SuperAgent is a small progressive client-side HTTP request library, and Node.js module with the same API, sporting many high-level HTTP client features. View the docs.
node:
$ npm install superagent
Works with browserify and webpack.
request
.post('/api/pet')
.send({ name: 'Manny', species: 'cat' }) // sends a JSON post body
.set('X-API-Key', 'foobar')
.set('accept', 'json')
.end((err, res) => {
// Calling the end function will send the request
});
Tested browsers:
- Latest Firefox, Chrome, Safari
- Latest Android, iPhone
- IE10 through latest. IE9 with polyfills. Even though IE9 is supported, a polyfill for
window.FormData
is required for.field()
.
Node 4 or later is required.
SuperAgent is easily extended via plugins.
const nocache = require('superagent-no-cache');
const request = require('superagent');
const prefix = require('superagent-prefix')('/static');
request
.get('/some-url')
.query({ action: 'edit', city: 'London' }) // query string
.use(prefix) // Prefixes *only* this request
.use(nocache) // Prevents caching of *only* this request
.end((err, res) => {
// Do something
});
Existing plugins:
- superagent-no-cache - prevents caching by including Cache-Control header
- superagent-prefix - prefixes absolute URLs (useful in test environment)
- superagent-suffix - suffix URLs with a given path
- superagent-mock - simulate HTTP calls by returning data fixtures based on the requested URL
- superagent-mocker — simulate REST API
- superagent-cache - A global SuperAgent patch with built-in, flexible caching
- superagent-cache-plugin - A SuperAgent plugin with built-in, flexible caching
- superagent-jsonapify - A lightweight json-api client addon for superagent
- superagent-serializer - Converts server payload into different cases
- superagent-use - A client addon to apply plugins to all requests.
- superagent-httpbackend - stub out requests using AngularJS' $httpBackend syntax
- superagent-throttle - queues and intelligently throttles requests
- superagent-charset - add charset support for node's SuperAgent
Please prefix your plugin with superagent-*
so that it can easily be found by others.
For SuperAgent extensions such as couchdb and oauth visit the wiki.
Our breaking changes are mostly in rarely used functionality and from stricter error handling.
- 2.x to 3.x:
- Ensure you're running Node 4 or later. We dropped support for Node 0.x.
- Test code that calls
.send()
multiple times. Invalid calls to.send()
will now throw instead of sending garbage.
- 1.x to 2.x:
- If you use
.parse()
in the browser version, rename it to.serialize()
. - If you rely on
undefined
in query-string values being sent literally as the text "undefined", switch to checking for missing value instead.?key=undefined
is now?key
(without a value). - If you use
.then()
in Internet Explorer, ensure that you have a polyfill that adds a globalPromise
object.
- If you use
- 0.x to 1.x:
- Use
.end(function(err, res){})
. 1-argument version is no longer supported.
- Use
Install dependencies:
$ npm install
Run em!
$ make test
Install dependencies:
$ npm install
Start the test runner:
$ make test-browser-local
Visit http://localhost:4000/__zuul
in your browser.
Edit tests and refresh your browser. You do not have to restart the test runner.
npm (for node) is configured via the package.json
file and the .npmignore
file. Key metadata in the package.json
file is the version
field which should be changed according to semantic versioning and have a 1-1 correspondence with git tags. So for example, if you were to git show v1.5.0:package.json | grep version
, you should see "version": "1.5.0",
and this should hold true for every release. This can be handled via the npm version
command. Be aware that when publishing, npm will presume the version being published should also be tagged in npm as latest
, which is OK for normal incremental releases. For betas and minor/patch releases to older versions, be sure to include --tag
appropriately to avoid an older release getting tagged as latest
.
npm (for browser standalone) When we publish versions to npm, we run make superagent.js
which generates the standalone superagent.js
file via browserify
, and this file is included in the package published to npm (but this file is never checked into the git repository). If users want to install via npm but serve a single .js
file directly to the browser, the node_modules/superagent/superagent.js
is a standalone browserified file ready to go for that purpose. It is not minified.
npm (for browserify) is handled via the package.json
browser
field which allows users to install SuperAgent via npm, reference it from their browser code with require('superagent')
, and then build their own application bundle via browserify
, which will use lib/client.js
as the SuperAgent entrypoint.
bower is configured via the bower.json
file. Bower installs files directly from git/github without any transformation, so you must use Browserify or Webpack (or use npm).
MIT