Node.js framework agnostic library that enables you to forward an http request to another HTTP server. Supported protocols: HTTP, HTTPS, HTTP2
This library was initially forked from
fastify-reply-from: https://github.com/fastify/fastify-reply-from
fast-proxy powers: https://www.npmjs.com/package/fast-gateway 🚀
npm i fast-proxy
The following examples describe how to use fast-proxy with restana:
Gateway:
const { proxy, close } = require('fast-proxy')({
base: 'http://127.0.0.1:3000'
// options
})
const gateway = require('restana')()
gateway.all('/service/*', function (req, res) {
proxy(req, res, req.url, {})
})
gateway.start(8080)Remote service:
const service = require('restana')()
service.get('/service/hi', (req, res) => res.send('Hello World!'))
service.start(3000)Using imports:
import fastProxy from 'fast-proxy'
const { proxy, close } = fastProxy({
base: 'http://127.0.0.1:3000'
})Please see: https://github.com/jkyberneees/nodejs-proxy-benchmarks
Set the base URL for all the forwarded requests. Will be required if http2 is set to true
Note that path will be discarded.
Set the query string parser and stringifier. By default fast-proxy uses the
fast-querystring module. Configuration can be changed like so:
{
base: 'http://localhost:3001/',
queryString: {
parse: (value) => qs.parse(value),
stringify: (value) => qs.stringify(value),
}
}Set to true if target server is http2 enabled.
Set to true to use undici
instead of require('node:http'). Enabling this flag should guarantee
20-50% more throughput.
This flag could controls the settings of the undici client, like so:
...
base: 'http://localhost:3001/',
undici: {
connections: 100,
pipelining: 10
}
...See undici demo at:
demos/gateway-undici.js
The number of parsed URLs that will be cached. Default: 100.
Use value =
0to disable the caching mechanism
Allows to optionally overwrite the internal http and https client agents implementation. Defaults: http and https.
For example, this could be used to add support for following redirects, like so:
...
requests: {
http: require('follow-redirects/http'),
https: require('follow-redirects/https')
}
...If using
undiciorhttp2this settings are ignored!
Defaults to 1 minute, passed down to [http.Agent][http-agent] and
[https.Agent][https-agent] instances.
Defaults to 2048 sockets, passed down to [http.Agent][http-agent] and
[https.Agent][https-agent] instances.
Defaults to true, passed down to [https.Agent][https-agent] instances.
This needs to be set to false to reply from https servers with
self-signed certificates.
Other supported configurations in https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_new_agent_options can also be part of the opts object.
Optional "on close resource release" strategy. You can link this to your application shutdown hook as an example.
Enables you to forward an http request to another HTTP server.
proxy(
originReq, // http.IncomingMessage
originRes, // http.ServerResponse
req.url, // String -> remote URL + path or path if base was set
{} // Options described below
)Optionally indicates the base URL for the current request proxy. When used, the global base config is overwriten.
This configuration value is ignored when using HTTP2.
Called when an http response is received from the source.
The default behavior is pump(stream, res), which will be disabled if the
option is specified.
Called to rewrite the headers of the request, before them being sent to the downstream server. It must return the new headers object.
Called to rewrite the headers of the response, before them being copied over to the outer response. It must return the new headers object.
Extended options supported by http[s].request method (https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_http_request_options_callback)
The following options are dynamically assigned: method, port, path, hostname, headers, agent.
http2options are limited totimeoutonly, whileundicisupports none.
Replaces the original querystring of the request with what is specified.
This will get passed to
querystring.stringify.
- http-agent: https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_new_agent_options
- https-agent: https://nodejs.org/api/https.html#https_class_https_agent
Special thanks to fastify-reply-from developers for creating a production ready library from where we could initially fork.
MIT