@gr2m/http-recorder v3.0.0
@gr2m/http-recorder
Library agnostic in-process recording of http(s) requests and responses
Features
- unopiniated, minimal library, as low-level as possible
- to record http(s) requests and responses within the same process, without starting a server or proxying
Goals & trade-offs
I created @gr2m/http-recorder as a utility library that can be used as a building stone for more opiniated libraries. I'm one of the maintainers of nock and hope to use this library to replace what nock is currently doing with much more code.
@gr2m/http-recorder plays well with Mitm.js (or its esm version), which is another lowe-level library but focused on mocking http(s) and net requests.
Note that the requests & responses you receive from the "record" event is as-is. If the request or response was encoded then it's up to you to decode it if you need to.
Install
npm install @gr2m/http-recorderUsage
import http from "node:http";
import httpRecorder from "@gr2m/http-recorder";
httpRecorder.start();
httpRecorder.addListener(
"record",
({ request, response, requestBody, responseBody }) => {
const { method, protocol, host, path } = request;
const requestHeaders = request.getHeaders();
console.log(`> %s %s//%s%s`, method, protocol, host, path);
console.log(`> %j`, requestHeaders);
console.log(Buffer.concat(requestBody).toString());
const { statusCode, statusMessage, headers: responseHeaders } = response;
console.log(`\n< %s %s`, statusCode, statusMessage);
console.log(`< %j`, responseHeaders);
console.log(Buffer.concat(responseBody).toString());
},
);
const request = http.request("http://httpbin.org/post", { method: "post" });
request.write("data");
request.end();
// > POST http://httpbin.org/post
// > {"host":"httpbin.org"}
// data
//
// < 200 OK
// < {"content-type":"application/json",...}
// {
// "args": {},
// "data": "data",
// ...
// }See more examples
API
httpRecorder is a singleton API.
httpRecorder.start()
Hooks into the request life cycle and emits record events for each request sent through the http or https modules.
httpRecorder.stop()
Removes the hooks. No record events will be emitted.
httpRecorder.addListener("record", listener)
Subscribe to a record event. The listener callback is called with an options object
options.request: anhttp.ClientRequestinstanceoptions.response: anhttp.IncomingMessageinstanceoptions.requestBody: An array of Buffer chunks representing the request bodyoptions.responseBody: An array of Buffer chunks representing the response body
httpRecorder.removeListener("record", listener)
Remove a record event listener.
httpRecorder.removeAllListeners()
Removes all record event listeners.
How it works
Once started, httpRecorder hooks itself into the http.ClientRequest.prototype.onSocket method which is conveniently called synchronously in the http.ClientRequest constructor.
When a request is intercepted, we
- hook into the
request.writemethod and therequest.endmethod in order to clone the request body - subscribe to the
responseevent - hook into the
response.emitmethod in order to clone the response body without consuming it
and then emit a record event with the request, response, requestBody and responseBody options.
See also
@gr2m/net-interceptor- Intercept outgoing network TCP/TLS connections@gr2m/http-interceptor- Intercept and mock outgoing http/https requests
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md
Credit
The inspiration for hooking into http.ClientRequest.prototype.onSocket method comes from Mitm.js - an http mocking library for TCP connections and http(s) requests.