yarn add js-tinyapi
Create a custom api object containing all the endpoints you create
import API from 'js-tinyapi'
const api = new API()
Perform a GET
request to an endpoint
// make endpoint
api.makeEndpoint('people', '/api/people', 'GET')
// call the endpoint
api.people()
.then(data => {
console.log(data)
})
.catch(error => {
console.log(error)
})
Perform a POST
request an endpoint
// make endpoint
api.makeEndpoint('people', '/api/people', 'POST')
// call the endpoint passing in the post payload
api.people({
payload: {name: 'Mary'}
})
.then(data => {
console.log(data)
})
.catch(error => {
console.log(error)
})
Perform a custom request
options = {
method: 'GET',
path: '/api/people',
params: {},
type: 'json',
payload: undefined,
contentType: undefined,
include: []
}
// call the endpoint with options
api.request(null, options)
.then(data => {
console.log(data)
})
.catch(error => {
console.log(error)
})
api.makeCrudEndpoints('people', '/api/')
api.peopleList() // GET /api/people
api.peopleCreate(payload) // POST /api/people with payload
api.peopleDetail(123) // GET /api/people?id=123
api.peopleUpdate(123, payload) // PATCH /api/people?id=123 with payload
api.peopleRemove(123) // DELETE /api/people?id=123
api.peopleOptions() // OPTIONS /api/people
Merge in POST
and/or GET
endpoints
api.merge({
api: {
people: {
GET: {
name: 'peopleGet'
},
POST: {
name: 'peoplePost'
}
}
}
})
api.peopleGet() // GET /api/people
api.peoplePost(payload) // POST /api/people with payload
Merge in a CRUD
endpoint. The result of this merge is equivalent to the above Create CRUD endpoints example.
api.merge({
api: {
people: {
CRUD: {
name: 'people'
}
}
}
})
// OR
api.merge({
api: {
people: 'CRUD'
}
})
// equivalent to
api.makeCrudEndpoints('people', '/api/')
A middleware layer is provided in order to easily alter the characteristics
of requests made through js-tinyapi
. Three kinds of middleware may be
created:
-
Request altering middleware.
-
Response altering middleware.
-
Fetch middleware.
The first, request altering middleware, is able to modify a request prior to being fetched. The second, response altering middleware, is able to modify a response after having been returned. The last, fetch middleware, is able to alter how each request is sent to a server.
To create a basic middleware for modifying a request, inherit from the provided
middleware baseclass and override the process
method:
import Middleware from './middleware'
// Add an extra slash to all request URLs.
class AddSlash extends Middleware {
process = request => {
return {
...request,
url: request.url + '/'
}
}
}
The above middleware returns a new request with an extra slash added to the URL.
To create a middleware that performs a fetch, simply return a promise that will be resolved once the fetch has completed:
import Middleware from './middleware'
// Add an extra slash to all request URLs.
class DelayedFetch extends Middleware {
process = request => {
return new Promise( (resolve, reject) => {
setTimeout( () => {
this.submit( request )
.then( r => resolve( r ) )
}, 500 )
})
}
}
The above will add a 500ms delay to all requests. Notice the use of this.submit
;
this is a helper method to submit the supplied request object.
As an example, a batching middleware is provided. It can be enabled as such:
import API, { Batch } from 'js-tinyapi'
const api = new API()
// prepare API as usual
api.pushMiddleware(
new Batch({
batchUrl: 'http://your.domain/api/batch/',
timeout: 50
})
)
This causes each incoming request to be "held" for up to 50 milliseconds, waiting for further requests to be made. Once the timeout has expired, all collected requests are sent to the batch endpoint simultaneously.