Server route handler for http-hash
var http = require('http');
var HttpHashRouter = require('http-hash-router');
var router = HttpHashRouter();
router.set('/health', function health(req, res) {
res.end('OK');
});
var server = http.createServer(function handler(req, res) {
router(req, res, {}, onError);
function onError(err) {
if (err) {
// use your own custom error serialization.
res.statusCode = err.statusCode || 500;
res.end(err.message);
}
}
});
server.listen(3000);
type NotFoundError : Error & {
type: "http-hash-router.not-found",
statusCode: 404
}
type Router : {
set: (pattern: String, handler: Function | Object) => void
} & (
req: HttpReqest,
res: HttpResponse,
opts: Object,
cb: Callback<NotFoundError | Error, void>
) => void
http-hash-router : () => Router
HttpHashRouter
will create a new router function.
The HttpHashRouter
itself takes no options and returns a
function that takes four arguments, req
, res
, opts
, cb
.
type NotFoundError : Error & {
type: "http-hash-router.not-found",
statusCode: 404
}
router : (
req: HttpReqest,
res: HttpResponse,
opts: Object,
cb: Callback<NotFoundError | Error, void>
) => void
- throw
http-hash-router.expected.callback
exception.
It is expected that you call the router
function with the
HTTPRequest
and HTTPResponse
as the first and second
arguments.
The third argument is the options object. The router
will
copy the options object and set the params
and splat
field.
The fourth argument is a callback function, this function
either gets called with a http-hash-router.not-found
error
or gets passed to the route handler function.
If you do not pass a callback to the router
function then
it will throw the http-hash-router.expected-callback
exception.
type RoutePattern : String
type RouteHandler : Object<method: String, RouteHandler> | (
req: HttpRequest,
res: HttpResponse,
opts: Object & {
params: Object<String, String>,
splat: String | null
},
cb: Callback<Error, void>
) => void
set : (RoutePattern, RouteHandler) => void
You can call .set()
on the router and it will internally
store your handler against the pattern.
.set()
takes a route pattern and a route handler. A route
handler is either a function or an object. If you use
an object then we will create a route handler function
using the http-methods
module.
The .set()
functionality is implemented by
http-hash
itself and you can find documentation
for it at HttpHash#set.
Your handler function will get called with four arguments.
req
the http request streamres
the http response streamopts
options object. This contains properties defined in the server and also contains theparams
andsplat
fields.cb
callback.
If your route pattern contains a param, i.e. "/foo/:bar"
or
your route pattern contains a splat, i.e. "/foo/*"
then
the values of the params and splat will be passed to the
params
and splat
field on opts
.