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In Angular, I learnt that we can proxy the API request or we can use the URL directly without using any proxy configurations. The two approaches that I've learnt are:

With Proxy:

proxy.config.json

{
  "/api": {
    "target": "http://localhost:3000",
    "secure": false
  }
}

package.json:

edit "start" of your package.jsson

"start": "ng serve --proxy-config proxy.conf.json",

Without Proxy:

Consider any service file to make REST API calls:

user.service.ts

@Injectable()
export class UserService {

public API = 'http://localhost:8080';
 constructor(private http: HttpClient) {
  }

  getAllUsers(): Observable<any> {
    return this.http.get(this.API + '/users');
  }

}

So, which of these methods are the correct method of approaching? How do we use this in a production type of environment? If there are any other such alternatives, please let me know.

1 Answer 1

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That proxy only works in development mode which is opened by ng serve. For production mode, you need to do the same job with Nginx, Apache or any other web server application which serves a Angular project.

If you request XHR call directly, you should deal with CORS issue. So I recommend former one.

6
  • Can you please elaborate on what is Nginx, Apache are? Feb 11, 2019 at 13:51
  • What kind of CORS issue I should deal with if I call XHR directly? Feb 11, 2019 at 13:52
  • After run ng build to get a production build, you need something to serve it. and that thing could be nginx.org, httpd.apache.org. ng serve is do the same thing with Node.js that those web servers do but only for development purpose.
    – zmag
    Feb 11, 2019 at 13:58
  • @AshfaqueRifaye For security reasons, browsers allow only request from same origin. developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/CORS Here's more detail :)
    – zmag
    Feb 11, 2019 at 14:01
  • Okay that served much purpose. Feb 11, 2019 at 14:02

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