Git Product home page Git Product logo

node-http-cache's Introduction

Cash

(WARNING: This is probably abandonware. I may pick the project back up, but I can't say for certain, or say when).

A HTTP Caching Proxy Using Node.js

This is a NPM module for Node.js, to add real HTTP caching (as if it were a standalone cache, like Squid or Varnish) to any Node application. It watches incoming requests and outgoing responses and intervenes where needed.

Primarily this is intended to be used in conjunction with something like node-http-proxy, which provides a powerful HTTP proxy without any caching. You may use node-http-cache to add HTTP caching to any Node.js application, however.

The storage implementation itself is abstract, which means you can add your own, or use a mix of the built-in ones (file-based and/or memory based).

The API is designed to be simple, yet powerful, so that rather than learning several hundred obscure configuration options, you can just write filters that instruct the cache how to behaves under specific scenarios. The defaults are RFC 2616 compliant.

Why?

I work for Flippa.com (born from SitePoint.com). We currently use Varnish as a caching proxy and a HTTP router, to serve between three different backends transparently. Varnish is awesome, except when it's not. The more complex our caching needs become, the more 'dity hacks' we're having to add to our Varnish configuration. Node.js lends itself to lightweight gateway services, so I wanted to explore a solution that gives us everything Varnish does and more. You can already do load-balancing, proxying and SSL unwrapping in Node.js. Decent caching is the missing piece of the puzzle. I mean HTTP caching, not a generic cache with get/set methods.

Work in Progress

This project is not ready for public use. It is still in development and currently just in the code-spike stage of development. The general sense of the shape of the API is coming together, however, so I imagine that real work will begin very soon. Here's an outside perspective of the way it will feel.

Used in place of http.createServer()

var httpCache = require('http-cache')
  , storage = new httpCache.storage.FileStorage({some: 'options'})
  ;

// the the handler function will only be invoked every 600 seconds, as the
// storage will provide the response for 600 seonds at a time
httpCache.createServer(function(req, res) {
  res.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/plain; charset=utf-8',
                      'Cache-Control: max-age=600, public'});
  res.write('This response was generated at ' + new Date());
  res.end();
}, storage).listen(8080);

Used to wrap an existing http.Server

Anything that responds to a 'request' event with the request and response objects as callback arguments can be wrapped with the cache. This looks just like the first example, except that the argument to httpCache.createServer() is another server. You must call listen() on the http-cache instance, not on the actual server, however.

var httpCache = require('http-cache')
  , http      = require('http')
  , storage = new httpCache.storage.FileStorage({some: 'options'})
  ;

// the the handler function will only be invoked every 600 seconds, as the
// storage will provide the response for 600 seonds at a time
var server = http.createServer(function(req, res) {
  res.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/plain; charset=utf-8',
                      'Cache-Control: max-age=600, public'});
  res.write('This response was generated at ' + new Date());
  res.end();
});

httpCache.createServer(server, storage).listen(8080);

Used In conjunction with http-proxy

The http-proxy module provides a http.Server, so the above example works if you replace server with the proxy.

This will proxy all requests to http://localhost:9000/ and cache the responses from the proxy.

var httpCache = require('http-cache')
  , httpProxy = require('http-proxy')
  , storage = new httpCache.storage.FileStorage({some: 'options'})
  ;

httpCache.createServer(
  httpProxy.createServer(9000, 'localhost'),
  storage
).listen(8080);

Used from inside another server

If you don't want the cache to listen for you, and prefer to integrate it yourself, this is easily achieved by using storage.handleRequest() from inside any other server. You get a lot of flexibility here, since you can conditionally use the cache.

var httpCache = require('http-cache')
  , http      = require('http')
  , storage = new httpCache.storage.FileStorage({some: 'options'})
  ;

// the the handler function will only be invoked every 600 seconds, as the
// storage will provide the response for 600 seonds at a time
http.createServer(function(req, res) {
  if (storage.handleRequest(req, res)) {
    return; // cache intercepted the request
  }

  res.writeHead(200, {'Content-Type': 'text/plain; charset=utf-8',
                      'Cache-Control: max-age=600, public'});
  res.write('This response was generated at ' + new Date());
  res.end();
}).listen(8080);

Fine-grained control using events

Cache storages in http-cache are EventEmitters. Before decisions are made about whether or not to perform caching, events are emitted allowing you to change the default behaviour.

Here's an example of a classic problem—ignoring cookies. Ordinarily, a well-reasoned cache will not cache any response if the request contains a Cookie header, or if the response contains a Set-Cookie header. In Varnish, you actually need to modify the request and the response, which can have undesirable side-effects. With http-cache, the data used to do the decision making is distinct from the request and response objects themselves. While you have access to the request and the response—and you are free to modify them—the actual decision is based on an evaluation context passed in the emitted events.

In order to store a response in the cache storage, two things must be set true

  1. The request evaluator must be flagged as storable = true
  2. Likewise, the response evaluator must be flagged storable = true

In order to serve an existing cached response, just one thing must be true

  1. The request evaluator must be flagged as retrievable = true

Leaving any of these flags undefined allows the cache to follow its default, RFC 2616-compliant behaviour. Note that even if a request evaluator is flagged retrievable, the cache may still need to talk to the origin server, if no data has yet been cached.

Here we get the cache to ignore cookies, but don't screw around with the actual cookie headers.

/*
 If we remove the cookie headers, the cache won't consider them.
 Note that the request and response sent to/from the browser remain unchanged.
 */

storage.on('request', function(req, res, evaluator) {
  delete evaluator.headers['cookie'];
});

storage.on('response', function(req, res, evaluator) {
  delete evaluator.headers['set-cookie'];
});

You may also expressly force or deny caching by setting evaluator.storable to true or false. Unless you are certain, you should not set this manually, however, since it is final and conclusive—the cache won't make it's own decision if you decide for it.

Let's say that if you're browsing from a particular IP address the cache should be completely disabled.

/*
 We create a closure here only for convenience, if we wanted to add other IPs.
 Of course, you could just write the callbacks by hand.
 */

function disableFor(ip) {
  return function(req, res, evaluator) {
    if (req.connection.remoteAddress == ip) {
      evaluator.flagStorable(false);
      evaluator.flagRetrievable(false);
    }
  };
}

storage.on('request', disableFor(officeIp));

In the above example, since the cache determines as not-storable result as soon as the request comes in, the response is not even checked for cacheability.

This is one of the selling points of a caching proxy written in Node.js—flexibility. Writing things like this in configuration files with custom formats gets twisty very quickly.

License & Copyright

Licensed under the MIT license. Please refer to the LICENSE file for details.

node-http-cache's People

Contributors

d11wtq avatar

Watchers

 avatar  avatar  avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    🖖 Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. 📊📈🎉

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google ❤️ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.