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superagent-cache

Superagent with tiered caching provided by cache-service.

  • 0.1.7
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  • npm
  • Socket score

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superagent-cache

Superagent with built-in tiered caching using cache-service.

Basic Usage

Require and instantiate superagent-cache as follows:

var superagent = require('superagent');
require('superagent-cache')(superagent);

Now you're ready for the magic! All of your existing GET requests will be cached with no extra bloat in your queries!

superagent
  .get(uri)
  .end(function (err, response){
    // response is now cached!
    // subsequent calls to this superagent request will now fetch the cached response
  }
);

Enjoy!

Where does superagent-cache store data?

superagent-cache depends on cache-service to manage caches and store and retrieve data. cache-service supports any type of cache that has been wrapped in its interface (redis and node-cache wrappers are provided by default). See cache-service's docs for the complete API. See the More Examples section for more detailed examples on caching specifics.

Install

npm install superagent-cache

Run Tests

npm test

API

require('superagent-cache)(superagent [, cacheServiceConfig])

Arguments
  • superagent: an instance of superagent
  • cacheServiceConfig: an object that matches one of the following:
    • {cacheService: an instance of cache-service}
    • the same object you would pass to cache-service's constructor

.get()

Same as superagent except that superagent's response object will be cached.

.put(), .del()

Same as superagent except that the generated cache key will be automatically invalidated when these HTTP verbs are used.

.responseProp(prop)

If you know you want a single, top-level property from superagent's response object, you can optimize what you cache by passing the property's name here. When used, it causes the .end() function's response to return superagent's response[prop].

Arguments
  • prop: string
Example
//response will now be replaced with superagent's response.body
//but all other top-level response properties,such as response.ok and response.status, will be ommitted
superagent
  .get(uri)
  .responseProp('body')
  .end(function (error, response){
    // handle response
  }
);

.prune(callback (response))

If you need to dig several layers into superagent's response, you can do so by passing a function to .prune(). Your prune function will receive superagent's response and should return a truthy value or null.

Arguments
  • callback: a function that accepts superagent's response object and returns a truthy value or null
Example
var prune = funtion(r){
  return (r && r.ok && r.body && r.body.user) ? r.body.user : null;
}

//response will now be replaced with r.body.urer or null
//and only r.body.user will be cached rather than the entire superagent response
superagent
  .get(uri)
  .prune(prune)
  .end(function (error, response){
    // handle response
  }
);

.pruneParams(params)

In the event that you need certain query params to execute a query but cannot have those params as part of your cache key (useful when security or time-related params are sent), use .pruneParams() to remove those properties. Pass .pruneParams() an array containing the param keys you want omitted from the cache key.

Arguments
  • params: array of strings
Example
//the superagent query will be executed with all params
//but the key used to store the superagent response will be generated without the passed param keys
superagent
  .get(uri)
  .query(query)
  .pruneParams(['token'])
  .end(function (error, response){
    // handle response
  }
);

.pruneOptions(options)

This function works just like the .pruneParams() funciton except that it modifies the arguments passed to the .set() chainable method rather than those passed to the .query() chainable method.

Arguments
  • options: array of strings
Example
//the superagent query will be executed with all headers
//but the key used to store the superagent response will be generated without the passed header keys
superagent
  .get(uri)
  .set(options)
  .pruneOptions(['token'])
  .end(function (error, response){
    // handle response
  }
);

.expiration(seconds)

Use this function when you need to override all of your caches' defaultExpiration properties (set via cache-service) for a particular cache entry.

Arguments
  • seconds: integer

.cacheWhenEmpty(bool)

Tell superagent-cache whether to cache the response object when it's false, null, or {}.This is especially useful when using .responseProp() or .prune() which can cause response to be falsy. By default, cacheWhenEmpty is true.

Arguments
  • bool: boolean, default: true

.doQuery(bool)

Tell superagent-cache whether to perform an ajax call if the generated cache key is not found. By default, cacheWhenEmpty is true.

Arguments
  • bool: boolean, default: true

._end(callback (err, response))

This is a convenience method that allows you to skip all caching logic and use superagent as normal.

Arguments
  • callback: a function that accepts superagent's error and response objects

.cacheService

If you don't have an external reference to superagent-cache's underlying cache-service instance, you can always get to it this way in case you need to manually add/invalidate keys you get from sources other than superagent queries.

Example
superagent.cacheService... //See cache-service's documentation for what you can do here

More Usage Examples

Coming soon.

Roadmap

  • Make it so superagent-cache's .end() callback function does not require an err param
  • Make sure that resetProps() gets called when ._end() is called directly
  • Add unit tests for the various ways headers can be added to calls
  • Add unit tests for the other points above
  • Add the 'More Usage Examples' section

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Package last updated on 20 Apr 2015

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