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What is this?
It's a subset of Edge Side Include standard implemented with promise-based interface.
What problem does it solve?
Let's say you want to use ESI in your project, but also want to retain good developer experience.
Rather than having to configure Varnish or Ngnix to take care of server-rendered ESI tags locally you can simply pass the server output through esi.process
function right before pushing it out to the client.
var response = obtainServerResponseWithEsiTags();
return Promise.resolve()
.then(function() {
if(process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production') {
return esi.process(response);
}
return response;
});
It also improves code mobility - if for whatever reason you decide to move from ESI-enabled environment into one that doesn't support it (yet?), all you have to do is to process the response directly on the server. This module should be performant enough for that use case.
Features
- Support for esi:include tags
- Out of the box Express support
- Custom logging
- Lots of good stuff like caching, retires, request collapsing and such provided by Good Guy HTTP
...and more, take a look at test cases for complete list.
Installation
npm install nodesi
Usage
Basic:
var ESI = require('nodesi');
var esi = new ESI();
esi.process('<esi:include src="http://full-resource-path/stuff.html" />').then(function(result) {
});
As Express middleware:
var esiMiddleware = require('nodesi').middleware;
var app = require('express')();
app.use(esiMiddleware());
All the ESI constructor options described below are also applicable for middleware function.
Just pass them like that: esiMiddleWare({baseUrl: ...});
If you'd like to pass options like headers to ESI middleware, use req.esiOptions
object:
...
app.use(esiMiddleware());
app.get('/example', function(req, res) {
req.esiOptions = {
headers: {
'Authorization': 'Basic QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ=='
}
};
res.render('example');
});
With base URL for relative paths:
var ESI = require('nodesi');
var esi = new ESI({
baseUrl: 'http://full-resource-path'
});
esi.process('<esi:include src="/stuff.html" />').then(function(result) {
});
var ESI = require('nodesi');
var esi = new ESI({
baseUrl: 'http://full-resource-path'
});
esi.process('<esi:include src="/stuff.html" />', {
headers: {
'Authorization': 'Basic QWxhZGRpbjpvcGVuIHNlc2FtZQ=='
}
}).then(function(result) {
});
Error handling
You can provide onError callback to a ESI constructor. It will recieve two arguments: source URL and error object.
It should return a string that will be put in place of errorous content.
Example
var esi = new ESI({
onError: function(src, error) {
if(error.statusCode === 404) {
return 'Not found';
}
return '';
}
});
Logging
It's a common anti-pattern that libraries write to stdout w/o users permission.
We want to be nice so you can provide your own logging output with logTo
configuration option.
It's expected to be an object with "write" method on it that accepts a single string.
Examples
Logging to a custom object
var esi = new ESI({
logTo: {
write: function(log) {
}
}
});
Logging to a standard output (same as console.log):
var esi = new ESI({
logTo: process.stdout
});
Logging to a file (possible, but please don't do that):
var logFile = require('fs').createWriteStream('./log.txt');
var esi = new ESI({
logTo: logFile
});
Performance testing
You can run performance tests with npm run perf [args]
This tool assumes you have Siege installed and added to your Path variable.
[args] are list of arguments that will be passed to Siege.