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A pure JS client for interacting with server-side RESTful resources. Think Restangular without Angular.
Note: All examples written in this README use the ES6 specification.
It is available with bower or npm:
bower install restful.js
npm install restful.js
The dist
folder contains two built versions which you can use to include either restful.js or a standalone version.
Standalone version already embeds fetch
.
Alternately, you can use a module loader like webpack.
import restful from 'restful.js';
Restful.js needs an HTTP backend in order to perform queries. Two http backend are currently available:
- fetch: For using restful.js in a browser.
- request: For using restful.js in Node.js.
There are defined as optional dependencies and therefore you must install them either with
npm
orbower
depending your package manager.
Start by defining the base endpoint for an API, for instance http://api.example.com
with the good http backend.
For a browser build :
import whatwg-fetch;
import restful, { fetchBackend } from 'restful.js';
const api = restful('http://api.example.com', fetchBackend(fetch));
For a node build :
import request from 'request';
import restful, { requestBackend } from 'restful.js';
const api = restful('http://api.example.com', requestBackend(request));
For those who prefers a ready-to-go version, pre built version of restful.js with fetch are available into the dist
folder.
A collection is an API endpoint for a list of entities, for instance http://api.example.com/articles
. Create it using the all(name)
syntax:
const articlesCollection = api.all('articles'); // http://api.example.com/articles
articlesCollection
is just the description of the collection, the API wasn't fetched yet.
A member is an API endpoint for a single entity, for instance http://api.example.com/articles/1
. Create it using the one(name, id)
syntax:
const articleMember = api.one('articles', 1); // http://api.example.com/articles/1
Just like above, articleMember
is a description, not an entity.
You can chain one()
and all()
to target the required collection or member:
const articleMember = api.one('articles', 1); // http://api.example.com/articles/1
const commentsCollection = articleMember.all('comments'); // http://api.example.com/articles/1/comments
In case you need to set a custom endpoint URL, you can use custom
methods.
const articleCustom = api.custom('articles/beta'); // http://api.example.com/articles/beta
// you can add an absolute url
const articleCustom = api.custom('http://custom.url/articles/beta', false); // http://custom.url/articles/beta
A custom endpoint acts like a member, and therefore you can use one
and all
to chain other endpoint with it.
Once you have collections and members endpoints, fetch them to get entities. Restful.js exposes get()
and getAll()
methods for fetching endpoints. Since these methods are asynchronous, they return a native Promise for response.
If your application does not support native Promise, you can use a polyfill.
const articleMember = api.one('articles', 1); // http://api.example.com/articles/1
articleMember.get().then((response) => {
const articleEntity = response.body();
const article = articleEntity.data();
console.log(article.title); // hello, world!
});
const commentsCollection = articleMember.all('comments'); // http://api.example.com/articles/1/comments
commentsCollection.getAll().then((response) => {
const commentEntities = response.body();
commentEntities.forEach((commentEntity) => {
const comment = commentEntity.data();
console.log(comment.body);
})
});
Tip: You can describe a member based on a collection and trigger the API fetch at the same time by calling get(id)
:
// fetch http://api.example.com/articles/1/comments/4
const articleMember = api.one('articles', 1);
const commentMember = articleMember.one('comments', 4);
commentMember.get().then((response) => {
//
});
// equivalent to
const commentsCollection = articleMember.all('comments');
commentsCollection.get(4).then((response) => {
//
});
A response is made from the HTTP response fetched from the endpoint. It exposes statusCode()
, headers()
, and body()
methods. For a GET
request, the body
method will return one or an array of entities. Therefore you can disable this hydration by calling body(false)
.
For most of cases, headers
in a response will be a plain object with headers data, but for some browsers, that don't support iteration over Headers object, it will simply be returned as a Headers object, so you can use get
method from it to get required headers.
An entity is made from the HTTP response data fetched from the endpoint. It exposes a data()
method:
const articleCollection = api.all('articles'); // http://api.example.com/articles
// http://api.example.com/articles/1
api.one('articles', 1).get().then((response) => {
const articleEntity = response.body();
// if the server response was { id: 1, title: 'test', body: 'hello' }
const article = articleEntity.data();
article.title; // returns `test`
article.body; // returns `hello`
// You can also edit it
article.title = 'test2';
// Finally you can easily update it or delete it
articleEntity.save(); // will perform a PUT request
articleEntity.delete(); // will perform a DELETE request
}, (response) => {
// The reponse code is not >= 200 and < 400
throw new Error('Invalid response');
});
You can also use the entity to continue exploring the API. Entities expose several other methods to chain calls:
entity.one ( name, id )
: Query a member child of the entity.entity.all ( name )
: Query a collection child of the entity.entity.url ()
: Get the entity url.entity.save ( [, data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Save the entity modifications by performing a POST request.entity.delete ( [, data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Remove the entity by performing a DELETE request.entity.id ()
: Get the id of the entity.
const articleMember = api.one('articles', 1); // http://api.example.com/articles/1
const commentMember = articleMember.one('comments', 3); // http://api.example.com/articles/1/comments/3
commentMember.get()
.then((response) => {
const commentEntity = response.body();
// You can also call `all` and `one` on an entity
return comment.all('authors').getAll(); // http://api.example.com/articles/1/comments/3/authors
}).then((response) => {
const authorEntities = response.body();
authorEntities.forEach((authorEntity) => {
const author = authorEntity.data();
console.log(author.name);
});
});
entity.id()
will get the id from its data regarding of the identifier
of its endpoint. If you are using another name than id
you can modify it by calling identifier()
on the endpoint.
const articleCollection = api.all('articles'); // http://api.example.com/articles
articleCollection.identifier('_id'); // We use _id as id field
const articleMember = api.one('articles', 1); // http://api.example.com/articles/1
articleMember.identifier('_id'); // We use _id as id field
Restful.js uses an inheritance pattern when collections or members are chained. That means that when you configure a collection or a member, it will configure all the collection on members chained afterwards.
// configure the api
api.header('AuthToken', 'test');
api.identifier('_id');
const articlesCollection = api.all('articles');
articlesCollection.get(1); // will send the `AuthToken` header
// You can configure articlesCollection, too
articlesCollection.header('foo', 'bar');
articlesCollection.one('comments', 1).get(); // will send both the AuthToken and foo headers
Restful.js exposes similar methods on collections, members and entities. The name are consistent, and the arguments depend on the context.
addErrorInterceptor ( interceptor )
: Add an error interceptor. You can alter the whole error.addRequestInterceptor ( interceptor )
: Add a request interceptor. You can alter the whole request.addResponseInterceptor ( interceptor )
: Add a response interceptor. You can alter the whole response.custom ( name [, isRelative = true ] )
: Target a child member with a custom url.delete ( id [, data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Delete a member in a collection. Returns a promise with the response.getAll ( [ params [, headers ]] )
: Get a full collection. Returns a promise with an array of entities.get ( id [, params [, headers ]] )
: Get a member in a collection. Returns a promise with an entity.head ( id [, params [, headers ]] )
: Perform a HEAD request on a member in a collection. Returns a promise with the response.header ( name, value )
: Add a header.headers ()
: Get all headers added to the collection.on ( event, listener )
: Add an event listener on the collection.once ( event, listener )
: Add an event listener on the collection which will be triggered only once.patch ( id [, data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Patch a member in a collection. Returns a promise with the response.post ( [ data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Create a member in a collection. Returns a promise with the response.put ( id [, data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Update a member in a collection. Returns a promise with the response.url ()
: Get the collection url.
// http://api.example.com/articles/1/comments/2/authors
const authorsCollection = api.one('articles', 1).one('comments', 2).all('authors');
authorsCollection.getAll().then((authorEntities) => { /* */ });
authorsCollection.get(1).then((authorEntity) => { /* */ });
addErrorInterceptor ( interceptor )
: Add an error interceptor. You can alter the whole error.addRequestInterceptor ( interceptor )
: Add a request interceptor. You can alter the whole request.addResponseInterceptor ( interceptor )
: Add a response interceptor. You can alter the whole response.all ( name )
: Target a child collectionname
.custom ( name [, isRelative = true ] )
: Target a child member with a custom url.delete ( [ data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Delete a member. Returns a promise with the response.get ( [ params [, headers ]] )
: Get a member. Returns a promise with an entity.head ( [ params [, headers ]] )
: Perform a HEAD request on a member. Returns a promise with the response.header ( name, value )
: Add a header.headers ()
: Get all headers added to the member.on ( event, listener )
: Add an event listener on the member.once ( event, listener )
: Add an event listener on the member which will be triggered only once.one ( name, id )
: Target a child member in a collectionname
.patch ( [ data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Patch a member. Returns a promise with the response.post ( [ data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Create a member. Returns a promise with the response.put ( [ data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Update a member. Returns a promise with the response.url ()
: Get the member url.
// http://api.example.com/articles/1/comments/2
const commentMember = api.one('articles', 1).one('comments', 2);
commentMember.get().then((commentEntity) => { /* */ });
commentMember.delete().then((data) => { /* */ });
An error, response or request interceptor is a callback which looks like this:
resource.addRequestInterceptor((config) => {
const { data, headers, method, params, url } = config;
// all args had been modified
return {
data,
params,
headers,
method,
url,
};
// just return modified arguments
return {
data,
headers,
};
});
resource.addResponseInterceptor((response, config) => {
const { data, headers, statusCode } = response;
// all args had been modified
return {
data,
headers,
statusCode
};
// just return modified arguments
return {
data,
headers,
};
});
resource.addErrorInterceptor((error, config) => {
const { message, response } = error;
// all args had been modified
return {
message,
response,
};
// just return modified arguments
return {
message,
};
});
body ()
: Get the HTTP body of the response. If it is aGET
request, it will hydrate some entities. To get the raw body call it withfalse
as argument.headers ()
: Get the HTTP headers of the response.statusCode ()
: Get the HTTP status code of the response.
all ( name )
: Query a collection child of the entity.custom ( name [, isRelative = true ] )
: Target a child member with a custom url.data ()
: Get the JS object unserialized from the response body (which must be in JSON)id ()
: Get the id of the entity.one ( name, id )
: Query a member child of the entity.delete ( [, data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Delete the member link to the entity. Returns a promise with the response.save ( [, data [, params [, headers ]]] )
: Update the member link to the entity. Returns a promise with the response.url ()
: Get the entity url.
// http://api.example.com/articles/1/comments/2
const commentMember = api.one('articles', 1).one('comments', 2);
commentMember.get().then((commentEntity) => {
commentEntity.save();
commentEntity.remove();
});
To deal with errors, you can either use error interceptors, error callbacks on promise or error events.
const commentMember = resource.one('articles', 1).one('comments', 2);
commentMember
.get()
.then((commentEntity) => { /* */ })
.catch((err) => {
// deal with the error
});
commentMember.on('error', (error, config) => {
// deal with the error
});
Any endpoint (collection or member) is an event emitter. It emits request
, response
and error
events. When it emits an event, it is propagated to all its parents. This way you can listen to all errors, requests and response on your restful instance by listening on your root endpoint.
api.on('error', (error, config) => {
// deal with the error
});
api.on('request', (config) => {
// deal with the request
});
api.on('response', (config) => {
// deal with the response
});
When you use interceptors, endpoints will also emit request:interceptor:pre
, request:interceptor:post
, response:interceptor:pre
, response:interceptor:post
, error:interceptor:pre
and error:interceptor:post
:
api.on('error:interceptor:pre', (error, config, interceptorName) => {
// deal with the error
});
api.on('error:interceptor:post', (error, config, interceptorName) => {
// deal with the error
});
api.on('request:interceptor:pre', (config, interceptorName) => {
// deal with the request
});
api.on('request:interceptor:post', (config, interceptorName) => {
// deal with the request
});
api.on('response:interceptor:pre', (response, config, interceptorName) => {
// deal with the response
});
api.on('response:interceptor:post', (response, config, interceptorName) => {
// deal with the response
});
You can also use once
method to add a one shot event listener.
Install dependencies:
make install
To rebuild the JavaScript you must run: make build-dev
.
During development you can run make watch
to trigger a build at each change.
To build for production (minified files) you must run: make build
.
To build the ES5 files you must run: make es5
.
make test
All contributions are welcome and must pass the tests. If you add a new feature, please write tests for it.
This application is available under the MIT License, courtesy of marmelab.