Expressive middleware for node.js using ES2017 async functions, now with less dependancies
Find a file
TJ Holowaychuk 242ec58f9d docs
2013-11-12 15:13:24 -07:00
benchmarks fix benchmarks for wrk(1) 3.x 2013-11-12 13:15:54 -07:00
docs update guide docs for new middleware style 2013-11-10 15:40:59 -07:00
examples add hello-world example 2013-11-10 16:09:27 -07:00
lib ctx.redirect(): only set status code if not already a valid redirect status code 2013-11-08 16:25:03 -08:00
test ctx.redirect(): only set status code if not already a valid redirect status code 2013-11-08 16:25:03 -08:00
.gitignore Initial commit 2013-08-17 00:15:57 -07:00
.npmignore Initial commit 2013-08-17 00:15:57 -07:00
.travis.yml add .travis.yml. Closes #1 2013-08-20 21:34:35 -07:00
index.js Initial commit 2013-08-17 00:15:57 -07:00
LICENSE fix license date 2013-08-17 01:06:48 -07:00
Makefile Initial commit 2013-08-17 00:15:57 -07:00
package.json update co for object yielding 2013-11-12 13:44:49 -07:00
Readme.md docs 2013-11-12 15:13:24 -07:00

koa middleware framework for nodejs

Build Status

Expressive middleware for node.js using generators via co to make writing web applications and REST APIs more enjoyable to write.

Only methods that are common to nearly all HTTP servers are integrated directly into Koa's small ~400 SLOC codebase. This includes things like content-negotiation, normalization of node inconsistencies, redirection, and a few others.

No middleware are bundled with koa. If you prefer to only define a single dependency for common middleware, much like Connect, you may use koa-common.

Installation

$ npm install koa

To use Koa you must be running node 0.11.4 or higher for generator support, and must run node(1) with the --harmony-generators flag. If you don't like typing this, add an alias to your shell profile:

alias node='node --harmony-generators'

Community

Example

var koa = require('koa');
var app = koa();

// logger

app.use(function *(next){
  var start = new Date;
  yield next;
  var ms = new Date - start;
  console.log('%s %s - %s', this.method, this.url, ms);
});

// response

app.use(function *(){
  this.body = 'Hello World';
});

app.listen(3000);

Running tests

$ make test

Benchmarks

If you like silly benchmarks, here's the requests per second using wrk 3.x on my MBP.

1 middleware
8367.03

5 middleware
8074.10

10 middleware
7526.55

15 middleware
7399.92

20 middleware
7055.33

30 middleware
6460.17

50 middleware
5671.98

100 middleware
4349.37

With 50 middleware (likely much more than you'll need), that's 340,260 requests per minute, and 20,415,600 per hour, and over 440 million per day, so unless you're a facebook and can't manage to spin up more than one process to scale horizontally you'll be fine ;)

Authors

License

MIT