b25e79dfb5
Reviewed by @tolmasky.
231 lines
7.4 KiB
Markdown
231 lines
7.4 KiB
Markdown
# Installation
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Koa requires __node v7.6.0__ or higher for ES2015 and async function support.
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You can quickly install a supported version of node with your favorite version manager:
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```bash
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$ nvm install 7
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$ npm i koa
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$ node my-koa-app.js
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```
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## Async Functions with Babel
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To use `async` functions in Koa in versions of node < 7.6, we recommend using [babel's require hook](http://babeljs.io/docs/usage/babel-register/).
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```js
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require('babel-register');
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// require the rest of the app that needs to be transpiled after the hook
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const app = require('./app');
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```
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To parse and transpile async functions,
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you should at a minimum have the [transform-async-to-generator](http://babeljs.io/docs/plugins/transform-async-to-generator/)
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or [transform-async-to-module-method](http://babeljs.io/docs/plugins/transform-async-to-module-method/) plugins.
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For example, in your `.babelrc` file, you should have:
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```json
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{
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"plugins": ["transform-async-to-generator"]
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}
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```
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You can also use the [env preset](http://babeljs.io/docs/plugins/preset-env/) with a target option `"node": "current"` instead.
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# Application
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A Koa application is an object containing an array of middleware functions
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which are composed and executed in a stack-like manner upon request. Koa is similar to many
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other middleware systems that you may have encountered such as Ruby's Rack, Connect, and so on -
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however a key design decision was made to provide high level "sugar" at the otherwise low-level
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middleware layer. This improves interoperability, robustness, and makes writing middleware much
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more enjoyable.
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This includes methods for common tasks like content-negotiation, cache freshness, proxy support, and redirection
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among others. Despite supplying a reasonably large number of helpful methods Koa maintains a small footprint, as
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no middleware are bundled.
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The obligatory hello world application:
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<!-- runkit:endpoint -->
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```js
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const Koa = require('koa');
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const app = new Koa();
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app.use(async ctx => {
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ctx.body = 'Hello World';
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});
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app.listen(3000);
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```
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## Cascading
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Koa middleware cascade in a more traditional way as you may be used to with similar tools -
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this was previously difficult to make user friendly with node's use of callbacks.
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However with async functions we can achieve "true" middleware. Contrasting Connect's implementation which
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simply passes control through series of functions until one returns, Koa invoke "downstream", then
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control flows back "upstream".
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The following example responds with "Hello World", however first the request flows through
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the `x-response-time` and `logging` middleware to mark when the request started, then continue
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to yield control through the response middleware. When a middleware invokes `next()`
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the function suspends and passes control to the next middleware defined. After there are no more
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middleware to execute downstream, the stack will unwind and each middleware is resumed to perform
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its upstream behaviour.
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<!-- runkit:endpoint -->
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```js
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const Koa = require('koa');
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const app = new Koa();
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// logger
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app.use(async (ctx, next) => {
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await next();
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const rt = ctx.response.get('X-Response-Time');
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console.log(`${ctx.method} ${ctx.url} - ${rt}`);
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});
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// x-response-time
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app.use(async (ctx, next) => {
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const start = Date.now();
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await next();
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const ms = Date.now() - start;
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ctx.set('X-Response-Time', `${ms}ms`);
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});
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// response
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app.use(async ctx => {
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ctx.body = 'Hello World';
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});
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app.listen(3000);
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```
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## Settings
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Application settings are properties on the `app` instance, currently
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the following are supported:
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- `app.env` defaulting to the __NODE_ENV__ or "development"
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- `app.proxy` when true proxy header fields will be trusted
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- `app.subdomainOffset` offset of `.subdomains` to ignore [2]
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## app.listen(...)
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A Koa application is not a 1-to-1 representation of an HTTP server.
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One or more Koa applications may be mounted together to form larger
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applications with a single HTTP server.
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Create and return an HTTP server, passing the given arguments to
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`Server#listen()`. These arguments are documented on [nodejs.org](http://nodejs.org/api/http.html#http_server_listen_port_hostname_backlog_callback). The following is a useless Koa application bound to port `3000`:
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```js
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const Koa = require('koa');
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const app = new Koa();
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app.listen(3000);
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```
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The `app.listen(...)` method is simply sugar for the following:
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```js
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const http = require('http');
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const Koa = require('koa');
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const app = new Koa();
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http.createServer(app.callback()).listen(3000);
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```
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This means you can spin up the same application as both HTTP and HTTPS
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or on multiple addresses:
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```js
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const http = require('http');
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const https = require('https');
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const Koa = require('koa');
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const app = new Koa();
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http.createServer(app.callback()).listen(3000);
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https.createServer(app.callback()).listen(3001);
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```
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## app.callback()
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Return a callback function suitable for the `http.createServer()`
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method to handle a request.
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You may also use this callback function to mount your Koa app in a
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Connect/Express app.
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## app.use(function)
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Add the given middleware function to this application. See [Middleware](https://github.com/koajs/koa/wiki#middleware) for
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more information.
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## app.keys=
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Set signed cookie keys.
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These are passed to [KeyGrip](https://github.com/jed/keygrip),
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however you may also pass your own `KeyGrip` instance. For
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example the following are acceptable:
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```js
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app.keys = ['im a newer secret', 'i like turtle'];
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app.keys = new KeyGrip(['im a newer secret', 'i like turtle'], 'sha256');
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```
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These keys may be rotated and are used when signing cookies
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with the `{ signed: true }` option:
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```js
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ctx.cookies.set('name', 'tobi', { signed: true });
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```
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## app.context
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`app.context` is the prototype from which `ctx` is created.
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You may add additional properties to `ctx` by editing `app.context`.
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This is useful for adding properties or methods to `ctx` to be used across your entire app,
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which may be more performant (no middleware) and/or easier (fewer `require()`s)
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at the expense of relying more on `ctx`, which could be considered an anti-pattern.
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For example, to add a reference to your database from `ctx`:
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```js
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app.context.db = db();
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app.use(async ctx => {
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console.log(ctx.db);
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});
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```
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Note:
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- Many properties on `ctx` are defined using getters, setters, and `Object.defineProperty()`. You can only edit these properties (not recommended) by using `Object.defineProperty()` on `app.context`. See https://github.com/koajs/koa/issues/652.
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- Mounted apps currently use their parent's `ctx` and settings. Thus, mounted apps are really just groups of middleware.
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## Error Handling
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By default outputs all errors to stderr unless `app.silent` is `true`.
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The default error handler also won't output errors when `err.status` is `404` or `err.expose` is `true`.
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To perform custom error-handling logic such as centralized logging you can add an "error" event listener:
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```js
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app.on('error', err => {
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log.error('server error', err)
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});
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```
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If an error is in the req/res cycle and it is _not_ possible to respond to the client, the `Context` instance is also passed:
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```js
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app.on('error', (err, ctx) => {
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log.error('server error', err, ctx)
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});
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```
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When an error occurs _and_ it is still possible to respond to the client, aka no data has been written to the socket, Koa will respond
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appropriately with a 500 "Internal Server Error". In either case
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an app-level "error" is emitted for logging purposes.
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