What is popsicle?
Popsicle is a versatile HTTP request library for Node.js and the browser. It provides a simple and consistent API for making HTTP requests, handling responses, and managing various aspects of HTTP communication such as headers, query parameters, and request/response bodies.
What are popsicle's main functionalities?
Making HTTP Requests
This feature allows you to make HTTP requests to a specified URL. The example demonstrates a GET request to a JSON placeholder API, logging the status and body of the response.
const { request } = require('popsicle');
request('https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts/1')
.then(response => {
console.log(response.status);
console.log(response.body);
})
.catch(error => {
console.error(error);
});
Handling Query Parameters
This feature allows you to include query parameters in your HTTP requests. The example demonstrates a GET request with a query parameter to filter posts by userId.
const { request } = require('popsicle');
request({
url: 'https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts',
query: { userId: 1 }
})
.then(response => {
console.log(response.status);
console.log(response.body);
})
.catch(error => {
console.error(error);
});
Setting Headers
This feature allows you to set custom headers for your HTTP requests. The example demonstrates setting the 'Content-Type' header to 'application/json'.
const { request } = require('popsicle');
request({
url: 'https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts',
headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' }
})
.then(response => {
console.log(response.status);
console.log(response.body);
})
.catch(error => {
console.error(error);
});
Handling Request and Response Bodies
This feature allows you to handle request and response bodies. The example demonstrates a POST request with a JSON body to create a new post.
const { request } = require('popsicle');
request({
method: 'POST',
url: 'https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/posts',
body: { title: 'foo', body: 'bar', userId: 1 },
headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' }
})
.then(response => {
console.log(response.status);
console.log(response.body);
})
.catch(error => {
console.error(error);
});
Other packages similar to popsicle
axios
Axios is a popular promise-based HTTP client for the browser and Node.js. It provides a simple API for making HTTP requests and handling responses, similar to Popsicle. Axios is known for its ease of use and wide adoption in the JavaScript community.
node-fetch
Node-fetch is a lightweight module that brings `window.fetch` to Node.js. It is a minimalistic library that provides a simple API for making HTTP requests, similar to the Fetch API in the browser. Node-fetch is often used for its simplicity and compatibility with the Fetch API standard.
superagent
Superagent is a small progressive client-side HTTP request library, and Node.js module with a similar API. It provides a flexible and powerful API for making HTTP requests and handling responses. Superagent is known for its extensive feature set and ease of use.
Advanced HTTP requests in node.js and browsers, using Servie.
Installation
npm install popsicle --save
Usage
import { transport, request } from 'popsicle'
const req = request('http://example.com')
const res = await transport()(req)
Thin wrapper to transport Servie HTTP request interfaces.
P.S. The default export from popsicle
is universal.js
. In TypeScript, this can cause trouble with types. Use specific imports such as popsicle/dist/{browser,node,universal}
instead, depending on preference.
Node.js Normalization
Normalizes some behavior that happens automatically in browsers (each normalization can be disabled).
- Default
User-Agent
insertion - Default unzip behaviour of
gzip
and deflate
encoding - Follows HTTP redirects
Built-in Transports
HTTP (node.js)
- unzip: boolean Automatically unzip response bodies (default:
true
) - follow: boolean Automatically follow HTTP redirects (default:
true
) - jar: CookieJar An instance of a cookie jar (
jar()
from node.js
import) - maxRedirects: number Override the number of redirects allowed (default:
5
) - confirmRedirect: Function Validate
307
and 308
redirects (default: () => false
) - rejectUnauthorized: boolean Reject invalid SSL certificates (default:
true
) - agent: http.Agent Custom
http.request
agent - ca: string | Buffer A string,
Buffer
or array of strings or Buffers
of trusted certificates in PEM format - key: string | Buffer Private key to use for SSL
- cert: string | Buffer Public x509 certificate to use
- secureProtocol: string Optional SSL method to use
XHR (browsers)
- type: XMLHttpRequestResponseType Handle the XHR response (default:
text
) - withCredentials: boolean Send cookies with CORS requests (default:
false
) - overrideMimeType: string Override the XHR response MIME type
Errors
Transports can return an error. Errors have a request
property set to the request object and a code
string. The built-in codes are documented below:
- EUNAVAILABLE Unable to connect to the remote URL
- EINVALID Request URL is invalid (browsers)
- EMAXREDIRECTS Maximum number of redirects exceeded (node.js)
- EBLOCKED The request was blocked (HTTPS -> HTTP) (browsers)
- ECSP Request violates the documents Content Security Policy (browsers)
- ETYPE Invalid transport type (browsers)
Plugins
Coming back soon.
Helpful Utilities
throat
- Throttle promise-based functions with concurrency supportis-browser
- Check if your in a browser environment (E.g. Browserify, Webpack)parse-link-header
- Handy for parsing HTTP link headers
Creating Plugins
See Throwback for more information:
type Plugin = (req: Request, next: (req?: Request) => Promise<Response>) => Promise<Response>
Transportation Layers
See Servie for more information:
type Transport = (req: Request) => Promise<Response>
TypeScript
This project is written using TypeScript and publishes the types to NPM alongside the package.
Related Projects
- Superagent - HTTP requests for node and browsers
- Fetch - Browser polyfill for promise-based HTTP requests
- Axios - HTTP request API based on Angular's
$http
service
License
MIT