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hyperagent.js Build Status Coverage Status devDependency Status

hyperagent.js is a JavaScript library for consuming HAL hypermedia APIs in the browser.

Installation

Download with bower or alternatively install manually.

bower install hyperagent

Compatibility

hyperagent aims to be compatible with draft 5 of the HAL specification. As the spec is still being developed, hyperagent.js is unlikely to have a stable API until HAL itself stabilizes.

Dependencies

hyperagent.js has one hard and two soft dependencies:

  • URI.js (+ URITemplate.js)
  • A jQuery-compatible AJAX implementation (e.g jQuery, zepto, reqwest), default: jQuery
  • A Promise/A+ implementation (e.g q, RSVP.js), default: q

To use other than the default implementations, see configure below.

Demo

You can see the library in action in the live sample application and check out the source in sample/.

Plugins

hyperagent.js provides some facilities for plugins to hook into and work with data from the response object. There is currently one plugin:

Example

The following JSON response represents the entry point of https://api.example.com and shall serve as an example for using hyperclient.

{
  "_links": {
    "self": {
      "href": "/"
    },
    "curies": [
      {
        "name": "ht",
        "href": "http://haltalk.herokuapp.com/rels/{rel}",
        "templated": true
      }
    ],
    "ht:users": {
      "href": "/users"
    },
    "ht:signup": {
      "href": "/signup"
    },
    "ht:me": {
      "href": "/users/{name}",
      "templated": true
    },
    "ht:latest-posts": {
      "href": "/posts/latest"
    }
  },
  "_embedded": {
    "ht:post": [{
      "_links": {
        "self": {
          "href": "/posts/4ff8b9b52e95950002000004"
        },
        "ht:author": {
          "href": "/users/mamund",
          "title": "Mike Amundsen"
        }
      },
      "content": "having fun w/ the HAL Talk explorer",
      "created_at": "2012-07-07T22:35:33+00:00"
    }, {
      "_links": {
        "self": {
          "href": "/posts/4ff9331ee85ace0002000001"
        },
        "ht:author": {
          "href": "/users/mike",
          "title": "Mike Kelly"
        },
        "ht:in-reply-to": {
          "href": "/posts/4ff8b9b52e95950002000004"
        }
      },
      "content": "Awesome! Good too see someone figured out how to post something!! ;)",
      "created_at": "2012-07-08T07:13:34+00:00"
    }]
  },
  "welcome": "Welcome to a haltalk server.",
  "hint_1": "You need an account to post stuff..",
  "hint_2": "Create one by POSTing via the ht:signup link..",
  "hint_3": "Click the orange buttons on the right to make POST requests..",
  "hint_4": "Click the green button to follow a link with a GET request..",
  "hint_5": "Click the book icon to read docs for the link relation."
}

Instantiating

Using defaults:

var Resource = require('hyperagent').Resource;
var api = new Resource('https://api.example.com/');

api.fetch().then(function (root) {
  console.log('API root resolved:', root);
  assert(root.url() === 'https://api.example.com/');
}, function (err) {
  console.warn('Error fetching API root', err);
});

With custom connection parameters:

var Resource = require('hyperagent').Resource;
var api = new Resource({
  url: 'https://api.example.com/',
  headers: { 'Accept': 'application/vnd.example.com.hal+json' },
  username: 'foo',
  password: 'bar',
  ajax: {
    foo: 'bar'
  }
});

The options username, password, headers as well as any additional options in ajax will be passed on to the AJAX implementation. For example, the above request would call the underlying AJAX function with these parameters:

config.ajax({
  url: 'https://api.example.com/',
  headers: { 'Accept': 'application/vnd.example.com.hal+json' },
  username: 'foo',
  password: 'bar',
  foo: 'bar'
});

WARNING: Note that defining a success or error function in the ajax options hash will make Hyperagent unable to properly handle AJAX calls (Hyperagent ties into these two ajax options to resolve promises). A configuration setting these options will make it so Hyperagent resources will never properly resolve/throw errors:

var Resource = require('hyperagent').Resource;
var api = new Resource({
  url: 'https://api.example.com/',
  ajax: {
    success: function(){}, // DON'T DO THIS
    error: function(){}    // OR THIS
  }
});

Attributes

Attributes are exposed as the props object on the Resource instance:

var welcome = root.props.welcome;
var hint1 = root.props.hint_1;

assert(welcome === 'Welcome to a haltalk server.');
assert(hint1 === 'You need an account to post stuff..');

Embedded resources

Embedded ressources are exposed via the embedded attribute of the Resource object and can be accessed either via the expanded URI or their currie. Resources are Resource instances of their own.

assert(root.embedded['ht:post'][0].props.content ===
       'having fun w/ the HAL Talk explorer');

root.embedded['ht:post'][1].links['ht:in-reply-to'].fetch().then(function (post) {
  console.log('User replying to comment #2:', post.links['ht:author'].props.title);
})

Sub-resources like embedded or links are also enumerable, so you can use them like this:

var contents = root.embedded['ht:post'].map(function (post) {
  return post.props.content;
});
assert(contents[0], 'having fun w/ the HAL Talk explorer');
assert(contents[1], 'Awesome! Good too see someone figured out how to post something!! ;)');

Links

Links are exposed through the links attribute and are either Resource instances or a list of instances.

Using standalone links:

assert(root.links.self.url() === root.url());

// Access via currie ht:users
root.links['ht:users'].fetch().then(function (users) {
  // Access via expanded URI
  return users.links['http://haltalk.herokuapp.com/rels/user'][0].fetch();
}).then(function (user) {
  console.log('First user name: ', user.props.title);
});

To use RFC6570 templated links, you can provide additional options to the link function:

root.link('ht:me', { name: 'mike' }).fetch().then(function (user) {
  assert(user.props.username === 'mike');
});

Using the url() accessor, you can get the absolute URL of the resource you are accessing:

var url = root.links['ht:signup'].url();
assert(url === 'http://haltalk.herokuapp.com/signup');

By default, fetch() only requests the resource once from the server and directly returns a promise on the cached result on successive calls. If you want to force a refresh from the server, you can set the force flag in an options object:

root.links['ht:users'].fetch().then(...);

// Enforce a refresh.
root.links['ht:users'].fetch({ force: true }).then(...);

If you want to pass in custom options to the AJAX call, you can specify them via the ajax option:

root.links['ht:users'].fetch({ ajax: { headers: { 'X-Awesome': '1337' } } }).then(...);

Curies

Curies are supported in that you can access links, properties and embedded resources either with their short form or the expanded link, which means the following two statements are equivalent:

var link1 = root.links['ht:signup'];
var link2 = root.links['http://haltalk.herokuapp.com/rels/signup'];

assert.deepEqual(link1, link2);

API

configure

Hyperagent depends on an AJAX and a Promise/A+ implementation, which are replaceable as long as they implement the common interface. The default implementations are:

  • ajax -- window.$.ajax
  • defer -- window.Q.defer
  • _ -- Hyperagent.miniscore (based on underscore.js)

You can use the configure function to override those defaults:

Hyperagent.configure('ajax', reqwest);
Hyperagent.configure('defer', RSVP.Promise);
Hyperagent.configure('_', lodash);

Resource#url()

Returns the URL of where the resource was or is about to be fetched from. This value is always an absolute, normalized URL in contrast to the value of links.self.href.

Resource#fetch([options])

Loads the document from the URL provided and enabled the access via props, links, and embedded. Returns a chainable promise.

(new Resource('http://example.com/')).fetch().then(function (api) {
  console.log('href: ', api.links.self.props.href);
});

The optional options object can have these keys:

  • force: defaults to false, overrides the internal cache
  • ajax: overrides Resource-level AJAX options

Resource#loaded

A boolean indicating whether the resource has been completely loaded or is potentially incomplete. Resources retrieved via fetched() and embedded resources are considered as fully loaded.

Resource#links

An object, containing links with their rel as key. Links are resources, lazily created on access or arrays of links.

Resource#link(rel[, params])

Creates a new link resource identified by the given rel and expands the link template if params are provided. For non-templated links, those too calls are equivalent:

assert.deepEqual(api.links.self, api.link('self'));

Calling with parameters:

// Given a `me` URI template of `http://example.com/users/{username}`
var link = api.link('me', { username: 'sindresorhus' });
assert(link.url() === 'http://example.com/users/sindresorhus');

Resource#embedded

An object containing all embedded resource, created lazily on access.

Resources#props

An object containing all properties on the current resource. This includes all properties of the resource, except _links and _embedded.

Resource#related(rel[, params])

Navigates the link identified by the given rel regardless of whether it is in the _embedded or _links section. If params are given they are used to expand the URI template. This allows consumers of this API to be indifferent to which section of the HAL document contains the link.

// Given a set embedded or normal `post` links
var posts = api.related('post');
assert(posts[0].url() === 'http://example.com/posts/4ff8b9b52e95950002000004');

Calling with parameters:

// Given a `me` URI template of `http://example.com/users/{username}`
var me = api.related('me', { username: 'sindresorhus' });
assert(me.url() === 'http://example.com/users/sindresorhus');

Resource.resolveUrl(oldUrl, newUrl)

Combines an old with a new URL:

var res = Hyperagent.Resource.resolveUrl('http://example.com/foo', '/bar');
assert.equal(res, 'http://example.com/bar');

Contributing

Please follow the existing code style and the commit message style from conventional changelog.

FAQ

Promises?

For now, hyperagent only supports a promise-based callback mechanism, because I believe that working with Hypermedia APIs inherently leads to deeply nested code using the standard callback-based approach. Promises, however, solve this beautifully by providing chaining mechanisms to flatten those calls.

It is not impossible though, that hyperagent will eventually get an alternative callback-based API.

License

Licensed under MIT