205

I want to be able to set a single cookie, and read that single cookie with each request made to the nodejs server instance. Can it be done in a few lines of code, without the need to pull in a third party lib?

var http = require('http');

http.createServer(function (request, response) {
  response.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/plain'});
  response.end('Hello World\n');
}).listen(8124);

console.log('Server running at http://127.0.0.1:8124/');

Just trying to take the above code directly from nodejs.org, and work a cookie into it.

17 Answers 17

242

There is no quick function access to getting/setting cookies, so I came up with the following hack:

const http = require('http');

function parseCookies (request) {
    const list = {};
    const cookieHeader = request.headers?.cookie;
    if (!cookieHeader) return list;

    cookieHeader.split(`;`).forEach(function(cookie) {
        let [ name, ...rest] = cookie.split(`=`);
        name = name?.trim();
        if (!name) return;
        const value = rest.join(`=`).trim();
        if (!value) return;
        list[name] = decodeURIComponent(value);
    });

    return list;
}

const server = http.createServer(function (request, response) {
    // To Read a Cookie
    const cookies = parseCookies(request);

    // To Write a Cookie
    response.writeHead(200, {
        "Set-Cookie": `mycookie=test`,
        "Content-Type": `text/plain`
    });

    response.end(`Hello World\n`);
}).listen(8124);

const {address, port} = server.address();
console.log(`Server running at http://${address}:${port}`);

This will store all cookies into the cookies object, and you need to set cookies when you write the head.

13
  • 11
    The above code will work incorrectly if the value of a cookie contains an equal (=) sign as in one of Facebook's cookies like fbm_1234123412341234=base_domain=.domain.com.
    – esengineer
    Oct 3, 2012 at 9:31
  • 3
    don't cookie values have to be URL encoded / percent encoded? = in the doockie value would be invalid in that case, right?
    – les2
    Mar 13, 2013 at 19:52
  • 2
    In that case split by ; then by the first instance of =. Left is key, right is value.
    – iLoch
    Jun 3, 2013 at 19:33
  • 4
    I ran into the same issue as @Eye, instead of going the route of @iLoch I switched parts[0] to parts.shift() and parts[1] to parts.join('=')
    – aron.duby
    Aug 10, 2013 at 14:23
  • 3
    The code given had serious bugs and people cuntinued to copy it. See my last update
    – Dan
    Oct 24, 2013 at 17:19
130

If you're using the express library, as many node.js developers do, there is an easier way. Check the Express.js documentation page for more information.

The parsing example above works but express gives you a nice function to take care of that:

app.use(express.cookieParser());

To set a cookie:

res.cookie('cookiename', 'cookievalue', { maxAge: 900000, httpOnly: true });

To clear the cookie:

res.clearCookie('cookiename');
7
  • 18
    The cookie library is actually from the underlying library connect; you don't need to take all of express to get cookie helper.
    – Ajax
    Sep 3, 2012 at 16:40
  • 1
    actually the cookie library is not part of connect (which can't set cookie)
    – framp
    Nov 1, 2012 at 1:58
  • 12
    cookie-parser is no longer part of express and/or connect, but is available as middleware: github.com/expressjs/cookie-parser
    – Koen.
    Apr 14, 2014 at 22:21
  • 7
    How does one "get" a cookie in this example? For completeness and answering the question.
    – hubatish
    Jul 16, 2015 at 17:48
  • 2
    Downvoting due to needing to install express just to use cookies
    – Steven
    Jun 6, 2019 at 23:46
48

RevNoah had the best answer with the suggestion of using Express's cookie parser. But, that answer is now 3 years old and is out of date.

Using Express, you can read a cookie as follows

var express = require('express');
var cookieParser = require('cookie-parser');
var app = express();
app.use(cookieParser());
app.get('/myapi', function(req, resp) {
   console.log(req.cookies['Your-Cookie-Name-Here']);
})

And update your package.json with the following, substituting the appropriate relatively latest versions.

"dependencies": {
    "express": "4.12.3",
    "cookie-parser": "1.4.0"
  },

More operations like setting and parsing cookies are described here and here

3
  • 10
    The question asks how to get and set. To set use this: res.cookie('cookieName', cookieValue, { maxAge: 900000, httpOnly: true }); Dec 14, 2017 at 19:11
  • Can you set and get cookies as a per-session (withouth the need to know and handle keys)?
    – Matej J
    Dec 20, 2019 at 21:11
  • 3
    Lot of express based answers to a question that shows code that uses the plain Node http module... Dec 31, 2021 at 18:28
15

As an enhancement to @Corey Hart's answer, I've rewritten the parseCookies() using:

Here's the working example:

let http = require('http');

function parseCookies(str) {
  let rx = /([^;=\s]*)=([^;]*)/g;
  let obj = { };
  for ( let m ; m = rx.exec(str) ; )
    obj[ m[1] ] = decodeURIComponent( m[2] );
  return obj;
}

function stringifyCookies(cookies) {
  return Object.entries( cookies )
    .map( ([k,v]) => k + '=' + encodeURIComponent(v) )
    .join( '; ');
}

http.createServer(function ( request, response ) {
  let cookies = parseCookies( request.headers.cookie );
  console.log( 'Input cookies: ', cookies );
  cookies.search = 'google';
  if ( cookies.counter )
    cookies.counter++;
  else
    cookies.counter = 1;
  console.log( 'Output cookies: ', cookies );
  response.writeHead( 200, {
    'Set-Cookie': stringifyCookies(cookies),
    'Content-Type': 'text/plain'
  } );
  response.end('Hello World\n');
} ).listen(1234);

I also note that the OP uses the http module. If the OP was using restify, he can make use of restify-cookies:

var CookieParser = require('restify-cookies');
var Restify = require('restify');
var server = Restify.createServer();
server.use(CookieParser.parse);
server.get('/', function(req, res, next){
  var cookies = req.cookies; // Gets read-only cookies from the request
  res.setCookie('my-new-cookie', 'Hi There'); // Adds a new cookie to the response
  res.send(JSON.stringify(cookies));
});
server.listen(8080);
1
  • 1
    some suggestions now, 3.5 years later, for future viewers. Use let/const and stringifyCookies can be one lined with a map instead of building an array that way.
    – Ascherer
    Jan 19, 2019 at 16:47
14

Let me repeat this part of question that answers here are ignoring:

Can it be done in a few lines of code, without the need to pull in a third party lib?


Reading Cookies

Cookies are read from requests with the Cookie header. They only include a name and value. Because of the way paths work, multiple cookies of the same name can be sent. In NodeJS, all Cookies in as one string as they are sent in the Cookie header. You split them with ;. Once you have a cookie, everything to the left of the equals (if present) is the name, and everything after is the value. Some browsers will accept a cookie with no equal sign and presume the name blank. Whitespaces do not count as part of the cookie. Values can also be wrapped in double quotes ("). Values can also contain =. For example, formula=5+3=8 is a valid cookie.

/**
 * @param {string} [cookieString='']
 * @return {[string,string][]} String Tuple
 */
function getEntriesFromCookie(cookieString = '') {
  return cookieString.split(';').map((pair) => {
    const indexOfEquals = pair.indexOf('=');
    let name;
    let value;
    if (indexOfEquals === -1) {
      name = '';
      value = pair.trim();
    } else {
      name = pair.substr(0, indexOfEquals).trim();
      value = pair.substr(indexOfEquals + 1).trim();
    }
    const firstQuote = value.indexOf('"');
    const lastQuote = value.lastIndexOf('"');
    if (firstQuote !== -1 && lastQuote !== -1) {
      value = value.substring(firstQuote + 1, lastQuote);
    }
    return [name, value];
  });
}

const cookieEntries = getEntriesFromCookie(request.headers.Cookie); 
const object = Object.fromEntries(cookieEntries.slice().reverse());

If you're not expecting duplicated names, then you can convert to an object which makes things easier. Then you can access like object.myCookieName to get the value. If you are expecting duplicates, then you want to do iterate through cookieEntries. Browsers feed cookies in descending priority, so reversing ensures the highest priority cookie appears in the object. (The .slice() is to avoid mutation of the array.)


Settings Cookies

"Writing" cookies is done by using the Set-Cookie header in your response. The response.headers['Set-Cookie'] object is actually an array, so you'll be pushing to it. It accepts a string but has more values than just name and value. The hardest part is writing the string, but this can be done in one line.

/**
 * @param {Object} options
 * @param {string} [options.name='']
 * @param {string} [options.value='']
 * @param {Date} [options.expires]
 * @param {number} [options.maxAge]
 * @param {string} [options.domain]
 * @param {string} [options.path]
 * @param {boolean} [options.secure]
 * @param {boolean} [options.httpOnly]
 * @param {'Strict'|'Lax'|'None'} [options.sameSite]
 * @return {string}
 */
function createSetCookie(options) {
  return (`${options.name || ''}=${options.value || ''}`)
    + (options.expires != null ? `; Expires=${options.expires.toUTCString()}` : '')
    + (options.maxAge != null ? `; Max-Age=${options.maxAge}` : '')
    + (options.domain != null ? `; Domain=${options.domain}` : '')
    + (options.path != null ? `; Path=${options.path}` : '')
    + (options.secure ? '; Secure' : '')
    + (options.httpOnly ? '; HttpOnly' : '')
    + (options.sameSite != null ? `; SameSite=${options.sameSite}` : '');
}

const newCookie = createSetCookie({
  name: 'cookieName',
  value: 'cookieValue',
  path:'/',
});
response.headers['Set-Cookie'].push(newCookie);

Remember you can set multiple cookies, because you can actually set multiple Set-Cookie headers in your request. That's why it's an array.


Note on external libraries:

If you decide to use the express, cookie-parser, or cookie, note they have defaults that are non-standard. Cookies parsed are always URI Decoded (percent-decoded). That means if you use a name or value that has any of the following characters: !#$%&'()*+/:<=>?@[]^`{|} they will be handled differently with those libraries. If you're setting cookies, they are encoded with %{HEX}. And if you're reading a cookie you have to decode them.

For example, while [email protected] is a valid cookie, these libraries will encode it as email=name%40domain.com. Decoding can exhibit issues if you are using the % in your cookie. It'll get mangled. For example, your cookie that was: secretagentlevel=50%007and50%006 becomes secretagentlevel=507and506. That's an edge case, but something to note if switching libraries.

Also, on these libraries, cookies are set with a default path=/ which means they are sent on every url request to the host.

If you want to encode or decode these values yourself, you can use encodeURIComponent or decodeURIComponent, respectively.


References:


Additional information:

6
  • If we're "clean" modern code, at least also turn that createSetCookie into a return [`${options.name ?? ``}=${options.value ?? ``}`, options.expires !== undefined && `Expires=${options.expires.toUTCString()}`, options.maxAge != undefined && Max-Age=${options.maxAge}`,...].filter(Boolean).join(`;`); (with the relevant indent of course). And note that an unspecified object property resolves to undefined, not to null. Dec 31, 2021 at 18:32
  • @Mike'Pomax'Kamermans != null checks for both null and undefined where as !== undefined will accept null. With your code, if expires is null, it'll crash when you call options.expires.toUTCString(). The JSDoc notation means you can pass null, with no issues. If not, the parameters would have to be {!string|undefined}. Also, there should be a space after semicolons, according to spec.
    – ShortFuse
    Jan 4, 2022 at 15:53
  • Single string is also faster than iterating arrays twice (join and filter), though our opinions may differ on legibility. The whole thing as a single String Template is probably even faster, but then I think it gets too unreadable.
    – ShortFuse
    Jan 4, 2022 at 16:01
  • Oh, wait, you used the coercive !=. That's kinda bad form, but sure, that does indeed do that. Jan 4, 2022 at 17:07
  • 1
    @Mike'Pomax'Kamermans It's not bad form. For example, eslint does not consider this bad. Most popular implementations use this, including NodeJS itself. There is no coercion because of how == works with null and undefined. You're also not supposed to compare against undefined because that's the object in globalThis you're comparing against which can be overwritten (Try: 'undefined' in globalThis). You're supposed to do typeof object !== 'undefined' && object !== null. But, using != null is just cleaner. See 262.ecma-international.org/5.1/#sec-11.9.3
    – ShortFuse
    Jan 4, 2022 at 17:56
8

You can use the "cookies" npm module, which has a comprehensive set of features.

Documentation and examples at:
https://github.com/jed/cookies

3
  • 1
    Looks like that module is intended for use in http servers. Is there a cookiejar tool for handling cookies in http clients? Basically I aant to tell the http client lib: if you get any Set-Cookie headers, remember them automatically, and then pass the on subsequent outbound requests as appropriate (when the domain matches).
    – Cheeso
    Sep 9, 2012 at 16:02
  • This would be a feature of your http client library of choice. I can suggest superagent as a good example.
    – zah
    Sep 9, 2012 at 20:51
  • Gave up trying to get this lib to work in express after couple of hours... use connect instead.
    – enko
    Aug 27, 2013 at 21:45
7

To get a cookie splitter to work with cookies that have '=' in the cookie values:

var get_cookies = function(request) {
  var cookies = {};
  request.headers && request.headers.cookie.split(';').forEach(function(cookie) {
    var parts = cookie.match(/(.*?)=(.*)$/)
    cookies[ parts[1].trim() ] = (parts[2] || '').trim();
  });
  return cookies;
};

then to get an individual cookie:

get_cookies(request)['my_cookie']
6

Cookies are transfered through HTTP-Headers
You'll only have to parse the request-headers and put response-headers.

1
  • Wikipedia not easier
    – mercury
    Jul 18, 2019 at 20:11
2

Here's a neat copy-n-paste patch for managing cookies in node. I'll do this in CoffeeScript, for the beauty.

http = require 'http'

http.IncomingMessage::getCookie = (name) ->
  cookies = {}
  this.headers.cookie && this.headers.cookie.split(';').forEach (cookie) ->
    parts = cookie.split '='
    cookies[parts[0].trim()] = (parts[1] || '').trim()
    return

  return cookies[name] || null

http.IncomingMessage::getCookies = ->
  cookies = {}
  this.headers.cookie && this.headers.cookie.split(';').forEach (cookie) ->
    parts = cookie.split '='
    cookies[parts[0].trim()] = (parts[1] || '').trim()
    return

  return cookies

http.OutgoingMessage::setCookie = (name, value, exdays, domain, path) ->
  cookies = this.getHeader 'Set-Cookie'
  if typeof cookies isnt 'object'
    cookies = []

  exdate = new Date()
  exdate.setDate(exdate.getDate() + exdays);
  cookieText = name+'='+value+';expires='+exdate.toUTCString()+';'
  if domain
    cookieText += 'domain='+domain+';'
  if path
    cookieText += 'path='+path+';'

  cookies.push cookieText
  this.setHeader 'Set-Cookie', cookies
  return

Now you'll be able to handle cookies just as you'd expect:

server = http.createServer (request, response) ->
  #get individually
  cookieValue = request.getCookie 'testCookie'
  console.log 'testCookie\'s value is '+cookieValue

  #get altogether
  allCookies = request.getCookies()
  console.log allCookies

  #set
  response.setCookie 'newCookie', 'cookieValue', 30

  response.end 'I luvs da cookies';
  return

server.listen 8080
1
  • 3
    Just copy paste that code in the TRY COFFESCRIPT tab on coffeescript.org. Your answer did help me, and coffeescript is not that hard to read if you know javascript.
    – Mattijs
    May 25, 2014 at 11:54
2

Using Some ES5/6 Sorcery & RegEx Magic

Here is an option to read the cookies and turn them into an object of Key, Value pairs for client side, could also use it server side.

Note: If there is a = in the value, no worries. If there is an = in the key, trouble in paradise.

More Notes: Some may argue readability so break it down as you like.

I Like Notes: Adding an error handler (try catch) wouldn't hurt.

const iLikeCookies = () => {
    return Object.fromEntries(document.cookie.split('; ').map(v => v.split(/=(.+)/))); 
}

const main = () => {
    // Add Test Cookies
    document.cookie = `name=Cookie Monster;expires=false;domain=localhost`
    document.cookie = `likesCookies=yes=withARandomEquals;expires=false;domain=localhost`;

    // Show the Objects
    console.log(document.cookie)
    console.log('The Object:', iLikeCookies())

    // Get a value from key
    console.log(`Username: ${iLikeCookies().name}`)
    console.log(`Enjoys Cookies: ${iLikeCookies().likesCookies}`)
}

enter image description here

What is going on?

iLikeCookies() will split the cookies by ; (space after ;):

["name=Cookie Monster", "likesCookies=yes=withARandomEquals"]

Then we map that array and split by first occurrence of = using regex capturing parens:

[["name", "Cookie Monster"], ["likesCookies", "yes=withARandomEquals"]]

Then use our friend `Object.fromEntries to make this an object of key, val pairs.

Nooice.

1
  • 1
    Split with /="?([^"]+)"?/ instead to support quoted values (eg: name="value").
    – ShortFuse
    Feb 17, 2021 at 15:37
1

You can use cookie lib to parse incoming multiple cookies, so that you won't have to worry about exceptions cases:

var cookies = cookie.parse('foo=bar; equation=E%3Dmc%5E2');
// { foo: 'bar', equation: 'E=mc^2' }

To write a cookie you can do like this:

response.writeHead(200, {
    "Set-Cookie": `mycookie=cookie`,
    "Content-Type": `text/plain`
});
1
  • As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Jan 16, 2023 at 15:38
1

Set Cookie

let key = "eyJhbGciOiJ...";
response.setHeader('Set-Cookie', `key=${key}; HttpOnly`);

Get Cookie

let val = request.headers.cookie.split("=")[1];
0

If you don't care what's in the cookie and you just want to use it, try this clean approach using request (a popular node module):

var request = require('request');
var j = request.jar();
var request = request.defaults({jar:j});
request('http://www.google.com', function () {
  request('http://images.google.com', function (error, response, body){
     // this request will will have the cookie which first request received
     // do stuff
  });
});
2
  • Sorry, but this code makes no sense at all to me. Is jar() some cutesy method name to get the current list of cookies? What is the point of the 2 invocations of request? This is mostly an advertisement, not an answer.
    – Hoshi
    Apr 26, 2020 at 18:36
  • Client answers are not accepted. Server answers are accepted.
    – user13430089
    Feb 20, 2021 at 14:58
0
var cookie = 'your_cookie';
var cookie_value;
var i = request.headers.indexOf(cookie+'=');
if (i != -1) {
  var eq = i+cookie.length+1;
  var end = request.headers.indexOf(';', eq);
  cookie_value = request.headers.substring(eq, end == -1 ? undefined : end);
}
0

I wrote this simple function just pass req.headers.cookie and cookie name

const getCookieByName =(cookies,name)=>{
    const arrOfCookies = cookies.split(' ')
    let yourCookie = null

    arrOfCookies.forEach(element => {
        if(element.includes(name)){
            yourCookie = element.replace(name+'=','')
        }
    });
    return yourCookie
}
0

I know that there are many answer to this question already, but here's a function made in native JS.

function parseCookies(cookieHeader) {
    var cookies = {};
    cookieHeader
        .split(";")
        .map(str => str.replace("=", "\u0000")
        .split("\u0000"))
        .forEach(x => cookies[x[0]] = x[1]); 

    return cookies;
}

It starts by taking in the document.cookie string. Every key-value pair is separated by a semicolon (;). Therefore the first step is to divide the string up each key-value pair.

After that, the function replaces the first instance of "=" with a random character that isn't in the rest of the string, for this function I decided to use the NULL character (\u0000). The key-value pair can now be split into just two pieces. The two pieces can now be combined into JSON.

-1

First one needs to create cookie (I have wrapped token inside cookie as an example) and then set it in response.To use the cookie in following way install cookieParser

app.use(cookieParser());

The browser will have it saved in its 'Resource' tab and will be used for every request thereafter taking the initial URL as base

var token = student.generateToken('authentication');
        res.cookie('token', token, {
            expires: new Date(Date.now() + 9999999),
            httpOnly: false
        }).status(200).send();

To get cookie from a request on the server side is easy too.You have to extract the cookie from request by calling 'cookie' property of the request object.

var token = req.cookies.token; // Retrieving Token stored in cookies

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