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hubkit

GitHub API library for JavaScript, promise-based, for both NodeJS and the browser

  • 0.3.3
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hubkit

A simple GitHub API library for JavaScript that works in both NodeJS and the browser. Features:

  • Takes a request-level approach that naturally covers the entire GitHub v3 API.
  • All requests return promises. (You may need to add a polyfill in the browser, depending on your target platforms. The Node package includes a polyfill in case you're not running with --harmony.)
  • Responses are (optionally) cached (segregated by user identity), and requests are conditional to save on bandwidth and request quota. Inspired by simple-github, octo, and octokit.

To enable caching, make sure that LRUCache is loaded. It's installed by default for Node, but in the browser you need to load lru-cache.js (perhaps from the Bower-compatible variant). Or you can pass any other cache instance as an option to the constructor, as long as it has get, set, and del methods. Also, since v0.2, if the cache is enabled it respects Cache-Control headers on the response (that GitHub currently seems to set to 1 minute for all requests), and will return a potentially stale value from the cache unless you specify {fresh: true}.

A simple example:

var gh = new Hubkit({
  token: '123456890ABCDEF',
  owner: 'pkaminski',
  repo: 'hubkit'
});
gh.request('GET /repos/:owner/:repo/commits').then(console.log);
gh.request('GET /repos/:owner/:repo/git/commits/:sha', {sha: '09876abc'}).then(console.log);
gh.request('POST /repose/{owner}/{repo}/pulls', {body: {title: 'foo', head: 'bar', base: 'master'}});

You issue requests exactly as documented in GitHub's API. Path segments of the form :foo or {foo} are interpolated from the options object passed as the second argument and defaulting to the options object passed to the constructor. The method can be specified either together with the path, or as a {method: 'GET'} option (the inline one takes precedence, and GET is the default if nothing else is found).

There are two ways to authenticate: either pass a token to the options, or both a username and password. Unauthenticated requests are fine too, of course.

Every call returns a Promise, which you might need to polyfill if your target environment doesn't support it natively. You can then use the standard then API to specify both success and failure callbacks, or in Node it integrates nicely with co, so you can do something like:

co(function*() {
  var commits = yield gh.request('GET /repose/:owner/:repo/commits');
})();

The returned values are exactly as documented in the GitHub API, except that requests with option {boolean: true} will return true or false instead (sorry, no way to automate it). Note that for paged responses, all pages will be concatenated together into the return value by default (see below).

After every request, you can access rateLimit and rateLimitRemaining (or searchRateLimit and searchRateLimitRemaining if it's a search request) for the latest information on your GitHub quotas, and oAuthScopes to see what scopes your authorization entitles you to, on your metadata object (see below) or on Hubkit if you didn't set one.

Valid options to pass (to the constructor or to each request), or to set on Hubkit.defaults, include:

  • token: String token to use for authentication; takes precedence over username and password.
  • username and password: For basic authentication.
  • userAgent: The user-agent to present in requests. Uses the browser's user agent, or Hubkit in NodeJS.
  • host: The hostname to prepend to all request paths; defaults to https://api.github.com.
  • timeout: The timeout in milliseconds to apply to the request; none by default. If the timeout is reached, the request will abort with an error that will have a timeout attribute set to the value you provided.
  • agent: On NodeJS only, the agent to use for the HTTP connection, e.g. to do connection pooling. You may want to consider using agentkeepalive if you're making a lot of requests.
  • cache: An object with get, set, and del methods to be used as a cache for responses. The objects inserted into the cache will be of the form {value: {...}, eTag: 'abc123', status: 200, size: 1763}. You can use the (approximate) size field to help your cache determine when to evict items, but note that it tends to underestimate the actual size size of the object by 3-4x. The default cache is set to hold ~10MB of the measured bytes amount (so ~30-40MB of actual memory usage).
  • fresh: If true, force a request to be issued to the server even if a cache is in use and an unexpired value available. This is different from turning off the cache for the request since it can still make use of ETags and get a cheap 304 response in return.
  • maxItemSizeRatio: The maximum ratio of the size of any single item to the size of the cache, to avoid blowing away the entire cache with one huge item. The default is set to 0.1, limiting each item to at most 1/10th the max size of the cache.
  • stats: Reports the cache hit rate via hitRate (number of items hit / total attempted) and hitSizeRate (total size of items hit / total attempted) attributes. You can reset() the stats to start counting from scratch again. A default instance is set on Hubkit.defaults but you can also assign a new Hubkit.Stats() to a Hubkit instance if you prefer.
  • immutable: If true, indicates that the return value for this call is immutable, so if it's available in the cache it can be reused without sending a request to GitHub to check freshness.
  • method: The HTTP method to use for the request.
  • media: A GitHub-specific media type for the response content. Valid values are:
    • for comment bodies: raw+json (default), text+json, html+json, full+json
    • for blobs: json (default), raw
    • for commits, etc.: diff, patch
  • body: The contents of the request to send, typically a JSON-friendly object.
  • responseType: The XHR2 response type if you want to receive raw binary data; one of text, arraybuffer, blob, or document. Only useful when fetching file blobs.
  • perPage: The number of items to return per page of response. Defaults to 100.
  • allPages: Whether to automatically fetch all pages by following the next links and concatenate the results before returning them. Defaults to true. If set to false and a result has more pages, you'll find a next() function on the result that you can call to get a promise with the next page of items.
  • boolean: If true, interprets a 404 as false and a 20x as true.
  • metadata: The object on which to set metadata found in the response headers. Defaults to Hubkit.
  • ifNotFound: A value to return instead of throwing an exception when the request results in a 404.
  • ifGone: A value to return instead of throwing an exception when the request results in a 410.
  • onError: A function to be called when an error occurs, either in the request itself or an unexpected 4xx or 5xx response. If it's an error response, the error object will have status, method, path, and response attributes. If the function returns undefined, the promise will be rejected as usual (or the request retried in some special cases, like socket hang ups and abuse quota 403s), if it returns Hubkit.RETRY the request will be retried, if it returns Hubkit.DONT_RETRY the promise will always be rejected, and if returns any other value the promise will be resolved with the returned value. If multiple onError handlers are assigned (e.g., in default options and in per-request options), they will all be executed, and the first non-undefined value from the most specific handler will be used.
  • maxTries: The maximum number of times that a request will be tried (including the original call) if onError keeps returning Hubkit.RETRY.

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Package last updated on 24 Jan 2016

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