@bufferapp/buffer-rpc

Buffer RPC request handler

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import bufferappBufferRpc from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/@bufferapp/buffer-rpc';
</script>

README

buffer-rpc

Build Status

Buffer RPC request handler

Quickstart

Create a RPC method to add 2 numbers:

// index.js
const express = require('express')
const { rpc, method } = require('@bufferapp/buffer-rpc')
const app = express()
app.use(bodyParser.json()) // this is required
app.post('/rpc/:method?', rpc(method('add', (a, b) => a + b)))
const port = 3000
app.listen(port, () => console.log(`App Is Listening On Port ${port}`))

Start the server

node index.js

Or you can use curl to call the add method:

curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"args": "[2, 3]"}' localhost:3000/add | python -m json.tool

# {
#    "result": 5
# }

Note: it is recommended that you use the RPC client:

https://github.com/bufferapp/micro-rpc-client

To see a list of all available methods use the methods call:

curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"name": "methods"}' localhost:3000 | python -m json.tool

# {
#   result: [
#     {
#       "docs": "add two numbers"
#       "name": "add"
#     },
#     {
#       "docs": "list all available methods",
#       "name": "methods"
#     }
#   ]
# }

Usage

Here's a few examples of how to hook up the handler methods:

const express = require('express')
const { rpc, method } = require('@bufferapp/buffer-rpc')
const app = express()
app.use(bodyParser.json()) // this is required

app.post(
  '/rpc/:method?',
  rpc(
    method('add', (a, b) => a + b),
    method(
      'addAsync',
      (a, b) =>
        new Promise(resolve => {
          resolve(a + b)
        }),
    ),
    method('addItems', ({ a, b }) => a + b),
    method(
      'addItemsAsync',
      ({ a, b }) =>
        new Promise(resolve => {
          resolve(a + b)
        }),
    ),
    method('throwError', () => {
      throw createError({ message: "I'm sorry I can't do that" })
    }),

    method(
      'throwErrorAsync',
      () =>
        new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
          reject(
            createError({
              message: 'Something is broke internally',
              statusCode: 500,
            }),
          )
        }),
    ),
    method(
      'documentation',
      `
  # documentation

  Document what a method does.
  `,
      () => 'documentation',
    ),
  ),
)

const port = 3000
app.listen(port, () => console.log(`App Is Listening On Port ${port}`))

Dependency Injection

To simplify the code in your RPC methods, you may want to pass some common utilities down via simple dependancy injection. To do this, you call the rpc() method with slightly different syntax.

Instead of this (seen in the other README examples):

rpc(methodOne, methodTwo, methodThree, ...);

Pass the methods as an Array and pass utils as a second parameter:

rpc([methodOne, methodTwo, methodThree], utils);

Where utils is an Object that will be exposed to your RPC methods as the last parameter. For example, you might use it like this (example is simplified):

// rpcHandler.js
const { rpc } = require('@bufferapp/buffer-rpc');

const PublishAPI = require('./publishAPI');
const myMethod = require('./myMethod');

module.exports = rpc([myMethod], { PublishAPI });

// myMethod.js
const { method } = require('@bufferapp/buffer-rpc');

module.exports = method(
  'myMethod',
  'myMethodDocs',
  (args, req, res, { PublishAPI }) => PublishAPI.fetch('/1/user.json')
);

Error Handling

Handled Flag

To help understand what the handled flag is for lets talk about a simplified distributed system.

client -> server

The server is the RPC endpoints and the client is the source of the request, perhaps a browser or another service.. When handled = true this means there is nothing more for the client to do, when handled = false this means there might be more work to resolve an issue. So handled = false is a maybe. An example of a definite handled = true is when you make a request to an RPC endpoint that does not exist. There's no partial state to resolve. An example of handled = false would be when you have to make multiple writes to a database, the first one passes and the second one fails. You've got a partially handled failure case. The client would be notified with a handled = false and then resolve the issue by either deleting the first record or writing the second -- depends on what the application does!

While this doesn't happen very often, it is more likely when we choose to use a NoSQL database since we don't have joins. That being said most of the time, you'll return an error with handled = true... especially if you're keeping RPC endpoints simple. Avoid distributed systems problems when you can!

createError handled = true (customizable)

errorMiddleware handled = false

method not found handled = true

Error Codes

These are the default error codes for error type responses

1000 - createError default (customizable)
4040 - method not found (404)
5000 - unhandled exception (500)

API

rpc

Takes a bunch of methods as arguments. Passes requests to right RPC endpoint

rpc(...methods)

...methods - method - rpc method (see below)

method

add a remote method

method(name, [docs], fn)

name - string - the name of the method
docs - string - documentation about a method
fn - function - the function to call and apply parameters the method is requested

createError

create an error to be thrown, optionally set the status code

createError({
  message,
  code = 1000,
  statusCode = 400,
  handled = true,
})

message - string - error message to return
code - integer - custom error code to add to response body HTTP status code (default to 1000)
statusCode - integer - HTTP status code (default to 400) handled - boolean - add if error was handled on backend to the response body (default to true)

errorMiddleware

express/connect error handling middleware that receives and unhandled error and returns a JSON response

app.post('/rpc', rpc(method('awake', () => 'OK')), errorHandler)

/*
statusCode = 500
body = {
  handled: false,
  code: 5000,
  error: 'some error message' // set from error.message
}
*/

Request and Response Objects

Request and response objects are always passed along as the last two arguments in case they're needed.

method('addWithSession', (a, b, req, res) => {
  if (!req.session) {
    throw createError({ message: 'a session is needed to add numbers', statusCode: 401})
  }
  return a + b
}