34

I've written a small proxy with nodejs, express and htt-proxy. It works well for serving local files but fails when it comes to proxy to external api:

var express = require('express'),
    app = express.createServer(),
    httpProxy = require('http-proxy');


app.use(express.bodyParser());
app.listen(process.env.PORT || 1235);

var proxy = new httpProxy.RoutingProxy();

app.get('/', function(req, res) {
    res.sendfile(__dirname + '/index.html');
});
app.get('/js/*', function(req, res) {
    res.sendfile(__dirname + req.url);
});
app.get('/css/*', function(req, res) {
    res.sendfile(__dirname + req.url);
});

app.all('/*', function(req, res) {
    req.url = 'v1/public/yql?q=show%20tables&format=json&callback=';
    proxy.proxyRequest(req, res, {
        host: 'query.yahooapis.com', //yahoo is just an example to verify its not the apis fault
        port: 8080
    });

});

The problem is that there is no response from the yahoo api, maybe there is an response but i dont came up in the browser.

5 Answers 5

126

Even simpler with pipe and request-Package

var request = require('request');

app.use('/api', function(req, res) {
  var url = apiUrl + req.url;
  req.pipe(request(url)).pipe(res);
});

It pipes the whole request to the API and pipes the response back to the requestor. This also handles POST/PUT/DELETE and all other requests \o/

If you also care about query string you should pipe it as well

req.pipe(request({ qs:req.query, uri: url })).pipe(res);
15
  • 4
    the pipe line hangs when the requests has json content-type - see this question Sep 30, 2014 at 13:53
  • 1
    using only the upper request(url).pipe(res); will eventually do it, but you would loose any request specific information except the URL. My proposed way is first piping the whole request to the API and piping the response back to the requestor. That's why two pipes are happening. Oct 1, 2014 at 4:27
  • 1
    If anybody else is facing this issue, the following code works with passing query string values correctly - req.pipe(request({ qs:req.query, uri: db_url })).pipe(res);
    – hazardous
    May 2, 2016 at 16:33
  • 1
    @HazardouS Thanks for the tip. I updated the answer accordingly. Oct 26, 2016 at 7:15
  • 3
    As indicated in @Jonathan 's link, if the content-type is JSON, add json: true to request parameters, so it becomes: req.pipe(request({ qs:req.query, uri: url, json: true })).pipe(res);
    – Antoine OL
    Feb 28, 2018 at 17:23
7

Maybe your code is different when you're testing, but I'm querying the same URL as in your code sample using the following:

http://query.yahooapis.com:8080/v1/public/yql?q=show%20tables&format=json&callback=

and I get nothing back. My guess is you want to change port to 80 (from 8080) -- it works when I change it like so:

http://query.yahooapis.com:80/v1/public/yql?q=show%20tables&format=json&callback=

So that means it should be:

proxy.proxyRequest(req, res, {
    host: 'query.yahooapis.com', //yahoo is just an example to verify its not the apis fault
    port: 80
});
1
  • Ok, changing the port works for my project as well but unfortunately I've got a 404 from the server. Calling the same url in the browser it works. Sep 27, 2011 at 5:51
4

Maybe I use http-proxy in a wrong way. Using restler does what I want:

var express = require('express'),
    app = express.createServer(),
    restler = require('restler');


app.use(express.bodyParser());
app.listen( 1234);



app.get('/', function(req, res) {
    console.log(__dirname + '/index.html')
    res.sendfile(__dirname + '/index.html');
});
app.get('/js/*', function(req, res) {
    res.sendfile(__dirname + req.url);
});
app.get('/css/*', function(req, res) {
    res.sendfile(__dirname + req.url);
});


app.all('/*', function(req, res) {

    restler.get('http://myUrl.com:80/app_test.php/api' + req.url, {

        }).on('complete', function (data) {
                console.log(data)
               res.json(data)
            });

});
0

I ended up using http-proxy-middleware.

The code looks something like this:

var express = require("express");
var proxy = require("http-proxy-middleware");

const theProxy = proxy({
  target: "query.yahooapis.com",
  changeOrigin: true,
});

app.use("/", theProxy);
app.listen(process.env.PORT || 3002);
0

That's what I've been using for a while. Can handle both JSON and binary requests.

app.use('/api', (req, res, next) => {
    const redirectUrl = config.api_server + req.url.slice(1);
    const redirectedRequest = request({
        url: redirectUrl,
        method: req.method,
        body: req.readable ? undefined : req.body,
        json: req.readable ? false : true,
        qs: req.query,
        // Pass redirect back to the browser
        followRedirect: false
    });
    if (req.readable) {
        // Handles all the streamable data (e.g. image uploads)
        req.pipe(redirectedRequest).pipe(res);
    } else {
        // Handles everything else
        redirectedRequest.pipe(res);
    }
});

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.