@jemmyphan/frisbee

2.0.6 • Public • Published

Frisbee

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Modern fetch-based alternative to axios/superagent/request. Great for React Native.

New in v2.0.4++: baseURI is now optional and you can pass raw: true as a global or request-based option to get the raw fetch() response (e.g. if you want to use res.arrayBuffer() or any other method manually).

Table of Contents

React Native Usage

  1. Install the required package (note that react-native provides us with a fetch implementation):

    npm install --save frisbee
  2. Require the package:

    const Frisbee = require('frisbee');
  3. See usage example and API below!

Browser and Server-Side Usage

  1. Install the required packages:

    • npm:

      # optional (to support older browsers):
      npm install es6-promise
      
      # required (this package):
      npm install frisbee
    • yarn:

      # optional (to support older browsers):
      yarn add es6-promise
      
      # required (this package):
      yarn add frisbee
  2. Require it, set default options, and make some requests:

    // add optional support for older browsers
    const es6promise = require('es6-promise');
    es6promise.polyfill();
    
    // require the module
    const Frisbee = require('frisbee');
    
    // create a new instance of Frisbee
    const api = new Frisbee({
      baseURI: 'https://api.startup.com', // optional
      headers: {
        'Accept': 'application/json',
        'Content-Type': 'application/json'
      }
    });
    
    // this is just an example of an anonymous
    // function invoked immediately with async/await
    (async () => {
      // log in to our API with a user/pass
      try {
        // make the request
        let res = await api.post('/v1/login');
        console.log('response', res.body);
    
        // handle HTTP or API errors
        if (res.err) throw res.err;
    
        // set basic auth headers for all
        // future API requests we make
        api.auth(res.body.api_token);
    
        // now let's post a message to our API
        res = await api.post('/v1/messages', { body: 'Hello' });
        console.log('response', res.body);
    
        // handle HTTP or API errors
        if (res.err) throw res.err;
    
        // now let's get a list of messages filtered by page and limit
        res = await api.get('/v1/messages', {
          body: {
            limit: 10,
            page: 2
          }
        });
    
        // handle HTTP or API errors
        if (res.err) throw res.err;
    
        // now let's logout
        res = api.post('/v1/logout');
        console.log('response', res.body);
    
        // handle HTTP or API errors
        if (res.err) throw res.err;
    
        // unset auth now since we logged out
        api.auth();
    
        // for more information on `fetch` headers and
        // how to send and expect various types of data:
        // <https://github.com/github/fetch>
    
      } catch (err) {
        throw err;
      }
    })();

Common Issues

  1. If you're using node-fetch, you need node-fetch@v1.5.3+ to use form-data with files properly (due to bitinn/node-fetch#102)

  2. If you experience form file upload issues, please see facebook/react-native#7564 (comment).

API

const Frisbee = require('frisbee');

Frisbee is a function that optionally accepts an argument options, which is an object full of options for constructing your API instance.

  • Frisbee - accepts an options object, with the following accepted options:

    • baseURI - the default URI to use as a prefix for all HTTP requests (optional as of v2.0.4+)

      • If your API server is running on http://localhost:8080, then use that as the value for this option

      • If you use React Native, then you most likely want to set baseURI as follows (e.g. making use of __DEV__ global variable):

        const api = new Frisbee({
          baseURI: __DEV__
            ? process.env.API_BASE_URI || 'http://localhost:8080'
            : 'https://api.startup.com'
        });
      • You could also set API_BASE_URI as an environment variable, and then set the value of this option to process.env.API_BASE_URI (e.g. API_BASE_URI=http://localhost:8080 node app)

      • Using React Native? You might want to read this article about automatic IP configuration.

    • headers - an object containing default headers to send with every request

      • Tip: You'll most likely want to set the "Accept" header to "application/json" and the "Content-Type" header to "application/json"
    • auth - will call the auth() function below and set it as a default

    • arrayFormat - how to stringify array in passed body. See qs for available formats

    • raw - return a raw fetch response (new as of v2.0.4+)

Upon being invoked, Frisbee returns an object with the following chainable methods:

  • api.auth(creds) - helper function that sets BasicAuth headers, and it accepts user and pass arguments

    • You can pass creds user and pass as an array, arguments, or string: ([user, pass]), (user, pass), or ("user:pass"), so you shouldn't have any problems!
    • If you don't pass both user and pass arguments, then it removes any previously set BasicAuth headers from prior auth() calls
    • If you pass only a user, then it will set pass to an empty string '')
    • If you pass : then it will assume you are trying to set BasicAuth headers using your own user:pass string
    • If you pass more than two keys, then it will throw an error (since BasicAuth only consists of user and pass anyways)
  • api.jwt(token) - helper function that sets a JWT Bearer header. It accepts the jwt_token as a single string argument. If you simply invoke the function null as the argument for your token, it will remove JWT headers.

  • All exposed HTTP methods return a Promise, and they require a path string, and accept an optional options object:

    • Accepted method arguments:

      • path required - the path for the HTTP request (e.g. /v1/login, will be prefixed with the value of baseURI if set)

      • options optional - an object containing options, such as header values, a request body, form data, or a querystring to send along with the request. For the GET method (and the DELETE method as of version 1.3.0), body data will be encoded in the query string.

        Here are a few examples (you can override/merge your set default headers as well per request):

        • To set a custom header value of X-Reply-To on a POST request:

          const res = await api.post('/messages', {
            headers: {
              'X-Reply-To': '7s9inuna748y4l1azchi'
            }
          });
      • raw optional - will override a global raw option if set, and if it is true it will return a raw fetch response (new as of v2.0.4+)

    • List of available HTTP methods:

      • api.get(path, options) - GET
      • api.head(path, options) - HEAD (does not currently work - see tests)
      • api.post(path, options) - POST
      • api.put(path, options) - PUT
      • api.del(path, options) - DELETE
      • api.options(path, options) - OPTIONS (does not currently work - see tests)
      • api.patch(path, options) - PATCH
    • Note that you can chain the auth method and a HTTP method together:

      const res = await api.auth('foo:bar').get('/');
  • interceptor - object that can be used to manipulate request and response interceptors. It has the following methods:

    • api.interceptor.register(interceptor): Accepts an interceptor object that can have one or more of the following functions

      {
      request: function (path, options) {
          // Read/Modify the path or options
          // ...
          return [path, options];
      },
      requestError: function (err) {
          // Handle an error occured in the request method
          // ...
          return Promise.reject(err);
      },
      response: function (response) {
          // Read/Modify the response
          // ...
          return response;
      },
      responseError: function (err) {
          // Handle error occured in api/response methods
          return Promise.reject(err);
      }

      the register method returns an unregister() function so that you can unregister the added interceptor.

    • api.interceptor.unregister(interceptor): Accepts the interceptor reference that you want to delete.

    • api.interceptor.clear(): Removes all the added interceptors.

    • Note that when interceptors are added in the order ONE->TWO->THREE:

      • The request/requestError functions will run in the same order ONE->TWO->THREE.
      • The response/responseError functions will run in reversed order THREE->TWO->ONE.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I unset a default header

Simply set its value to null, '', or undefined – and it will be unset and removed from the headers sent with your request.

A common use case for this is when you are attempting to use FormData and need the content boundary automatically added.

Why do my form uploads randomly fail with React Native

This is due to a bug with setting the boundary. For more information and temporary workaround if you are affected please see facebook/react-native#7564 (comment).

Does this support callbacks, promises, or both

As of version 1.0.0 we have dropped support for callbacks, it now only supports Promises.

What is the fetch method

It is a WHATWG browser API specification. You can read more about at the following links:

Does the Browser or Node.js support fetch yet

Yes, a lot of browsers are now supporting it! See this reference for more information http://caniuse.com/#feat=fetch.

If my engine does not support fetch yet, is there a polyfill

Yes you can use the fetch method (polyfill) from whatwg-fetch or node-fetch.

By default, React Native already has a built-in fetch out of the box!

Can I make fetch support older browsers

Yes, but you'll need a promise polyfill for older browsers.

What is this project about

Use this package as a universal API wrapper for integrating your API in your client-side or server-side projects.

It's a better working alternative (and with less headaches; at least for me) – for talking to your API – than superagent and the default fetch Network method provide.

Use it for projects in Node, React, Angular, React Native, ...

It supports and is tested for both client-side usage (e.g. with Bower, Browserify, or Webpack, with whatwg-fetch) and also server-side (with node-fetch).

Why not just use superagent or fetch

See Background for more information.

Want to build an API back-end with Node.js

See Lad as a great starting point, and read this article about building Node.js API's with authentication.

Need help or want to request a feature

File an issue on GitHub and we'll try our best help you out.

Tests

This package is tested to work with whatwg-fetch and node-fetch.

This means that it is compatible for both client-side and server-side usage.

Development

  1. Fork/clone this repository
  2. Run npm install
  3. Run npm run watch to watch the src directory for changes
  4. Make changes in src directory
  5. Write unit tests in /test/ if you add more stuff
  6. Run npm test when you're done
  7. Submit a pull request

Background

The docs suggest that you use superagent with React Native, but in our experience it did not work properly, therefore we went with the next best solution, the Github fetch API polyfill included with React Native. After having several issues trying to use fetch and writing our own API wrapper for a project with it (and running into roadblocks along the way) – we decided to publish this.

Here were the issues we discovered/filed related to this:

We know that solutions like superagent exist, but they don't seem to work well with React Native (which was our use case for this package).

In addition, the authors of WHATWG's fetch API only support throwing errors instead of catching them and bubbling them up to the callback/promise (for example, with Frisbee any HTTP or API errors are found in the res.err object).

Therefore we created frisbee to serve as our API glue, and hopefully it'll serve as yours too.

Contributors

Name Website
Nick Baugh http://niftylettuce.com/
Alexis Tyler
Assem-Hafez
Jordan Denison
James
Sampsa Saarela
Julien Moutte
Charles Soetan
Kesha Antonov
Ben Turley
Richard Evans
Hawken Rives
Fernando Montoya
Brent Vatne
Hosmel Quintana
Kyle Kirbatski

Credits

License

MIT © Nick Baugh

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