grunt-connect-proxy
Provides a http proxy as middleware for the grunt-contrib-connect plugin.
Getting Started
This plugin requires Grunt ~0.4.1
If you haven't used Grunt before, be sure to check out the Getting Started guide, as it explains how to create a Gruntfile as well as install and use Grunt plugins. Once you're familiar with that process, you may install this plugin with this command:
npm install grunt-connect-proxy --save-dev
One the plugin has been installed, it may be enabled inside your Gruntfile with this line of JavaScript:
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-connect-proxy');
Adapting the "connect" task
Overview
Proxy Configuration
In your project's Gruntfile, add a section named proxies
to your existing connect definition.
grunt.initConfig({
connect: {
server: {
options: {
port: 9000,
hostname: 'localhost'
},
proxies: [
{
context: '/cortex',
host: '10.10.2.202',
port: 8080,
https: false,
xforward: false,
headers: {
"x-custom-added-header": value
},
hideHeaders: ['x-removed-header']
}
]
}
}
})
Adding the middleware
With Livereload
Add the middleware call from the connect option middleware hook
connect: {
livereload: {
options: {
middleware: function (connect, options) {
if (!Array.isArray(options.base)) {
options.base = [options.base];
}
var middlewares = [require('grunt-connect-proxy/lib/utils').proxyRequest];
options.base.forEach(function(base) {
middlewares.push(connect.static(base));
});
var directory = options.directory || options.base[options.base.length - 1];
middlewares.push(connect.directory(directory));
return middlewares;
}
}
}
}
Without Livereload
It is possible to add the proxy middleware without Livereload as follows:
connect: {
server: {
options: {
port: 8000,
base: 'public',
logger: 'dev',
hostname: 'localhost',
middleware: function (connect, options) {
var proxy = require('grunt-connect-proxy/lib/utils').proxyRequest;
return [
proxy,
connect.static(options.base),
connect.directory(options.base)
];
}
},
proxies: [ ]
}
}
Adding the configureProxy task to the server task
For the server task, add the configureProxies task before the connect task
grunt.registerTask('server', function (target) {
grunt.task.run([
'clean:server',
'compass:server',
'configureProxies:server',
'livereload-start',
'connect:livereload',
'open',
'watch'
]);
});
IMPORTANT: You must specify the connect target in the configureProxies
task.
Options
The available configuration options from a given proxy are generally the same as what is provided by the underlying httpproxy library
options.context
Type: String
or Array
The context(s) to match requests against. Matching requests will be proxied. Should start with /. Should not end with /
Multiple contexts can be matched for the same proxy rule via an array such as:
context: ['/api', 'otherapi']
options.host
Type: String
The host to proxy to. Should not start with the http/https protocol.
options.port
Type: Number
Default: 80
The port to proxy to.
options.https
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Whether to proxy with https
options.xforward:
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Whether to add x-forward headers to the proxy request, such as
"x-forwarded-for": "127.0.0.1",
"x-forwarded-port": 50892,
"x-forwarded-proto": "http"
options.appendProxies
Type: Boolean
Default: true
Set to false to isolate multi-task configuration proxy options from parent level instead of appending them.
options.rewrite
Type: Object
Allows rewrites of url (including context) when proxying. The object's keys serve as the regex used in the replacement operation. As an example the following proxy configuration will remove the context when proxying:
proxies: [
context: '/context',
host: 'host',
port: 8080,
rewrite: {
'^/removingcontext': '',
'^/changingcontext': '/anothercontext'
}
]
Type: Object
A map of headers to be added to proxied requests.
Type: Array
An array of headers that should be removed from the server's response.
options.ws
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Set to true to proxy websockets.
Contributing
In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using Grunt.
Multi-server proxy configuration
grunt-contrib-connect multi-server configuration is supported. You can define proxies blocks in per-server options and refer to those blocks in task invocation.
grunt.initConfig({
connect: {
options: {
port: 9000,
hostname: 'localhost'
},
server2: {
proxies: [
{
context: '/cortex',
host: '10.10.2.202',
port: 8080,
https: false,
}
]
},
server3: {
appendProxies: false,
proxies: [
{
context: '/api',
host: 'example.org'
}
]
}
}
})
grunt.registerTask('e2etest', function (target) {
grunt.task.run([
'configureProxies:server2',
'open',
'karma'
]);
});
Release History
- 0.1.0 Initial release
- 0.1.1 Fix changeOrigin
- 0.1.2 Support multiple server definitions, bumped to grunt 0.4.1 (thanks to @lauripiispanen)
- 0.1.3 Bumped http-proxy dependency to 0.10.2
- 0.1.4 Added proxy rewrite support (thanks to @slawrence)
- 0.1.5 Default rejectUnauthorized to false to allow self-signed certificates over SSL
- 0.1.6 Add xforward option, added support for context arrays, added debug logging
- 0.1.7 Added WebSocket support (thanks for @killfill), Headers support (thanks to @gadr), various docs fixed
- 0.1.8 Minor websocket bug fix
- 0.1.10 Minor bug fix
- 0.1.11 Fix Websocket support on Node 0.10 - Bumped http-proxy dependency to 1.1.4, Removed unsupported http-proxy options (rejectUnauthorized, timeout, changeOrigin)