dynamic-reverse-proxy v0.7.0-alpha2
dynamic-reverse-proxy
A reverse proxy built on http-proxy that is configured by REST.
Dynamic-reverse-proxy exposes several web apps on a single port so you can:
- Use the right language for the job. Maybe you want to use the best parts of Clojure, Node.js, Erlang, Ruby. Put each project on its own port and use dynamic-reverse-proxy to expose a unified front to the world.
- Partition parts of the web app for stability. Put experimental features in their own process and relay the traffic.
- Only bother with HTTPS in one place. You can expose HTTPS to the world, but your "behind the proxy" apps don't need to worry about HTTPS.
Latest stable release: 0.6.0 Doc
npm install dynamic-reverse-proxy
Latest unstable release: 0.7.0-alpha2
npm install dynamic-reverse-proxy@0.7.0-alpha2
Starting the server
Stand-alone (available starting 0.7.0)
npm install dynamic-reverse-proxy
cd node_modules\dynamic-reverse-proxy
SET port=3000
npm start
With code
var http = require("http"),
server = http.createServer(),
dynamicProxy = require("dynamic-reverse-proxy")();
server.on("request", function (req, res) {
if (req.url.match(/^\/register/i)) {
dynamicProxy.registerRouteRequest(req, res);
}
else {
dynamicProxy.proxyRequest(req, res);
}
});
server.listen(3000, function () {
console.log("Reverse Proxy started, listening on port 3000");
});
Configuring the proxy
The reverse proxy is configured to route based on the first segment of the path. For example:
/
would route to the host registered at/
/application1
would route to the host registered at/application1
/application2/test/index.html
would route to the host registered at/application2
To register the a host with the proxy:
POST /register HTTP/1.1
Host: localhost:3000
Content-Length: 28
Content-Type: application/json
{"prefix": "/", "port":1234}
Now, any request made to http://localhost:3000/
will be sent to http://localhost:1234/
.
To register another host:
POST /register HTTP/1.1
Host: localhost:3000
Content-Length: 32
Content-Type: application/json
{"prefix": "/test", "port":4321}
Now, any request made to http://localhost:3000/test
will be sent to http://localhost:4321/test
.
Wait, what about security?
Well, it's pretty lame (but functional) at the moment. Only requests originating from the same machine as the proxy are allowed to register.
Events
The dynamic proxy object that is returned is an EventEmitter with the following events:
proxyError
is passed(error, host, request, response)
and is emitted when:- A request is sent to a known host but the request could not be proxied (likely the host was unreachable). If no handler ends the response back to the original client,
500 Internal Server Error
will be returned. - No host could be found to handle the request. In this case, the
error
will beNOT_FOUND
. If no handler ends the response back to the original client,501 Not Implemented
will be returned.
- A request is sent to a known host but the request could not be proxied (likely the host was unreachable). If no handler ends the response back to the original client,
registerError
is passed(error, request, response)
and is emitted when a request is sent to/register
but it could not be handled correctly. Error will be one of the following:FORBIDDEN
(not allowed)METHOD_NOT_ALLOWED
(must be a POST)BAD_REQUEST
(not parsable as JSON)INCOMPLETE_REQUEST
(path and port were not supplied)
routeRegistered
is passed(host)
and is emitted when a request is sent to/register
and it was successful.
Methods
dynamicProxy.addRoutes(routes)
adds an object of routes in the following format:
{
"/": {
"prefix": "",
"port": 1234
},
"/test": {
"prefix": "test",
"port": 4321
}
}
Troubleshooting
This package comes with both an optimized/minified "release" version, and a more-readable "debug" version. To use the debug version, set debug: true
in ./config.js.
Development
Roadmap
- Allowing HOST-specific routes (
http://example.com/
gets a different route thanhttp://subdomain.example.com/
depending on the host header) - Requiring encryption for some routes (for example, force the
/login
route to use HTTPS) - Performance improvements for proxies with many routes. Before v0.7.0, the complexity was o(n) and O(n) because it uses the longest prefix that works. This may become more important when certain areas of sites force HTTPS - that may use more routes, depending on your URL scheme.
Scripts
- To set the version (in package.json, project.clj, resources/version.js):
lein set-version 0.x.x-alphaX
. You can also:dry-run true
to see what changes would be made.
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