rxrest

RxRest a reactive REST utility

Usage no npm install needed!

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README

RxRest Build Status

A reactive REST utility

Highly inspirated by Restangular, this library implements a natural way to interact with a REST API.

Install

npm install rxrest --save

Example

import { RxRest, RxRestConfig } from 'rxrest'

const config = new RxRestConfig()
config.baseURL = 'http://localhost/api'

const rxrest = new RxRest(config)
rxrest.all('cars')
.get()
.subscribe((cars: Car[]) => {
  /**
   * `cars` is:
   * RxRestCollection [
   *   RxRestItem { name: 'Polo', id: 1, brand: 'Audi' },
   *   RxRestItem { name: 'Golf', id: 2, brand: 'Volkswagen' }
   * ]
   */

  cars[0].brand = 'Volkswagen'

  cars[0].save()
  .subscribe(result => {
    console.log(result)
    /**
     * outputs: RxRestItem { name: 'Polo', id: 1, brand: 'Volkswagen' }
     */
  })
})

Menu

Technical concepts

This library uses a fetch-like library to perform HTTP requests. It has the same api as fetch but uses XMLHttpRequest so that requests have a cancellable ability! It also makes use of Proxy and implements an Iterator on RxRestCollection.

Because it uses fetch, the RxRest library uses it's core concepts. It will add an Object compatibility layer to URLSearchParams for query parameters and Headers. It is also familiar with Body-like object, as FormData, Response, Request etc.

This script depends on superagent (for a easier XMLHttpRequest usage, compatible in both node and the browser) and rxjs for the reactive part.

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Promise compatibility

Just use the toPromise utility:


rxrest.one('foo')
.get()
.toPromise()
.then(item => {
  console.log(item)
})

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One-event Stream instead of multiple events

Sometimes, you may want RxRest to emit one event per item in the collection:

To do so, just call asIterable(false):

rxrest.all('cars')
.asIterable(false)
.get()
// next() is called with every car available
.subscribe((e) => {})

Or use the second argument of .all instead of asIterable:

rxrest.all('cars', false)
.get()
// next() is called with every car available
.subscribe((e) => {})

Object state ($fromServer, $pristine, $uuid)

Thanks to the Proxy, we can get metadata informations about the current object and it's state.

When you instantiate an object, it's $pristine. When it gets modified it's dirty:

const rxrest = new RxRest()
const car = rxrest.one('cars', 1)

assert(car.$prisine === true)

car.brand = 'Ford'

assert(car.$prisine === false)

You can also check that the item comes from the server:

const rxrest = new RxRest()
const car = rxrest.one('cars', 1)

assert(car.$fromServer === false) // we just instantiated it in the client

car.save()
.subscribe((car) => {
  assert(car.$fromServer === true) //now it's from the server
  assert(car.$prisine === true) //it's also pristine!
})

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Configuration

Setting up RxRest is done via RxRestConfiguration:

const config = new RxRestConfiguration()

baseURL

It is the base url prepending your routes. For example :

//set the url
config.baseURL = 'http://localhost/api'

const rxrest = new RxRest(config)
//this will request GET http://localhost/api/cars/1
rxrest.one('cars', 1)
.get()

identifier='id'

This is the key storing your identifier in your api objects. It defaults to id.

config.identifier = '@id'

const rxrest = new RxRest(config)
rxrest.one('cars', 1)

> RxRestItem { '@id': 1 }

headers

You can set headers through the configuration, but also change them request-wise:

config.headers
config.headers.set('Authorization', 'foobar')
config.headers.set('Content-Type', 'application/json')

const rxrest = new RxRest(config)

// Performs a GET request on /cars/1 with Authorization and an `application/json` content type header
rxrest.one('cars', 1).get()

// Performs a POST request on /cars with Authorization and an `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` content type header
rxrest.all('cars')
.post(new FormData(), null, {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'})

queryParams

You can set query parameters through the configuration, but also change them request-wise:

config.queryParams.set('bearer', 'foobar')

const rxrest = new RxRest(config)

// Performs a GET request on /cars/1?bearer=foobar
rxrest.one('cars', 1).get()

// Performs a GET request on /cars?bearer=barfoo
rxrest.all('cars')
.get({bearer: 'barfoo'})

uuid

It tells RxRest to add an uuid to every resource. This is great if you need a unique identifier that's not related to the data of a collection (useful in forms):

//set the url
config.uuid = true

const rxrest = new RxRest(config)
rxrest.one('cars', 1)
.get()
.subscribe((car: Car) => {
  console.log(car.$uuid)
})

Also works in a non-$fromServer resource:

const car = rxrest.fromObject('cars')
console.log(car.$uuid)

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Interceptors

You can add custom behaviors on every state of the request. In order those are:

  1. Request
  2. Response
  3. Error

To alter those states, you can add interceptors having the following signature:

  1. requestInterceptor(request: Request)
  2. responseInterceptor(request: Body)
  3. errorInterceptor(error: Response)

Each of those can return a Stream, a Promise, their initial altered value, or be void (ie: return nothing).

For example, let's alter the request and the response:

config.requestInterceptors.push(function(request) {
  request.headers.set('foo', 'bar')
})

// This alters the body (note that ResponseBodyHandler below is more appropriate to do so)
config.responseInterceptors.push(function(response) {
  return response.text(
  .then(data => {
    data = JSON.parse(data)
    data.foo = 'bar'
    //We can read the body only once (see Body.bodyUsed), here we return a new Response
    return new Response(JSON.stringify(body), response)
  })
})

// Performs a GET request with a 'foo' header having `bar` as value
const rxrest = new RxRest(config)

rxrest.one('cars', 1)
.get()

> RxRestItem<Car> {id: 1, brand: 'Volkswagen', name: 'Polo', foo: 1}

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Handlers

Handlers allow you to transform the Body before or after a request is issued.

Those are the default values:

/**
 * This method transforms the requested body to a json string
 */
config.requestBodyHandler = function(body) {
  if (!body) {
    return undefined
  }

  if (body instanceof FormData || body instanceof URLSearchParams) {
    return body
  }

  return body instanceof RxRestItem ? body.json() : JSON.stringify(body)
}

/**
 * This transforms the response in an Object (ie JSON.parse on the body text)
 * should return Promise<{body: any, metadata: any}>
 */
config.responseBodyHandler = function(body) {
  return body.text()
  .then(text => {
    return {body: text ? JSON.parse(text) : null, metadata: null}
  })
}

In the responseBodyHandler, you can note that we're returning an object containing:

  1. body - the javascript Object or Array that will be transformed in a RxRestItem or RxRestCollection
  2. metadata - an API request sometimes gives us metadata (for example pagination metadata), add it here to be able to retrieve item.$metadata later

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API

There are two prototypes:

  • RxRestItem
  • RxRestCollection - an iterable collection of RxRestItem

Available on both RxRestItem and RxRestCollection

one(route: string, id: any): RxRestItem

Creates an RxRestItem on the requested route.

all(route: string, asIterable: boolean = false): RxRestCollection

Creates an RxRestCollection on the requested route

Note that this allows url composition:

rxrest.all('cars').one('audi', 1).URL

> cars/audi/1

fromObject(route: string, element: Object|Object[]): RxRestItem|RxRestCollection

Depending on whether element is an Object or an Array, it returns an RxRestItem or an RxRestCollection.

For example:

const car = rxrest.fromObject('cars', {id: 1, brand: 'Volkswagen', name: 'Polo'})

> RxRestItem<Car> {id: 1, brand: 'Volkswagen', name: 'Polo'}

car.URL

> cars/1

RxRest automagically binds the id in the route, note that the identifier property is configurable.

get(queryParams?: Object|URLSearchParams, headers?: Object|Headers): Stream<RxRestItem|RxRestCollection>

Performs a GET request, for example:

rxrest.one('cars', 1).get({brand: 'Volkswagen'})
.subscribe(e => console.log(e))

GET /cars/1?brand=Volkswagen

> RxRestItem<Car> {id: 1, brand: 'Volkswagen', name: 'Polo'}

post(body?: BodyParam, queryParams?: Object|URLSearchParams, headers?: Object|Headers): Stream<RxRestItem|RxRestCollection>

Performs a POST request, for example:

const car = new Car({brand: 'Audi', name: 'A3'})
rxrest.all('cars').post(car)
.subscribe(e => console.log(e))

> RxRestItem<Car> {id: 3, brand: 'Audi', name: 'A3'}

remove(queryParams?: Object|URLSearchParams, headers?: Object|Headers): Stream<RxRestItem|RxRestCollection>

Performs a DELETE request

patch(body?: BodyParam, queryParams?: Object|URLSearchParams, headers?: Object|Headers): Stream<RxRestItem|RxRestCollection>

Performs a PATCH request

head(queryParams?: Object|URLSearchParams, headers?: Object|Headers): Stream<RxRestItem|RxRestCollection>

Performs a HEAD request

trace(queryParams?: Object|URLSearchParams, headers?: Object|Headers): Stream<RxRestItem|RxRestCollection>

Performs a TRACE request

request(method: string, body?: BodyParam): Stream<RxRestItem|RxRestCollection>

This is useful when you need to do a custom request, note that we're adding query parameters and headers

rxrest.all('cars/1/audi')
.setQueryParams({foo: 'bar'})
.setHeaders({'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'})
.request('GET')

This will do a GET request on cars/1/audi?foo=bar with a Content-Type header having a application/x-www-form-urlencoded value.

json(): string

Output a JSON string of your RxRest element.

rxrest.one('cars', 1)
.get()
.subscribe((e: RxRestItem<Car>) => console.log(e.json()))

> {id: 1, brand: 'Volkswagen', name: 'Polo'}

plain(): Object|Object[]

This gives you the original object (ie: not an instance of RxRestItem or RxRestCollection):

rxrest.one('cars', 1)
.get()
.subscribe((e: RxRestItem<Car>) => console.log(e.plain()))

> {id: 1, brand: 'Volkswagen', name: 'Polo'}

clone(): RxRestItem|RxRestCollection

Clones the current instance to a new one.

RxRestCollection

getList(): Stream<RxRestCollection>

Just a reference to Restangular ;). It's an alias to get().

RxRestItem

save(): RxRestCollection

Do a POST or a PUT request according to whether the resource came from the server or not. This is due to an internal property fromServer, which is set when parsing the request result.

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Typings

Interfaces:

import { RxRest, RxRestItem, RxRestConfig } from 'rxrest';

const config = new RxRestConfig()
config.baseURL = 'http://localhost'

interface Car {
  id: number;
  name: string;
  model: string;
}

const rxrest = new RxRest(config)

rxrest.one<Car>('/cars', 1)
.get()
.subscribe((item: Car) => {
  console.log(item.model)
  item.model = 'audi'

  item.save()
})

If you work with Hypermedia-Driven Web APIs (Hydra), you can extend a default typing for you items to avoid repetitions:

interface HydraItem<T> {
  '@id': string;
  '@context': string;
  '@type': string;
}

interface Car extends HydraItem<Car> {
  name: string;
  model: Model;
  color: string;
}

interface Model extends HydraItem<Model> {
  name: string;
}

To know more about typings and rxrest, please check out the typings example.

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Angular 2 configuration example

First, let's declare our providers:

import { Injectable, NgModule, Component, OnInit } from '@angular/core'
import { RxRest, RxRestConfiguration } from 'rxrest'

@Injectable()
export class AngularRxRestConfiguration extends RxRestConfiguration {
  constructor() {
    super()
    this.baseURL = 'localhost/api'
  }
}

@Injectable()
export class AngularRxRest extends RxRest {
  constructor(config: RxRestConfiguration) {
    super(config)
  }
}

@NgModule({
  providers: [
    {provide: RxRest, useClass: AngularRxRest},
    {provide: RxRestConfiguration, useClass: AngularRxRestConfiguration},
  ]
})
export class SomeModule {
}

Then, just inject RxRest:

export interface Car {
  name: string
}

@Component({
  template: '<ul><li *ngFor="let car of cars | async">{{car.name}}</li></ul>'
})
export class FooComponent implements OnInit {
  constructor(private rxrest: RxRest) {
  }

  ngOnInit() {
    this.cars = this.rxrest.all<Car>('cars', true).get()
  }
}

Full example featuring jwt authentication, errors handling, body parsers for JSON-LD

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Test

Testing can be done using rxrest-assert.

Licence

MIT