Micro — Async ES6 HTTP microservices
- Easy. Designed for usage with
asyncandawait(more) - Fast. Ultra-high performance (even JSON parsing is opt-in).
- Micro. The whole project is ~100 lines of code.
- Agile. Super easy deployment and containerization.
- Simple. Oriented for single purpose modules (function).
- Explicit. No middleware. Modules declare all dependencies.
- Standard. Just HTTP!
- Lightweight. The package is small and the
asynctranspilation fast and transparent
The following example sleep.js will wait before responding (without blocking!)
const { send } = require('micro');
const sleep = require('then-sleep');
module.exports = async function (req, res) {
await sleep(500);
send(res, 200, 'Ready!');
}To run the microservice on port 3000, use the micro command:
$ micro -p 3000 sleep.jsTo run the microservice on port 3000 and localhost instead of listening on every interface, use the micro command:
$ micro -p 3000 -H localhost sleep.jsNote: micro requires Node 6.0.0 or later
Install from NPM:
$ npm init
$ npm install micro --saveThen in your package.json:
"main": "index.js",
"scripts": {
"start": "micro -p 3000"
}Then write your index.js (see above for an example). To run your
app and make it listen on http://localhost:3000 run:
$ npm startmicro(fn)
-
This function is exposed as the
defaultexport. -
Use
require('micro'). -
Returns a
http.Serverthat uses the providedfnas the request handler. -
The supplied function is run with
await. It can beasync! -
Example:
const micro = require('micro'); const sleep = require('then-sleep'); const srv = micro(async function (req, res) { await sleep(500); res.writeHead(200); res.end('woot'); }); srv.listen(3000);
json(req, { limit = '1mb' })
-
Use
require('micro').json. -
Buffers and parses the incoming body and returns it.
-
Exposes an
asyncfunction that can be run withawait. -
limitis how much data is aggregated before parsing at max. Otherwise, anErroris thrown withstatusCodeset to413(see Error Handling). It can be aNumberof bytes or a string like'1mb'. -
If JSON parsing fails, an
Erroris thrown withstatusCodeset to400(see Error Handling) -
Example:
const { json, send } = require('micro'); module.exports = async function (req, res) { const data = await json(req); console.log(data.price); send(res, 200); }
send(res, statusCode, data = null)
-
Use
require('micro').send. -
statusCodeis aNumberwith the HTTP error code, and must always be supplied. -
If
datais supplied it is sent in the response. Different input types are processed appropriately, andContent-TypeandContent-Lengthare automatically set.Stream:datais piped as anoctet-stream. Note: it is your responsibility to handle theerrorevent in this case (usually, simply logging the error and aborting the response is enough).Buffer:datais written as anoctet-stream.object:datais serialized as JSON.string:datais written as-is.
-
If JSON serialization fails (for example, if a cyclical reference is found), a
400error is thrown. See Error Handling. -
Example
const { send } = require('micro') module.exports = async function (req, res) { send(res, 400, { error: 'Please use a valid email' }); }
return val;
-
Returning
valfrom your function is shorthand for:send(res, 200, val). -
Example
module.exports = function (req, res) { return {message: 'Hello!'}; }
-
Returning a promise works as well!
-
Example
const sleep = require('then-sleep') module.exports = async function (req, res) { return new Promise(async (resolve) => { await sleep(100); resolve('I Promised'); }); }
sendError(req, res, error)
- Use
require('micro').sendError. - Used as the default handler for errors thrown.
- Automatically sets the status code of the response based on
error.statusCode. - Sends the
error.messageas the body. - During development (when
NODE_ENVis set to'development'), stacks are printed out withconsole.errorand also sent in responses. - Usually, you don't need to invoke this method yourself, as you can use the built-in error handling flow with
throw.
createError(code, msg, orig)
- Use
require('micro').createError. - Creates an error object with a
statusCode. - Useful for easily throwing errors with HTTP status codes, which are interpreted by the built-in error handling.
origsetserror.originalErrorwhich identifies the original error (if any).
Micro allows you to write robust microservices. This is accomplished primarily by bringing sanity back to error handling and avoiding callback soup.
If an error is thrown and not caught by you, the response will automatically be 500. Important: during development mode (if the env variable NODE_ENV is 'development'), error stacks will be printed as console.error and included in the responses.
If the Error object that's thrown contains a statusCode property, that's used as the HTTP code to be sent. Let's say you want to write a rate limiting module:
const rateLimit = require('my-rate-limit')
module.exports = async function (req, res) {
await rateLimit(req);
// … your code
}If the API endpoint is abused, it can throw an error like so:
if (tooMany) {
const err = new Error('Rate limit exceeded');
err.statusCode = 429;
throw err;
}Alternatively you can use createError as described above.
if (tooMany) {
throw createError(429, 'Rate limit exceeded')
}The nice thing about this model is that the statusCode is merely a suggestion. The user can override it:
try {
await rateLimit(req);
} catch (err) {
if (429 == err.statusCode) {
// perhaps send 500 instead?
send(res, 500);
}
}If the error is based on another error that Micro caught, like a JSON.parse exception, then originalError will point to it.
If a generic error is caught, the status will be set to 500.
In order to set up your own error handling mechanism, you can use composition in your handler:
module.exports = handleErrors(async (req, res) => {
throw new Error('What happened here?');
});
function handleErrors (fn) {
return async function (req, res) {
try {
return await fn(req, res);
} catch (err) {
console.log(err.stack);
send(res, 500, 'My custom error!');
}
}
}Micro makes tests compact and a pleasure to read and write. We recommend ava, a highly parallel micro test framework with built-in support for async tests:
const test = require('ava');
const listen = require('./listen');
const send = require('micro').send;
const request = require('request-promise');
test('my endpoint', async t => {
const fn = async function (req, res) {
send(res, 200, { test: 'woot' });
};
const url = await listen(fn);
const body = await request(url);
t.same(body.test, 'woot');
});Look at the test-listen for a function that returns a URL with an ephemeral port every time it's called.
We now use async-to-gen,
so that the only transformation that happens is converting async
and await to generators.
If you want to do it manually, you can! micro(1) is idempotent and
should not interfere.
micro exclusively supports Node 6+ to avoid a big transpilation
pipeline. async-to-gen is fast and can be distributed with
the main micro package due to its small size.
You can use the micro CLI for npm start:
{
"name": "my-microservice",
"dependencies": {
"micro": "x.y.z"
},
"main": "microservice.js",
"scripts": {
"start": "micro -p 3000"
}
}Then simply run npm start!
- Fork this repository to your own GitHub account and then clone it to your local device
- Link the package to the global module directory:
npm link - Transpile the source code and watch for changes:
npm start - Within the module you want to test your local development instance of micro, just link it to the dependencies:
npm link micro. Instead of the default one from npm, node will now use your clone of micro!
Thanks Tom Yandell and Richard Hodgson for donating the micro npm name.