http-custom-errors
Custom errors based on HTTP status codes -- http://jproulx.github.io/node-http-error
Install
npm install http-custom-errors
Usage
var HTTPErrors = require('http-custom-errors');
var error = HTTPErrors.createHTTPError(500);
throw new HTTPErrors.NotFoundError('/missing');
The createHTTPError(code);
function export will inherit and return a new error exception, with the additional code
and status
fields that correspond to the HTTP Server Statuses advertised by node's internal HTTP module.
One practical use would allow you to use a polymorphic error handler with express.js
:
app.use(function (err, res, req, next) {
res.status(err.code || 500);
if (req.accepts('html')) {
return res.render(err.code || 500, { url: req.url });
}
if (req.accepts('json')) {
res.send({ 'message' : err.message || 'Server Error' });
return;
}
res.type('txt').send(err.message || 'Server Error');
});
With this middleware you would be able to simply throw the appropriate HTTP status error in the right situation:
function authorize (req, res, next) {
if (
return next(new HTTPErrors.ForbiddenError('Please log in'));
}
return next();
});
app.get('/sensitive', authorize, function (req, res, next) {
return res.render('logged_in');
});
app.use(function (req, res, next) {
throw new HTTPErrors.NotFoundError(req.url);
});
Additionally, each error type is exposed as its own Error constructor:
HTTPErrors.BadRequestError(message);
HTTPErrors.UnauthorizedError(message);
HTTPErrors.PaymentRequiredError(message);
HTTPErrors.ForbiddenError(message);
HTTPErrors.NotFoundError(message);
HTTPErrors.MethodNotAllowedError(message);
HTTPErrors.NotAcceptableError(message);
HTTPErrors.ProxyAuthenticationRequiredError(message);
HTTPErrors.RequestTimeoutError(message);
HTTPErrors.ConflictError(message);
HTTPErrors.GoneError(message);
HTTPErrors.LengthRequiredError(message);
HTTPErrors.PreconditionFailedError(message);
HTTPErrors.RequestEntityTooLargeError(message);
HTTPErrors.RequestURITooLargeError(message);
HTTPErrors.UnsupportedMediaTypeError(message);
HTTPErrors.RequestedRangeNotSatisfiableError(message);
HTTPErrors.ExpectationFailedError(message);
HTTPErrors.ImATeapotError(message);
HTTPErrors.UnprocessableEntityError(message);
HTTPErrors.LockedError(message);
HTTPErrors.FailedDependencyError(message);
HTTPErrors.UnorderedCollectionError(message);
HTTPErrors.UpgradeRequiredError(message);
HTTPErrors.PreconditionRequiredError(message);
HTTPErrors.TooManyRequestsError(message);
HTTPErrors.RequestHeaderFieldsTooLargeError(message);
HTTPErrors.InternalServerError(message);
HTTPErrors.NotImplementedError(message);
HTTPErrors.BadGatewayError(message);
HTTPErrors.ServiceUnavailableError(message);
HTTPErrors.GatewayTimeoutError(message);
HTTPErrors.HTTPVersionNotSupportedError(message);
HTTPErrors.VariantAlsoNegotiatesError(message);
HTTPErrors.InsufficientStorageError(message);
HTTPErrors.BandwidthLimitExceededError(message);
HTTPErrors.NotExtendedError(message);
HTTPErrors.NetworkAuthenticationRequiredError(message);
Notes
Care is taken to preserve the built-in error handling behavior as much as possible, with support for checking instanceof
and typeof
, as well as making sure the error constructor behaves the same whether it is called with the new
operator or not.
In other words, you shouldn't have to worry about these errors affecting your syntax or existing code. Simply drop in place for any existing errors you're throwing and it should work just the same.