cookie is a more robust package for handling cookies in Node.js. It offers a wider range of features compared to 'cookie', including cookie jar support, which allows for storing and iterating over multiple cookies easily. It also handles parsing and serialization but with more options and considerations for security and cookie management.
The 'cookies' package is another alternative for handling cookies in Node.js and is often used with the Koa web framework. It provides a higher-level API for cookie management, including encryption and signing of cookie values, which 'cookie' does not offer out of the box.
Basic HTTP cookie parser and serializer for HTTP servers.
This is a Node.js module available through the
npm registry. Installation is done using the
npm install
command:
$ npm install cookie
var cookie = require('cookie');
Parse an HTTP Cookie
header string and returning an object of all cookie name-value pairs.
The str
argument is the string representing a Cookie
header value and options
is an
optional object containing additional parsing options.
var cookies = cookie.parse('foo=bar; equation=E%3Dmc%5E2');
// { foo: 'bar', equation: 'E=mc^2' }
cookie.parse
accepts these properties in the options object.
Specifies a function that will be used to decode a cookie's value. Since the value of a cookie has a limited character set (and must be a simple string), this function can be used to decode a previously-encoded cookie value into a JavaScript string or other object.
The default function is the global decodeURIComponent
, which will decode any URL-encoded
sequences into their byte representations.
note if an error is thrown from this function, the original, non-decoded cookie value will be returned as the cookie's value.
Serialize a cookie name-value pair into a Set-Cookie
header string. The name
argument is the
name for the cookie, the value
argument is the value to set the cookie to, and the options
argument is an optional object containing additional serialization options.
var setCookie = cookie.serialize('foo', 'bar');
// foo=bar
cookie.serialize
accepts these properties in the options object.
Specifies the value for the Domain
Set-Cookie
attribute. By default, no
domain is set, and most clients will consider the cookie to apply to only the current domain.
Specifies a function that will be used to encode a cookie's value. Since value of a cookie has a limited character set (and must be a simple string), this function can be used to encode a value into a string suited for a cookie's value.
The default function is the global encodeURIComponent
, which will encode a JavaScript string
into UTF-8 byte sequences and then URL-encode any that fall outside of the cookie range.
Specifies the Date
object to be the value for the Expires
Set-Cookie
attribute.
By default, no expiration is set, and most clients will consider this a "non-persistent cookie" and
will delete it on a condition like exiting a web browser application.
note the cookie storage model specification states that if both expires
and
maxAge
are set, then maxAge
takes precedence, but it is possible not all clients by obey this,
so if both are set, they should point to the same date and time.
Specifies the boolean
value for the HttpOnly
Set-Cookie
attribute. When truthy,
the HttpOnly
attribute is set, otherwise it is not. By default, the HttpOnly
attribute is not set.
note be careful when setting this to true
, as compliant clients will not allow client-side
JavaScript to see the cookie in document.cookie
.
Specifies the number
(in seconds) to be the value for the Max-Age
Set-Cookie
attribute.
The given number will be converted to an integer by rounding down. By default, no maximum age is set.
note the cookie storage model specification states that if both expires
and
maxAge
are set, then maxAge
takes precedence, but it is possible not all clients by obey this,
so if both are set, they should point to the same date and time.
Specifies the value for the Path
Set-Cookie
attribute. By default, the path
is considered the "default path".
Specifies the boolean
or string
to be the value for the SameSite
Set-Cookie
attribute.
true
will set the SameSite
attribute to Strict
for strict same site enforcement.false
will not set the SameSite
attribute.'lax'
will set the SameSite
attribute to Lax
for lax same site enforcement.'none'
will set the SameSite
attribute to None
for an explicit cross-site cookie.'strict'
will set the SameSite
attribute to Strict
for strict same site enforcement.More information about the different enforcement levels can be found in the specification.
note This is an attribute that has not yet been fully standardized, and may change in the future. This also means many clients may ignore this attribute until they understand it.
Specifies the boolean
value for the Secure
Set-Cookie
attribute. When truthy,
the Secure
attribute is set, otherwise it is not. By default, the Secure
attribute is not set.
note be careful when setting this to true
, as compliant clients will not send the cookie back to
the server in the future if the browser does not have an HTTPS connection.
The following example uses this module in conjunction with the Node.js core HTTP server to prompt a user for their name and display it back on future visits.
var cookie = require('cookie');
var escapeHtml = require('escape-html');
var http = require('http');
var url = require('url');
function onRequest(req, res) {
// Parse the query string
var query = url.parse(req.url, true, true).query;
if (query && query.name) {
// Set a new cookie with the name
res.setHeader('Set-Cookie', cookie.serialize('name', String(query.name), {
httpOnly: true,
maxAge: 60 * 60 * 24 * 7 // 1 week
}));
// Redirect back after setting cookie
res.statusCode = 302;
res.setHeader('Location', req.headers.referer || '/');
res.end();
return;
}
// Parse the cookies on the request
var cookies = cookie.parse(req.headers.cookie || '');
// Get the visitor name set in the cookie
var name = cookies.name;
res.setHeader('Content-Type', 'text/html; charset=UTF-8');
if (name) {
res.write('<p>Welcome back, <b>' + escapeHtml(name) + '</b>!</p>');
} else {
res.write('<p>Hello, new visitor!</p>');
}
res.write('<form method="GET">');
res.write('<input placeholder="enter your name" name="name"> <input type="submit" value="Set Name">');
res.end('</form>');
}
http.createServer(onRequest).listen(3000);
$ npm test
$ npm run bench
> cookie@0.4.1 bench
> node benchmark/index.js
node@16.13.1
v8@9.4.146.24-node.14
uv@1.42.0
zlib@1.2.11
brotli@1.0.9
ares@1.18.1
modules@93
nghttp2@1.45.1
napi@8
llhttp@6.0.4
openssl@1.1.1l+quic
cldr@39.0
icu@69.1
tz@2021a
unicode@13.0
ngtcp2@0.1.0-DEV
nghttp3@0.1.0-DEV
> node benchmark/parse-top.js
cookie.parse - top sites
15 tests completed.
parse accounts.google.com x 504,358 ops/sec ±6.55% (171 runs sampled)
parse apple.com x 1,369,991 ops/sec ±0.84% (189 runs sampled)
parse cloudflare.com x 360,669 ops/sec ±3.75% (182 runs sampled)
parse docs.google.com x 521,496 ops/sec ±4.90% (180 runs sampled)
parse drive.google.com x 553,514 ops/sec ±0.59% (189 runs sampled)
parse en.wikipedia.org x 286,052 ops/sec ±0.62% (188 runs sampled)
parse linkedin.com x 178,817 ops/sec ±0.61% (192 runs sampled)
parse maps.google.com x 284,585 ops/sec ±0.68% (188 runs sampled)
parse microsoft.com x 161,230 ops/sec ±0.56% (192 runs sampled)
parse play.google.com x 352,144 ops/sec ±1.01% (181 runs sampled)
parse plus.google.com x 275,204 ops/sec ±7.78% (156 runs sampled)
parse support.google.com x 339,493 ops/sec ±1.02% (191 runs sampled)
parse www.google.com x 286,110 ops/sec ±0.90% (191 runs sampled)
parse youtu.be x 548,557 ops/sec ±0.60% (184 runs sampled)
parse youtube.com x 545,293 ops/sec ±0.65% (191 runs sampled)
> node benchmark/parse.js
cookie.parse - generic
6 tests completed.
simple x 1,266,646 ops/sec ±0.65% (191 runs sampled)
decode x 838,413 ops/sec ±0.60% (191 runs sampled)
unquote x 877,820 ops/sec ±0.72% (189 runs sampled)
duplicates x 516,680 ops/sec ±0.61% (191 runs sampled)
10 cookies x 156,874 ops/sec ±0.52% (189 runs sampled)
100 cookies x 14,663 ops/sec ±0.53% (191 runs sampled)
FAQs
HTTP server cookie parsing and serialization
The npm package cookie receives a total of 39,226,585 weekly downloads. As such, cookie popularity was classified as popular.
We found that cookie demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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