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Package detail

@supabase/node-fetch

supabase6.2mMIT2.6.13

A light-weight module that brings window.fetch to node.js

fetch, http, promise

readme

node-fetch

npm version build status coverage status install size Discord

A light-weight module that brings window.fetch to Node.js

(We are looking for v2 maintainers and collaborators)

Backers

Motivation

Instead of implementing XMLHttpRequest in Node.js to run browser-specific Fetch polyfill, why not go from native http to fetch API directly? Hence, node-fetch, minimal code for a window.fetch compatible API on Node.js runtime.

See Matt Andrews' isomorphic-fetch or Leonardo Quixada's cross-fetch for isomorphic usage (exports node-fetch for server-side, whatwg-fetch for client-side).

Features

  • Stay consistent with window.fetch API.
  • Make conscious trade-off when following WHATWG fetch spec and stream spec implementation details, document known differences.
  • Use native promise but allow substituting it with [insert your favorite promise library].
  • Use native Node streams for body on both request and response.
  • Decode content encoding (gzip/deflate) properly and convert string output (such as res.text() and res.json()) to UTF-8 automatically.
  • Useful extensions such as timeout, redirect limit, response size limit, explicit errors for troubleshooting.

Difference from client-side fetch

  • See Known Differences for details.
  • If you happen to use a missing feature that window.fetch offers, feel free to open an issue.
  • Pull requests are welcomed too!

Installation

Current stable release (2.x)

$ npm install node-fetch

Loading and configuring the module

We suggest you load the module via require until the stabilization of ES modules in node:

const fetch = require('node-fetch');

If you are using a Promise library other than native, set it through fetch.Promise:

const Bluebird = require('bluebird');

fetch.Promise = Bluebird;

Common Usage

NOTE: The documentation below is up-to-date with 2.x releases; see the 1.x readme, changelog and 2.x upgrade guide for the differences.

Plain text or HTML

fetch('https://github.com/')
    .then(res => res.text())
    .then(body => console.log(body));

JSON


fetch('https://api.github.com/users/github')
    .then(res => res.json())
    .then(json => console.log(json));

Simple Post

fetch('https://httpbin.org/post', { method: 'POST', body: 'a=1' })
    .then(res => res.json()) // expecting a json response
    .then(json => console.log(json));

Post with JSON

const body = { a: 1 };

fetch('https://httpbin.org/post', {
        method: 'post',
        body:    JSON.stringify(body),
        headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' },
    })
    .then(res => res.json())
    .then(json => console.log(json));

Post with form parameters

URLSearchParams is available in Node.js as of v7.5.0. See official documentation for more usage methods.

NOTE: The Content-Type header is only set automatically to x-www-form-urlencoded when an instance of URLSearchParams is given as such:

const { URLSearchParams } = require('url');

const params = new URLSearchParams();
params.append('a', 1);

fetch('https://httpbin.org/post', { method: 'POST', body: params })
    .then(res => res.json())
    .then(json => console.log(json));

Handling exceptions

NOTE: 3xx-5xx responses are NOT exceptions and should be handled in then(); see the next section for more information.

Adding a catch to the fetch promise chain will catch all exceptions, such as errors originating from node core libraries, network errors and operational errors, which are instances of FetchError. See the error handling document for more details.

fetch('https://domain.invalid/')
    .catch(err => console.error(err));

Handling client and server errors

It is common to create a helper function to check that the response contains no client (4xx) or server (5xx) error responses:

function checkStatus(res) {
    if (res.ok) { // res.status >= 200 && res.status < 300
        return res;
    } else {
        throw MyCustomError(res.statusText);
    }
}

fetch('https://httpbin.org/status/400')
    .then(checkStatus)
    .then(res => console.log('will not get here...'))

Advanced Usage

Streams

The "Node.js way" is to use streams when possible:

fetch('https://assets-cdn.github.com/images/modules/logos_page/Octocat.png')
    .then(res => {
        const dest = fs.createWriteStream('./octocat.png');
        res.body.pipe(dest);
    });

In Node.js 14 you can also use async iterators to read body; however, be careful to catch errors -- the longer a response runs, the more likely it is to encounter an error.

const fetch = require('node-fetch');
const response = await fetch('https://httpbin.org/stream/3');
try {
    for await (const chunk of response.body) {
        console.dir(JSON.parse(chunk.toString()));
    }
} catch (err) {
    console.error(err.stack);
}

In Node.js 12 you can also use async iterators to read body; however, async iterators with streams did not mature until Node.js 14, so you need to do some extra work to ensure you handle errors directly from the stream and wait on it response to fully close.

const fetch = require('node-fetch');
const read = async body => {
    let error;
    body.on('error', err => {
        error = err;
    });
    for await (const chunk of body) {
        console.dir(JSON.parse(chunk.toString()));
    }
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
        body.on('close', () => {
            error ? reject(error) : resolve();
        });
    });
};
try {
    const response = await fetch('https://httpbin.org/stream/3');
    await read(response.body);
} catch (err) {
    console.error(err.stack);
}

Buffer

If you prefer to cache binary data in full, use buffer(). (NOTE: buffer() is a node-fetch-only API)

const fileType = require('file-type');

fetch('https://assets-cdn.github.com/images/modules/logos_page/Octocat.png')
    .then(res => res.buffer())
    .then(buffer => fileType(buffer))
    .then(type => { /* ... */ });

Accessing Headers and other Meta data

fetch('https://github.com/')
    .then(res => {
        console.log(res.ok);
        console.log(res.status);
        console.log(res.statusText);
        console.log(res.headers.raw());
        console.log(res.headers.get('content-type'));
    });

Unlike browsers, you can access raw Set-Cookie headers manually using Headers.raw(). This is a node-fetch only API.

fetch(url).then(res => {
    // returns an array of values, instead of a string of comma-separated values
    console.log(res.headers.raw()['set-cookie']);
});

Post data using a file stream

const { createReadStream } = require('fs');

const stream = createReadStream('input.txt');

fetch('https://httpbin.org/post', { method: 'POST', body: stream })
    .then(res => res.json())
    .then(json => console.log(json));

Post with form-data (detect multipart)

const FormData = require('form-data');

const form = new FormData();
form.append('a', 1);

fetch('https://httpbin.org/post', { method: 'POST', body: form })
    .then(res => res.json())
    .then(json => console.log(json));

// OR, using custom headers
// NOTE: getHeaders() is non-standard API

const form = new FormData();
form.append('a', 1);

const options = {
    method: 'POST',
    body: form,
    headers: form.getHeaders()
}

fetch('https://httpbin.org/post', options)
    .then(res => res.json())
    .then(json => console.log(json));

Request cancellation with AbortSignal

NOTE: You may cancel streamed requests only on Node >= v8.0.0

You may cancel requests with AbortController. A suggested implementation is abort-controller.

An example of timing out a request after 150ms could be achieved as the following:

import AbortController from 'abort-controller';

const controller = new AbortController();
const timeout = setTimeout(
  () => { controller.abort(); },
  150,
);

fetch(url, { signal: controller.signal })
  .then(res => res.json())
  .then(
    data => {
      useData(data)
    },
    err => {
      if (err.name === 'AbortError') {
        // request was aborted
      }
    },
  )
  .finally(() => {
    clearTimeout(timeout);
  });

See test cases for more examples.

API

fetch(url[, options])

  • url A string representing the URL for fetching
  • options Options for the HTTP(S) request
  • Returns: Promise<Response>

Perform an HTTP(S) fetch.

url should be an absolute url, such as https://example.com/. A path-relative URL (/file/under/root) or protocol-relative URL (//can-be-http-or-https.com/) will result in a rejected Promise.

Options

The default values are shown after each option key.

{
    // These properties are part of the Fetch Standard
    method: 'GET',
    headers: {},        // request headers. format is the identical to that accepted by the Headers constructor (see below)
    body: null,         // request body. can be null, a string, a Buffer, a Blob, or a Node.js Readable stream
    redirect: 'follow', // set to `manual` to extract redirect headers, `error` to reject redirect
    signal: null,       // pass an instance of AbortSignal to optionally abort requests

    // The following properties are node-fetch extensions
    follow: 20,         // maximum redirect count. 0 to not follow redirect
    timeout: 0,         // req/res timeout in ms, it resets on redirect. 0 to disable (OS limit applies). Signal is recommended instead.
    compress: true,     // support gzip/deflate content encoding. false to disable
    size: 0,            // maximum response body size in bytes. 0 to disable
    agent: null         // http(s).Agent instance or function that returns an instance (see below)
}
Default Headers

If no values are set, the following request headers will be sent automatically:

Header Value
Accept-Encoding gzip,deflate (when options.compress === true)
Accept */*
Connection close (when no options.agent is present)
Content-Length (automatically calculated, if possible)
Transfer-Encoding chunked (when req.body is a stream)
User-Agent node-fetch/1.0 (+https://github.com/bitinn/node-fetch)

Note: when body is a Stream, Content-Length is not set automatically.

Custom Agent

The agent option allows you to specify networking related options which are out of the scope of Fetch, including and not limited to the following:

  • Support self-signed certificate
  • Use only IPv4 or IPv6
  • Custom DNS Lookup

See http.Agent for more information.

In addition, the agent option accepts a function that returns http(s).Agent instance given current URL, this is useful during a redirection chain across HTTP and HTTPS protocol.

const httpAgent = new http.Agent({
    keepAlive: true
});
const httpsAgent = new https.Agent({
    keepAlive: true
});

const options = {
    agent: function (_parsedURL) {
        if (_parsedURL.protocol == 'http:') {
            return httpAgent;
        } else {
            return httpsAgent;
        }
    }
}

Class: Request

An HTTP(S) request containing information about URL, method, headers, and the body. This class implements the Body interface.

Due to the nature of Node.js, the following properties are not implemented at this moment:

  • type
  • destination
  • referrer
  • referrerPolicy
  • mode
  • credentials
  • cache
  • integrity
  • keepalive

The following node-fetch extension properties are provided:

  • follow
  • compress
  • counter
  • agent

See options for exact meaning of these extensions.

new Request(input[, options])

(spec-compliant)

  • input A string representing a URL, or another Request (which will be cloned)
  • options [Options][#fetch-options] for the HTTP(S) request

Constructs a new Request object. The constructor is identical to that in the browser.

In most cases, directly fetch(url, options) is simpler than creating a Request object.

Class: Response

An HTTP(S) response. This class implements the Body interface.

The following properties are not implemented in node-fetch at this moment:

  • Response.error()
  • Response.redirect()
  • type
  • trailer

new Response([body[, options]])

(spec-compliant)

Constructs a new Response object. The constructor is identical to that in the browser.

Because Node.js does not implement service workers (for which this class was designed), one rarely has to construct a Response directly.

response.ok

(spec-compliant)

Convenience property representing if the request ended normally. Will evaluate to true if the response status was greater than or equal to 200 but smaller than 300.

response.redirected

(spec-compliant)

Convenience property representing if the request has been redirected at least once. Will evaluate to true if the internal redirect counter is greater than 0.

Class: Headers

This class allows manipulating and iterating over a set of HTTP headers. All methods specified in the Fetch Standard are implemented.

new Headers([init])

(spec-compliant)

  • init Optional argument to pre-fill the Headers object

Construct a new Headers object. init can be either null, a Headers object, an key-value map object or any iterable object.

// Example adapted from https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/#example-headers-class

const meta = {
  'Content-Type': 'text/xml',
  'Breaking-Bad': '<3'
};
const headers = new Headers(meta);

// The above is equivalent to
const meta = [
  [ 'Content-Type', 'text/xml' ],
  [ 'Breaking-Bad', '<3' ]
];
const headers = new Headers(meta);

// You can in fact use any iterable objects, like a Map or even another Headers
const meta = new Map();
meta.set('Content-Type', 'text/xml');
meta.set('Breaking-Bad', '<3');
const headers = new Headers(meta);
const copyOfHeaders = new Headers(headers);

Interface: Body

Body is an abstract interface with methods that are applicable to both Request and Response classes.

The following methods are not yet implemented in node-fetch at this moment:

  • formData()

body.body

(deviation from spec)

Data are encapsulated in the Body object. Note that while the Fetch Standard requires the property to always be a WHATWG ReadableStream, in node-fetch it is a Node.js Readable stream.

body.bodyUsed

(spec-compliant)

  • Boolean

A boolean property for if this body has been consumed. Per the specs, a consumed body cannot be used again.

body.arrayBuffer()

body.blob()

body.json()

body.text()

(spec-compliant)

  • Returns: Promise

Consume the body and return a promise that will resolve to one of these formats.

body.buffer()

(node-fetch extension)

  • Returns: Promise<Buffer>

Consume the body and return a promise that will resolve to a Buffer.

body.textConverted()

(node-fetch extension)

  • Returns: Promise<String>

Identical to body.text(), except instead of always converting to UTF-8, encoding sniffing will be performed and text converted to UTF-8 if possible.

(This API requires an optional dependency of the npm package encoding, which you need to install manually. webpack users may see a warning message due to this optional dependency.)

Class: FetchError

(node-fetch extension)

An operational error in the fetching process. See ERROR-HANDLING.md for more info.

Class: AbortError

(node-fetch extension)

An Error thrown when the request is aborted in response to an AbortSignal's abort event. It has a name property of AbortError. See ERROR-HANDLING.MD for more info.

Acknowledgement

Thanks to github/fetch for providing a solid implementation reference.

node-fetch v1 was maintained by @bitinn; v2 was maintained by @TimothyGu, @bitinn and @jimmywarting; v2 readme is written by @jkantr.

License

MIT

changelog

Changelog

2.x release

v2.6.7

  • Fix: don't forward secure headers to 3th party

v2.6.6

  • Fix: prefer built in URL version when available and fallback to whatwg

v2.6.5

  • Fix: import whatwg-url in a way compatible with ESM

v2.6.4

  • Hotfix: fix v2.6.3 that did not sending query params

v2.6.3

  • Fix: properly encode url with unicode characters

v2.6.2

  • Fix: used full filename for main in package.json
  • Other: pinned codecov & teeny-request (had one breaking change with spread operators)

v2.6.1

This is an important security release. It is strongly recommended to update as soon as possible.

  • Fix: honor the size option after following a redirect.

v2.6.0

  • Enhance: options.agent, it now accepts a function that returns custom http(s).Agent instance based on current URL, see readme for more information.
  • Fix: incorrect Content-Length was returned for stream body in 2.5.0 release; note that node-fetch doesn't calculate content length for stream body.
  • Fix: Response.url should return empty string instead of null by default.

v2.5.0

  • Enhance: Response object now includes redirected property.
  • Enhance: fetch() now accepts third-party Blob implementation as body.
  • Other: disable package-lock.json generation as we never commit them.
  • Other: dev dependency update.
  • Other: readme update.

v2.4.1

  • Fix: Blob import rule for node < 10, as Readable isn't a named export.

v2.4.0

  • Enhance: added Brotli compression support (using node's zlib).
  • Enhance: updated Blob implementation per spec.
  • Fix: set content type automatically for URLSearchParams.
  • Fix: Headers now reject empty header names.
  • Fix: test cases, as node 12+ no longer accepts invalid header response.

v2.3.0

  • Enhance: added AbortSignal support, with README example.
  • Enhance: handle invalid Location header during redirect by rejecting them explicitly with FetchError.
  • Fix: update browser.js to support react-native environment, where self isn't available globally.

v2.2.1

  • Fix: compress flag shouldn't overwrite existing Accept-Encoding header.
  • Fix: multiple import rules, where PassThrough etc. doesn't have a named export when using node <10 and --exerimental-modules flag.
  • Other: Better README.

v2.2.0

  • Enhance: Support all ArrayBuffer view types
  • Enhance: Support Web Workers
  • Enhance: Support Node.js' --experimental-modules mode; deprecate .es.js file
  • Fix: Add __esModule property to the exports object
  • Other: Better example in README for writing response to a file
  • Other: More tests for Agent

v2.1.2

  • Fix: allow Body methods to work on ArrayBuffer-backed Body objects
  • Fix: reject promise returned by Body methods when the accumulated Buffer exceeds the maximum size
  • Fix: support custom Host headers with any casing
  • Fix: support importing fetch() from TypeScript in browser.js
  • Fix: handle the redirect response body properly

v2.1.1

Fix packaging errors in v2.1.0.

v2.1.0

  • Enhance: allow using ArrayBuffer as the body of a fetch() or Request
  • Fix: store HTTP headers of a Headers object internally with the given case, for compatibility with older servers that incorrectly treated header names in a case-sensitive manner
  • Fix: silently ignore invalid HTTP headers
  • Fix: handle HTTP redirect responses without a Location header just like non-redirect responses
  • Fix: include bodies when following a redirection when appropriate

v2.0.0

This is a major release. Check our upgrade guide for an overview on some key differences between v1 and v2.

General changes

  • Major: Node.js 0.10.x and 0.12.x support is dropped
  • Major: require('node-fetch/lib/response') etc. is now unsupported; use require('node-fetch').Response or ES6 module imports
  • Enhance: start testing on Node.js v4.x, v6.x, v8.x LTS, as well as v9.x stable
  • Enhance: use Rollup to produce a distributed bundle (less memory overhead and faster startup)
  • Enhance: make Object.prototype.toString() on Headers, Requests, and Responses return correct class strings
  • Other: rewrite in ES2015 using Babel
  • Other: use Codecov for code coverage tracking
  • Other: update package.json script for npm 5
  • Other: encoding module is now optional (alpha.7)
  • Other: expose browser.js through package.json, avoid bundling mishaps (alpha.9)
  • Other: allow TypeScript to import node-fetch by exposing default (alpha.9)

HTTP requests

  • Major: overwrite user's Content-Length if we can be sure our information is correct (per spec)
  • Fix: errors in a response are caught before the body is accessed
  • Fix: support WHATWG URL objects, created by whatwg-url package or require('url').URL in Node.js 7+

Response and Request classes

  • Major: response.text() no longer attempts to detect encoding, instead always opting for UTF-8 (per spec); use response.textConverted() for the v1 behavior
  • Major: make response.json() throw error instead of returning an empty object on 204 no-content respose (per spec; reverts behavior changed in v1.6.2)
  • Major: internal methods are no longer exposed
  • Major: throw error when a GET or HEAD Request is constructed with a non-null body (per spec)
  • Enhance: add response.arrayBuffer() (also applies to Requests)
  • Enhance: add experimental response.blob() (also applies to Requests)
  • Enhance: URLSearchParams is now accepted as a body
  • Enhance: wrap response.json() json parsing error as FetchError
  • Fix: fix Request and Response with null body

Headers class

  • Major: remove headers.getAll(); make get() return all headers delimited by commas (per spec)
  • Enhance: make Headers iterable
  • Enhance: make Headers constructor accept an array of tuples
  • Enhance: make sure header names and values are valid in HTTP
  • Fix: coerce Headers prototype function parameters to strings, where applicable

Documentation

  • Enhance: more comprehensive API docs
  • Enhance: add a list of default headers in README

1.x release

backport releases (v1.7.0 and beyond)

See changelog on 1.x branch for details.

v1.6.3

  • Enhance: error handling document to explain FetchError design
  • Fix: support form-data 2.x releases (requires form-data >= 2.1.0)

v1.6.2

  • Enhance: minor document update
  • Fix: response.json() returns empty object on 204 no-content response instead of throwing a syntax error

v1.6.1

  • Fix: if res.body is a non-stream non-formdata object, we will call body.toString and send it as a string
  • Fix: counter value is incorrectly set to follow value when wrapping Request instance
  • Fix: documentation update

v1.6.0

  • Enhance: added res.buffer() api for convenience, it returns body as a Node.js buffer
  • Enhance: better old server support by handling raw deflate response
  • Enhance: skip encoding detection for non-HTML/XML response
  • Enhance: minor document update
  • Fix: HEAD request doesn't need decompression, as body is empty
  • Fix: req.body now accepts a Node.js buffer

v1.5.3

  • Fix: handle 204 and 304 responses when body is empty but content-encoding is gzip/deflate
  • Fix: allow resolving response and cloned response in any order
  • Fix: avoid setting content-length when form-data body use streams
  • Fix: send DELETE request with content-length when body is present
  • Fix: allow any url when calling new Request, but still reject non-http(s) url in fetch

v1.5.2

  • Fix: allow node.js core to handle keep-alive connection pool when passing a custom agent

v1.5.1

  • Fix: redirect mode manual should work even when there is no redirection or broken redirection

v1.5.0

  • Enhance: rejected promise now use custom Error (thx to @pekeler)
  • Enhance: FetchError contains err.type and err.code, allows for better error handling (thx to @pekeler)
  • Enhance: basic support for redirect mode manual and error, allows for location header extraction (thx to @jimmywarting for the initial PR)

v1.4.1

  • Fix: wrapping Request instance with FormData body again should preserve the body as-is

v1.4.0

  • Enhance: Request and Response now have clone method (thx to @kirill-konshin for the initial PR)
  • Enhance: Request and Response now have proper string and buffer body support (thx to @kirill-konshin)
  • Enhance: Body constructor has been refactored out (thx to @kirill-konshin)
  • Enhance: Headers now has forEach method (thx to @tricoder42)
  • Enhance: back to 100% code coverage
  • Fix: better form-data support (thx to @item4)
  • Fix: better character encoding detection under chunked encoding (thx to @dsuket for the initial PR)

v1.3.3

  • Fix: make sure Content-Length header is set when body is string for POST/PUT/PATCH requests
  • Fix: handle body stream error, for cases such as incorrect Content-Encoding header
  • Fix: when following certain redirects, use GET on subsequent request per Fetch Spec
  • Fix: Request and Response constructors now parse headers input using Headers

v1.3.2

  • Enhance: allow auto detect of form-data input (no FormData spec on node.js, this is form-data specific feature)

v1.3.1

  • Enhance: allow custom host header to be set (server-side only feature, as it's a forbidden header on client-side)

v1.3.0

  • Enhance: now fetch.Request is exposed as well

v1.2.1

  • Enhance: Headers now normalized Number value to String, prevent common mistakes

v1.2.0

  • Enhance: now fetch.Headers and fetch.Response are exposed, making testing easier

v1.1.2

  • Fix: Headers should only support String and Array properties, and ignore others

v1.1.1

  • Enhance: now req.headers accept both plain object and Headers instance

v1.1.0

  • Enhance: timeout now also applies to response body (in case of slow response)
  • Fix: timeout is now cleared properly when fetch is done/has failed

v1.0.6

  • Fix: less greedy content-type charset matching

v1.0.5

  • Fix: when follow = 0, fetch should not follow redirect
  • Enhance: update tests for better coverage
  • Enhance: code formatting
  • Enhance: clean up doc

v1.0.4

  • Enhance: test iojs support
  • Enhance: timeout attached to socket event only fire once per redirect

v1.0.3

  • Fix: response size limit should reject large chunk
  • Enhance: added character encoding detection for xml, such as rss/atom feed (encoding in DTD)

v1.0.2

  • Fix: added res.ok per spec change

v1.0.0

  • Enhance: better test coverage and doc

0.x release

v0.1

  • Major: initial public release