make-fetch-happen
make-fetch-happen
is a Node.js library that implements the fetch
API, including HTTP Cache support, request pooling, proxies, retries, and more!
Install
$ npm install --save make-fetch-happen
Table of Contents
Example
const fetch = require('make-fetch-happen').defaults({
cacheManager: './my-cache'
})
fetch('https://registry.npmjs.org/make-fetch-happen').then(res => {
return res.json()
}).then(body => {
console.log(`got ${body.name} from web`)
return fetch('https://registry.npmjs.org/make-fetch-happen', {
cache: 'no-cache'
})
}).then(res => {
console.log(res.status)
return res.json().then(body => {
console.log(`got ${body.name} from cache`)
})
})
Features
- Follows
fetch
spec, using node-fetch
under the hood. - Request pooling out of the box
- Quite fast, really
- Automatic HTTP-semantics-aware request retries
- Cache-fallback automatic "offline mode"
- Proxy support (http, https, socks, socks4, socks5)
- Built-in request caching following full HTTP caching rules (
Cache-Control
, ETag
, 304
s, cache fallback on error, etc). - Customize cache storage with any Cache API-compliant
Cache
instance. Cache to Redis! - Node.js Stream support
- Transparent gzip and deflate support
- Subresource Integrity support
- Literally punches nazis
- (PENDING) Range request caching and resuming
Contributing
The make-fetch-happen team enthusiastically welcomes contributions and project participation! There's a bunch of things you can do if you want to contribute! The Contributor Guide has all the information you need for everything from reporting bugs to contributing entire new features. Please don't hesitate to jump in if you'd like to, or even ask us questions if something isn't clear.
All participants and maintainers in this project are expected to follow Code of Conduct, and just generally be excellent to each other.
Please refer to the Changelog for project history details, too.
Happy hacking!
API
> fetch(uriOrRequest, [opts]) -> Promise<Response>
This function implements most of the fetch
API: given a uri
string or a Request
instance, it will fire off an http request and return a Promise containing the relevant response.
If opts
is provided, the node-fetch
-specific options will be passed to that library. There are also additional options specific to make-fetch-happen that add various features, such as HTTP caching, integrity verification, proxy support, and more.
Example
fetch('https://google.com').then(res => res.buffer())
> fetch.defaults([defaultUrl], [defaultOpts])
Returns a new fetch
function that will call make-fetch-happen
using defaultUrl
and defaultOpts
as default values to any calls.
A defaulted fetch
will also have a .defaults()
method, so they can be chained.
Example
const fetch = require('make-fetch-happen').defaults({
cacheManager: './my-local-cache'
})
fetch('https://registry.npmjs.org/make-fetch-happen')
> node-fetch options
The following options for node-fetch
are used as-is:
- method
- body
- redirect
- follow
- timeout
- compress
- size
These other options are modified or augmented by make-fetch-happen:
- headers - Default
User-Agent
set to make-fetch happen. Connection
is set to keep-alive
or close
automatically depending on opts.agent
. - agent
- If agent is null, an http or https Agent will be automatically used. By default, these will be
http.globalAgent
and https.globalAgent
. - If
opts.proxy
is provided and opts.agent
is null, the agent will be set to an appropriate proxy-handling agent. - If
opts.agent
is an object, it will be used as the request-pooling agent argument for this request. - If
opts.agent
is false
, it will be passed as-is to the underlying request library. This causes a new Agent to be spawned for every request.
For more details, see the documentation for node-fetch
itself.
> make-fetch-happen options
make-fetch-happen augments the node-fetch
API with additional features available through extra options. The following extra options are available:
> opts.cacheManager
Either a String
or a Cache
. If the former, it will be assumed to be a Path
to be used as the cache root for cacache
.
If an object is provided, it will be assumed to be a compliant Cache
instance. Only Cache.match()
, Cache.put()
, and Cache.delete()
are required. Options objects will not be passed in to match()
or delete()
.
By implementing this API, you can customize the storage backend for make-fetch-happen itself -- for example, you could implement a cache that uses redis
for caching, or simply keeps everything in memory. Most of the caching logic exists entirely on the make-fetch-happen side, so the only thing you need to worry about is reading, writing, and deleting, as well as making sure fetch.Response
objects are what gets returned.
You can refer to cache.js
in the make-fetch-happen source code for a reference implementation.
NOTE: Requests will not be cached unless their response bodies are consumed. You will need to use one of the res.json()
, res.buffer()
, etc methods on the response, or drain the res.body
stream, in order for it to be written.
The default cache manager also adds the following headers to cached responses:
X-Local-Cache
: Path to the cache the content was found inX-Local-Cache-Key
: Unique cache entry key for this responseX-Local-Cache-Hash
: Specific integrity hash for the cached entryX-Local-Cache-Time
: UTCString of the cache insertion time for the entry
Using cacache
, a call like this may be used to
manually fetch the cached entry:
const h = response.headers
cacache.get(h.get('x-local-cache'), h.get('x-local-cache-key'))
cacache.get.byDigest(h.get('x-local-cache'), h.get('x-local-cache-hash'))
Example
fetch('https://registry.npmjs.org/make-fetch-happen', {
cacheManager: './my-local-cache'
})
fetch('https://npm.im/cacache', {
cacheManager: new MyCustomRedisCache(process.env.PORT)
})
A possible (minimal) implementation for MyCustomRedisCache
:
const bluebird = require('bluebird')
const redis = require("redis")
bluebird.promisifyAll(redis.RedisClient.prototype)
class MyCustomRedisCache {
constructor (opts) {
this.redis = redis.createClient(opts)
}
match (req) {
return this.redis.getAsync(req.url).then(res => {
if (res) {
const parsed = JSON.parse(res)
return new fetch.Response(parsed.body, {
url: req.url,
headers: parsed.headers,
status: 200
})
}
})
}
put (req, res) {
return res.buffer().then(body => {
return this.redis.setAsync(req.url, JSON.stringify({
body: body,
headers: res.headers.raw()
}))
}).then(() => {
return res
})
}
'delete' (req) {
return this.redis.unlinkAsync(req.url)
}
}
> opts.cache
This option follows the standard fetch
API cache option. This option will do nothing if opts.cacheManager
is null. The following values are accepted (as strings):
default
- Fetch will inspect the HTTP cache on the way to the network. If there is a fresh response it will be used. If there is a stale response a conditional request will be created, and a normal request otherwise. It then updates the HTTP cache with the response. If the revalidation request fails (for example, on a 500 or if you're offline), the stale response will be returned.no-store
- Fetch behaves as if there is no HTTP cache at all.reload
- Fetch behaves as if there is no HTTP cache on the way to the network. Ergo, it creates a normal request and updates the HTTP cache with the response.no-cache
- Fetch creates a conditional request if there is a response in the HTTP cache and a normal request otherwise. It then updates the HTTP cache with the response.force-cache
- Fetch uses any response in the HTTP cache matching the request, not paying attention to staleness. If there was no response, it creates a normal request and updates the HTTP cache with the response.only-if-cached
- Fetch uses any response in the HTTP cache matching the request, not paying attention to staleness. If there was no response, it returns a network error. (Can only be used when request’s mode is "same-origin". Any cached redirects will be followed assuming request’s redirect mode is "follow" and the redirects do not violate request’s mode.)
(Note: option descriptions are taken from https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/#http-network-or-cache-fetch)
Example
const fetch = require('make-fetch-happen').defaults({
cacheManager: './my-cache'
})
fetch('https://registry.npmjs.org/make-fetch-happen', {
cache: 'only-if-cached'
})
fetch('https://registry.npmjs.org/make-fetch-happen', {
cache: 'reload'
})
fetch('https://registry.npmjs.org/make-fetch-happen', {
cache: 'force-cache'
})
> opts.proxy
A string or url.parse
-d URI to proxy through. Different Proxy handlers will be
used depending on the proxy's protocol.
Additionally, process.env.HTTP_PROXY
, process.env.HTTPS_PROXY
, and
process.env.PROXY
are used if present and no opts.proxy
value is provided.
(Pending) process.env.NO_PROXY
may also be configured to skip proxying requests for all, or specific domains.
Example
fetch('https://registry.npmjs.org/make-fetch-happen', {
proxy: 'https://corporate.yourcompany.proxy:4445'
})
fetch('https://registry.npmjs.org/make-fetch-happen', {
proxy: {
protocol: 'https:',
hostname: 'corporate.yourcompany.proxy',
port: 4445
}
})
> opts.ca, opts.cert, opts.key
These values are passed in directly to the HTTPS agent and will be used for both
proxied and unproxied outgoing HTTPS requests. They correspond to the same
options the https
module accepts, which will be themselves passed to
tls.connect()
.
> opts.maxSockets
Default: 15
Maximum number of active concurrent sockets to use for the underlying
Http/Https/Proxy agents. This setting applies once per spawned agent.
15 is probably a pretty good value for most use-cases, and balances speed
with, uh, not knocking out people's routers. 🤓
> opts.retry
An object that can be used to tune request retry settings. Retries will only be attempted on the following conditions:
- Request method is NOT
POST
AND - Request status is one of:
404
, 408
, 420
, 429
, or any status in the 500-range. OR - Request errored with
ECONNRESET
, ECONNREFUSED
, EADDRINUSE
, ETIMEDOUT
, or the fetch
error request-timeout
.
The following are worth noting as explicitly not retried:
getaddrinfo ENOTFOUND
and will be assumed to be either an unreachable domain or the user will be assumed offline. If a response is cached, it will be returned immediately.ECONNRESET
currently has no support for restarting. It will eventually be supported but requires a bit more juggling due to streaming.
If opts.retry
is false
, it is equivalent to {retries: 0}
If opts.retry
is a number, it is equivalent to {retries: num}
The following retry options are available if you want more control over it:
- retries
- factor
- minTimeout
- maxTimeout
- randomize
For details on what each of these do, refer to the retry
documentation.
Example
fetch('https://flaky.site.com', {
retry: {
retries: 10,
randomize: true
}
})
fetch('http://reliable.site.com', {
retry: false
})
fetch('http://one-more.site.com', {
retry: 3
})
> opts.integrity
Matches the response body against the given Subresource Integrity metadata. If verification fails, the request will fail with an EINTEGRITY
error.
integrity
may either be a string or an ssri
Integrity
-like.
Example
fetch('https://registry.npmjs.org/make-fetch-happen/-/make-fetch-happen-1.0.0.tgz', {
integrity: 'sha1-o47j7zAYnedYFn1dF/fR9OV3z8Q='
})
fetch('https://malicious-registry.org/make-fetch-happen/-/make-fetch-happen-1.0.0.tgz'. {
integrity: 'sha1-o47j7zAYnedYFn1dF/fR9OV3z8Q='
})