/express-http-proxy

Proxy middleware for express/connect

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

express-http-proxy NPM version Build Status Dependency Status

Express proxy middleware to forward request to another host and pass response back

Install

$ npm install express-http-proxy --save

Usage

proxy(host, options);

To proxy URLS starting with '/proxy' to the host 'www.google.com':

var proxy = require('express-http-proxy');

var app = require('express')();

app.use('/proxy', proxy('www.google.com'));

Options

forwardPath

The forwardPath option allows you to modify the path prior to proxying the request.

var proxy = require('express-http-proxy');

var app = require('express')();

app.use('/proxy', proxy('www.google.com', {
  forwardPath: function(req, res) {
    return require('url').parse(req.url).path;
  }
}));

forwardPathAsync

The forwardPathAsync options allows you to modify the path asyncronously prior to proxying the request, using Promises.

app.use(proxy('httpbin.org', {
  forwardPathAsync: function() {
    return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
      // ...
      // eventually
      resolve( /* your resolved forwardPath as string */ )
    });
  }
}));

filter

The filter option can be used to limit what requests are proxied. For example, if you only want to proxy get request

app.use('/proxy', proxy('www.google.com', {
  filter: function(req, res) {
     return req.method == 'GET';
  },
  forwardPath: function(req, res) {
    return require('url').parse(req.url).path;
  }
}));

intercept

You can intercept the response before sending it back to the client.

app.use('/proxy', proxy('www.google.com', {
  intercept: function(rsp, data, req, res, callback) {
    // rsp - original response from the target
    data = JSON.parse(data.toString('utf8'));
    callback(null, JSON.stringify(data));
  }
}));

decorateRequest

You can change the request options before it is sent to the target.

app.use('/proxy', proxy('www.google.com', {
  decorateRequest: function(proxyReq, originalReq) {
    // you can update headers
    proxyReq.headers['Content-Type'] = 'text/html';
    // you can change the method
    proxyReq.method = 'GET';
    // you can munge the bodyContent.
    proxyReq.bodyContent = proxyReq.bodyContent.replace(/losing/, 'winning!');
    return proxyReq;
  }
}));

https

Normally, your proxy request will be made on the same protocol as the original request. If you'd like to force the proxy request to be https, use this option.

app.use('/proxy', proxy('www.google.com', {
  https: true
}));

preserveHostHdr

You can copy the host HTTP header to the proxied express server using the preserveHostHdr option.

app.use('/proxy', proxy('www.google.com', {
  preserveHostHdr: true
}));

reqAsBuffer

Note: this is an experimental feature. ymmv

The reqAsBuffer option allows you to ensure the req body is encoded as a Node Buffer when sending a proxied request. Any value for this is truthy.

This defaults to to false in order to preserve legacy behavior. Note that the value of reqBodyEnconding is used as the encoding when coercing strings (and stringified JSON) to Buffer.

app.use('/proxy', proxy('www.google.com', {
  reqAsBuffer: true
}));

reqBodyEncoding

Encoding used to decode request body. Defaults to utf-8.

Use null to preserve as Buffer when proxied request body is a Buffer. (e.g image upload) Accept any values supported by raw-body.

The same encoding is used in the intercept method.

app.use('/post', proxy('httpbin.org', {
  reqBodyEncoding: null
}));

timeout

By default, node does not express a timeout on connections. Use timeout option to impose a specific timeout. Timed-out requests will respond with 504 status code and a X-Timeout-Reason header.

app.use('/', proxy('httpbin.org', {
  timeout: 2000  // in milliseconds, two seconds
}));

Questions

Q: Can it support https proxy?

The library will use https if the provided path has 'https://' or ':443'. You can use decorateRequest to ammend any auth or challenge headers required to succeed https.

Here is an older answer about using the https-proxy-agent package. It may be useful if the included functionality in http-express-proxy does not solve your use case.

A: Yes, you can use the 'https-proxy-agent' package. Something like this:

var corporateProxyServer = process.env.HTTP_PROXY || process.env.http_proxy || process.env.HTTPS_PROXY || process.env.https_proxy;

if (corporateProxyServer) {
  corporateProxyAgent = new HttpsProxyAgent(corporateProxyServer);
}

Then inside the decorateRequest method, add the agent to the request:

  req.agent = corporateProxyAgent;

Release Notes

Release Notes
0.10.1 Fixed issue where 'body encoding' was being incorrectly set to the character encoding.
Dropped explicit support for node 0.10.
Intercept can now deal with gziped responses.
Author can now 'force https', even if the original request is over http.
Do not call next after ECONNRESET catch.
0.10.0 Fix regression in forwardPath implementation.
0.9.1 Documentation updates. Set 'Accept-Encoding' header to match bodyEncoding.
0.9.0 Better handling for request body when body is JSON.
0.8.0 Features: add forwardPathAsync option
Updates: modernize dependencies
Fixes: Exceptions parsing proxied response causes error: Can't set headers after they are sent. (#111)
If client request aborts, proxied request is aborted too (#107)
0.7.4 Move jscs to devDependencies to avoid conflict with nsp.
0.7.3 Adds a timeout option. Code organization and small bug fixes.
0.7.2 Collecting many minor documentation and test improvements.
0.4.0 Signature of intercept callback changed from function(data, req, res, callback) to function(rsp, data, req, res, callback) where rsp is the original response from the target

Licence

MIT