1.0.0 • Published 2 years ago

cloudflare-services v1.0.0

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
2 years ago

cloudflare-services

Routing for Cloudflare Workers module based services to handle multiple routes.

Install

$ npm install cloudflare-services

Usage

import { ServiceRouter } from 'cloudflare-services';

const router = new ServiceRouter();

router.get('/', (request) => new Response('Welcome\n'))
router.get('/hello', (request) => new Response('Hi there\n'))
router.get('/goodbye', (request) => new Response('See you later\n'))

export default {
  async fetch(request, environment, context) {
    return router.handleRequest(request, environment, context)
  }
}

Supported Operations

router.use(handler) Add a handler that executes on every path

router.use(path, handler) Add a handler that executes on a specific path

router.get(path, handler) Executes a handler on GETs for a specific path

router.put(path, handler) Executes a handler on PUTs for a specific path

router.post(path, handler) Executes a handler on POSTs for a specific path

router.delete(path, handler) Executes a handler on DELETEs for a specific path

router.head(path, handler) Executes a handler on HEAD for a specific path

Wildcard Paths

Use wildcard * to handle multiple routes with one handler. For example

router.get('/public/css/*', (request) => fetch(request))

Handler Order

Handlers are executed in the order in which they are registered. If a handler returns undefined the next matching handler will be invoked. Execution of handlers stops once a handler returns a Response object.

Request Context

A request context is created for each request. It can be used to store any data needed during handing of an inbound request. The following handler saves some information which can be retrieved later by another handler.

router.use((request, environment, context, requestContext) => {
   requestContext.responseHeaders = {
       'Cache-Control': 'private, max-age=0'
   }
})

router.get('/some/path', (request, environment, context, requestContext) => {
   return new Response(`response with headers set in requestContext data\n`, {
       headers: requestContext.responseHeaders
   });
})

Path Parameters

Path parameters are supported and can be accessed in the requestContext pathParams value.

router.get('/user/:name/:account', (request, environment, context, requestContext) => {
    let username = requestContext.pathParams.name;
    let accountId = requestContext.pathParams.account;
    return new Response(`Hello ${username}. Your account number is ${accountId}\n`)
})

Context waitUntil

If background processing needs to be performed use context.waitUntil to wait for a background task to complete.

Special Handlers

Special handlers can be setup for additional control of the request/response flow. If the special handler returns a Response object normal route processing will stop and the response will be sent out.

The ingressHandler executes prior to any route handlers.

router.ingressHandler = (request, environment, context, requestContext) => { requestContext.startTime = new Date(); }

The egressHandler executes right before sending a response from a route handler.

router.egressHandler = (request, environment, context, requestContext, response) => {
    let endTime = new Date();
    let duration = endTime.valueOf() - requestContext.startTime.valueOf();
    // do something with duration data
    return response;
}

The notFoundHandler executes if the incoming request does not match any routes.

router.notFoundHandler = (request, environment, context, requestContext) => {
    return new Response('page not found!', { status: 404 });
}

The errorHandler executes if any error is thrown during processing of the request.

router.errorHandler = (request, environment, context, requestContext, err) => {
    return new Response(`internal error: ${err}`, { status: 500 })
}

License

MIT license; see LICENSE.

1.0.0

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0.0.2

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0.0.1

2 years ago