# then-request A request library that returns promises and supports both browsers and node.js [![Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/then/then-request/master.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/then/then-request) [![Dependency Status](https://img.shields.io/david/then/then-request.svg)](https://david-dm.org/then/then-request) [![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/then-request.svg)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/then-request) Sponsor ## Installation npm install then-request ## Usage `request(method, url, options, callback?)` The following examples all work on both client and server. ```js var request = require('then-request'); request('GET', 'http://example.com').done(function (res) { console.log(res.getBody()); }); request('POST', 'http://example.com/json-api', {json: {some: 'values'}}).getBody('utf8').then(JSON.parse).done(function (res) { console.log(res); }); var FormData = request.FormData; var data = new FormData(); data.append('some', 'values'); request('POST', 'http://example.com/form-api', {form: data}).done(function (res) { console.log(res.getBody()); }); ``` Or with ES6 ```js import request, {FormData} from 'then-request'; request('GET', 'http://example.com').done((res) => { console.log(res.getBody()); }); request('POST', 'http://example.com/json-api', {json: {some: 'values'}}).getBody('utf8').then(JSON.parse).done((res) => { console.log(res); }); var FormData = request.FormData; var data = new FormData(); data.append('some', 'values'); request('POST', 'http://example.com/form-api', {form: data}).done((res) => { console.log(res.getBody()); }); ``` **Method:** An HTTP method (e.g. `GET`, `POST`, `PUT`, `DELETE` or `HEAD`). It is not case sensitive. **URL:** A url as a string (e.g. `http://example.com`). Relative URLs are allowed in the browser. **Options:** - `qs` - an object containing querystring values to be appended to the uri - `headers` - http headers (default: `{}`) - `body` - body for PATCH, POST and PUT requests. Must be a `Buffer`, `ReadableStream` or `String` (only strings are accepted client side) - `json` - sets `body` but to JSON representation of value and adds `Content-type: application/json`. Does not have any affect on how the response is treated. - `form` - You can pass a `FormData` instance to the `form` option, this will manage all the appropriate headers for you. Does not have any affect on how the response is treated. - `cache` - only used in node.js (browsers already have their own caches) Can be `'memory'`, `'file'` or your own custom implementaton (see https://github.com/ForbesLindesay/http-basic#implementing-a-cache). - `followRedirects` - defaults to `true` but can be explicitly set to `false` on node.js to prevent then-request following redirects automatically. - `maxRedirects` - sets the maximum number of redirects to follow before erroring on node.js (default: `Infinity`) - `allowRedirectHeaders` (default: `null`) - an array of headers allowed for redirects (none if `null`). - `gzip` - defaults to `true` but can be explicitly set to `false` on node.js to prevent then-request automatically supporting the gzip encoding on responses. - `agent` - (default: `false`) - An `Agent` to controll keep-alive. When set to `false` use an `Agent` with default values. - `timeout` (default: `false`) - times out if no response is returned within the given number of milliseconds. - `socketTimeout` (default: `false`) - calls `req.setTimeout` internally which causes the request to timeout if no new data is seen for the given number of milliseconds. This option is ignored in the browser. - `retry` (default: `false`) - retry GET requests. Set this to `true` to retry when the request errors or returns a status code greater than or equal to 400 (can also be a function that takes `(err, req, attemptNo) => shouldRetry`) - `retryDelay` (default: `200`) - the delay between retries (can also be set to a function that takes `(err, res, attemptNo) => delay`) - `maxRetries` (default: `5`) - the number of times to retry before giving up. **Returns:** A [Promise](https://www.promisejs.org/) is returned that eventually resolves to the `Response`. The resulting Promise also has an additional `.getBody(encoding?)` method that is equivallent to calling `.then(function (res) { return res.getBody(encoding?); })`. ### Response Note that even for status codes that represent an error, the promise will be resolved as the request succeeded. You can call `getBody` if you want to error on invalid status codes. The response has the following properties: - `statusCode` - a number representing the HTTP status code - `headers` - http response headers - `body` - a string if in the browser or a buffer if on the server - `url` - the URL that was requested (in the case of redirects on the server, this is the final url that was requested) It also has a method `getBody(encoding?)` which looks like: ```js function getBody(encoding) { if (this.statusCode >= 300) { var err = new Error('Server responded with status code ' + this.statusCode + ':\n' + this.body.toString(encoding)); err.statusCode = this.statusCode; err.headers = this.headers; err.body = this.body; throw err; } return encoding ? this.body.toString(encoding) : this.body; } ``` ### FormData ```js var FormData = require('then-request').FormData; ``` Form data either exposes the node.js module, [form-data](https://www.npmjs.com/package/form-data), or the builtin browser object [FormData](https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/API/FormData), as appropriate. They have broadly the same API, with the exception that form-data handles node.js streams and Buffers, while FormData handles the browser's `File` Objects. ## License MIT