orchid

🛬 Simple and lightweight way to create a HTTP request to the world, with more features sprinkled in.

17
1
TypeScript

@augu/orchid

🛫 Simple and lightweight way to create a HTTP request to the world, with more features sprinkled in.

👉 View other branches: 1.x branch | 2.x branch

Features

  • Middleware: Orchid has a Express-like interface for creating middleware to extend classes like Request, Response, and HttpClient.
  • Serialization: Orchid provides a serialization system to serialize the response body from the Content Type from the server, so far JSON and Text are supported.
  • Path Parameters: Apply path parameters similar to Express routes!
  • Simple: Orchid has a simple API so there is no steep learning curve when moving!

Usage

const { HttpClient, middleware } = require('@augu/orchid');

const orchid = new HttpClient();
orchid
  .use(middleware.logging());

orchid
  .get('https://floofy.dev')
  .then((res) => console.log(res.body()))
  .catch(error => console.error(error));

Install

@augu/orchid requires Node.js v14 or higher to use since it uses ES2020 features like optional chaining (?.)

$ npm install @augu/orchid

Middleware

Orchid allows to have custom middleware to do whatever you want from a request or response. An example would be:

const { MiddlewareType } = require('@augu/orchid');

module.exports = {
  name: 'my.middleware',

  // this is a "MultiMiddleware" type
  types: [MiddlewareType.Request, MiddlewareType.Response],

  init() {
    // called when the middleware is added
  },

  onRequest(req) {
    // called when a request has been made
  },

  onResponse(client, req, res) {
    // called when a response is made
    // `client` and `req` are added to do whatever
  }
};

Serialization

Orchid allows you to serialize your own data without doing it yourself every time you make a request. Currently, this is only limited
to Response.body().

An example on building a XML serializer would look like this:

const { Serializer } = require('@augu/orchid');

module.exports = class XMLSerializer extends Serializer {
  constructor() {
    super(/application\/xhtml[+]xml/gi);
  }

  serialize(data) {
    const str = data.toString();
    return someXMLParser(str);
  }
}

Then we inject it into our http client or adding it with orchid#method

// HttpClient
const client = new HttpClient({
  serializers: [new XMLSerializer()]
});

// Method function
orchid.get({
  serializers: [new XMLSerializer()]
});

Migration Guide

v1.0 / v1.1 -> v1.2

All this version really does is add middleware or agent (or both!) to the constructor

new HttpClient([]); // adds middleware only
new HttpClient('my agent'); // adds the agent only
new HttpClient([], 'my agent'); // adds middleware and the agent

v1.2 -> v1.3

Now the HttpClient’s constructor is an object like this:

interface HttpClientOptions {
  middleware?: Middleware[]; // add any middleware
  baseUrl?: string; // Use a base URL
  agent?: string; // Adds an agent
}

v1.3 -> v1.4

The HttpClient’s constructor is now like:

interface HttpClientOptions {
  middleware?: Middleware[];
  defaults?: DefaultRequestOptions;
  agent?: string;
}
    
interface DefaultRequestOptions {
  followRedirects?: boolean;
  headers?: { [x: string]: any }
  timeout?: number;
  baseUrl?: string;
}

v1.x -> v2.x

Read the migration notes for more information.

v2.x -> v3.x

Read the migration notes for more information.

License

@augu/orchid is released under the MIT License, read here for more information. ❤️