podium-lib / client

Client for fetching Podium component fragments over HTTP.
MIT License
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@podium/client v5

Client for fetching podium component fragments over HTTP.

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This module is intended for internal use in Podium and is not a module an end user would use directly. End users will typically interact with this module through higher level modules such as the @podium/layout.

Installation

$ npm install @podium/client

Simple stream usage

Connect to a Podium component server and stream the HTML content:

import { HttpIncoming } from '@podium/utils';
import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

const component = client.register({
    name: 'foo',
    uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json',
});

const stream = component.stream(new HttpIncoming());
stream.once('beforeStream', (res) => {
    console.log(res.headers);
    console.log(res.css);
    console.log(res.js);
});
stream.on('error', (error) => {
    console.log(error);
});
stream.pipe(process.stdout);

Simple fetch usage

Connect to a podium component server and fetch the HTML content:

import { HttpIncoming } from '@podium/utils';
import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

const component = client.register({
    name: 'foo',
    uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json',
});

component
    .fetch(new HttpIncoming())
    .then((res) => {
        console.log(res.content);
        console.log(res.headers);
        console.log(res.css);
        console.log(res.js);
    })
    .catch((error) => {
        console.log(error);
    });

Constructor

Create a new Client instance.

import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client(options);

The client instance is iterable and holds a reference to each registered resource.

import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

client.register({ uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json', name: 'fooBar' });
client.register({ uri: 'http://bar.site.com/manifest.json', name: 'barFoo' });

for (let resource of client) {
    resource.fetch();
}

options (optional)

An options object containing configuration. The following values can be provided:

API

The Client instance has the following API:

.register(options)

Registers a component.

Example:

import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

const component = client.register({
    uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json',
    name: 'fooBar',
});

Returns a Resource Object.

The created Resource Object is also stored on the instance of the client. It is stored with the name as its property name.

Example:

import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

client.register({ uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json', name: 'fooBar' });
client.fooBar.fetch();

options (required)

The following values can be provided:

excludeBy and includeBy

These options are used by fetch to conditionally skip fetching the podlet content based on values on the request. It's an alternative to conditionally fetching podlets in your request handler. Setting both at the same time will throw.

Allowed options:

Example: exclude a header and footer in a hybrid web view.

import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

const footer = client.register({
    uri: 'http://footer.site.com/manifest.json',
    name: 'footer',
    excludeBy: {
        deviceType: ['hybrid-ios', 'hybrid-android'], // when footer.fetch(incoming) is called, if the incoming request has the header `x-podium-device-type: hybrid-ios`, `fetch` will return an empty response.
    },
});

.js()

Retrieve list of all JavaScript references from all registered and fetched components.

import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

const foo = client.register({
    uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json',
    name: 'foo',
});
const bar = client.register({
    uri: 'http://bar.site.com/manifest.json',
    name: 'bar',
});

await Promise.all([foo.fetch(), bar.fetch()]);

client.js(); // Array of js entries

.css()

Retrieve a list of all CSS references from all registered and fetched components.

import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

const foo = client.register({
    uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json',
    name: 'foo',
});
const bar = client.register({
    uri: 'http://bar.site.com/manifest.json',
    name: 'bar',
});

await Promise.all([foo.fetch(), bar.fetch()]);

client.css(); // Array of css entries

.refresh()

This method will refresh a resource by reading its manifest and fallback if defined in the manifest. The method will not call the URI to the content of a component.

If the internal cache in the client already has a manifest cached, this will be thrown away and replaced when the new manifest is successfully fetched. If a new manifest cannot be successfully fetched, the old manifest will be kept in cache.

If a manifest is successfully fetched, this method will resolve with a true value. If a manifest is not successfully fetched, it will resolve with false.

import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

client.register({ uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json', name: 'foo' });

console.log(client.js()); // []

const status = await client.refresh();

console.log(status); // true
console.log(client.js()); // ['foo.js', 'bar.js']

.refreshManifests()

Refreshes the manifests of all registered resources. Does so by calling the .refresh() method on all resources under the hood.

import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

client.register({ uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json', name: 'foo' });
client.register({ uri: 'http://bar.site.com/manifest.json', name: 'bar' });

console.log(client.js()); // []
console.log(client.css()); // []

await client.refreshManifests();

console.log(client.js()); // ['foo.js', 'bar.js']
console.log(client.css()); // ['foo.css', 'bar.css']

.dump()

Returns an Array of all loaded manifests ready to be used by .load().

.load()

Loads an Array of manifests, provided by .dump(), into the client. If any of the items in the loaded Array contains a key which is already in the cache the entry in the cache will be overwritten.

If any of the entries in the loaded Array are not compatible with the format which .dump() exports, they will not be inserted into the cache.

Returns an Array with the keys which were inserted into the cache.

Properties

The Client instance has the following properties:

.metrics

Property that exposes a metric stream. This stream joins all internal metrics streams into one stream resulting in all metrics from all sub modules being exposed here.

Please see @metrics/metric for full documentation.

.state

What state the client is in. See the section "Podlet update life cycle" for more information.

The event will fire with the following value:

Events

The Client instance emits the following events:

state

When there is a change in state. See the section "Podlet update life cycle" for more information.

const client = new Client();
client.on('state', (state) => {
    console.log(state);
});

const resource = client.register({
    uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json',
    name: 'foo',
});

resource.fetch();

The event will fire with the following value:

change (deprecated)

When there is a change in version number between the cached manifest held by the client and the manifest on the remote source.

The event will fire after a new version of the manifest on the remote source is fetched.

Emits the new manifest.

const client = new Client();
client.on('change', (manifest) => {
    console.log(manifest);
});

const resource = client.register({
    uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json',
    name: 'foo',
});

Podium Resource Object

A registered Podium component is stored in a Podium Resource Object.

The Podium Resource Object contains methods for retrieving the content of a Podium component. The URI to the content of a component is defined in the component's manifest. This is the content root of the component.

A Podium Resource Object has the following API:

.fetch(incoming, options)

Fetches the content of the component. Returns a Promise which resolves with a Response object containing the keys content, headers, css and js.

incoming (required)

A HttpIncoming object. See https://github.com/podium-lib/utils/blob/main/lib/http-incoming.js

options (optional)

An options object containing configuration. The following values can be provided:

return value

const result = await component.fetch();
console.log(result.content);
console.log(result.js);
console.log(result.css);

.stream(incoming, options)

Streams the content of the component. Returns a ReadableStream which streams the content of the component. Before the stream starts flowing a beforeStream with a Response object, containing headers, css and js references is emitted.

Note: If the podlet is unavailable, the client will not receive headers and therefore will not set headers on the response.

incoming (required)

A HttpIncoming object. See https://github.com/podium-lib/utils/blob/main/lib/http-incoming.js

options (optional)

An options object containing configuration. The following values can be provided:

.name

A property returning the name of the podium resource. This is the name provided during the call to register.

.uri

A property returning the location of the podium resource.

Events

beforeStream

A beforeStream event is emitted before the stream starts flowing. An response object with keys headers, js and css is emitted with the event.

headers will always contain the response headers from the podlet. If the resource manifest defines JavaScript assets, js will contain the value from the manifest file otherwise js will be an empty string. If the resource manifest defines CSS assets, css will contain the value from the manifest file otherwise css will be an empty string.

const stream = component.stream();
stream.once('beforeStream', (data) => {
    console.log(data.headers);
    console.log(data.css);
    console.log(data.js);
});

Note: If the podlet is unavailable, the client will not receive headers and therefore data.headers will be undefined.

Asset Scope

Both the .fetch() method and the .stream() method give you access to podlet asset objects and these CSS and JS asset objects will be filtered if the asset objects contain a scope property and that scope property matches the current response type (either content or fallback).

For example, if the podlet manifest contains a JavaScript asset definition of the form:

{
    js: [{ value: "https://assets.com/path/to/file.js", scope: "content" }],
}

And the client performs a fetch like so:

const result = await component.fetch();

Then, if the podlet successfully responds from its content route, the result.js property will contain the asset defined above. If, however, the podlet's content route errors and the client is forced to use the podlet's fallback content, then result.js property will be an empty array.

Possible scope values are content, fallback and all. For backwards compatibility reasons, when assets do not provide a scope property, they will always be included in both content and fallback responses.

Controlling caching of the manifest

The client has an internal cache where it keeps a cached version of the manifest for each registered Podium component.

By default all manifests are cached for 24 hours unless a new version of the manifest is detected by a change in the podlet-version HTTP header on the content URI. When this happens, the cache is thrown away and the fresh version of the manifest is cached.

The default length of time the manifest is cached for can be configured by setting maxAge in the constructor of the client.

const client = new Client({ maxAge: 1000 * 60 * 60 * 4 });

It is also possible to control how long a manifest should be cached in the client from a Podium component. This is done by setting a RFC 7234 compatible HTTP header on the manifest on the server serving the Podium component.

Example: This will cache the manifest for 1 hour:

const app = express();
app.get('/manifest.json', (req, res) => {
    res.setHeader('cache-control', 'public, max-age=3600');
    res.status(200).json({
        name: 'foo',
        content: '/index.html',
    });
});

Defining a component as throwable

By default the client will never throw if something fails in the process of retreiving the manifest, the fallback or the content itself. It will simply provide a fallback if it has one or an empty String for the resource in an error situation.

There are however, cases where throwing an error is more appropriate. This can be achieved by setting the option throwable to true in the .register() method. If an error is thrown in the process of retrieving the manifest, the fallback or the content then it can then be acted upon.

Example:

import Client from '@podium/client';
const client = new Client();

const foo = client.register({
    name: 'foo',
    uri: 'http://foo.site.com/manifest.json',
});

const bar = client.register({
    name: 'bar',
    uri: 'http://bar.site.com/manifest.json',
    throwable: true,
});

Promise.all([foo.fetch(), bar.fetch()])
    .then((res) => {
        console.log(res.content);
    })
    .catch((error) => {
        console.log(error);
    });

In this example, the catch will be triggered if bar encounters an error in the process of retrieving content from the remote. If the same happens with foo the catch will NOT be triggered.

When a resource is flagged as throwable and it throws an error the error will be an enriched boom with detailed information on what went wrong.

try {
    const result = await foo.fetch();
} catch (err) {
    // err.statusCode === 404
}

The error object will reflect the http status code of the remote. In other words; if the remote responded with a 404, the statusCode in the error object will be 404.

One exceptional case is when the podlet responds with a 3xx code. In this case, the error object's isRedirect property will be set to true and a property redirectUrl will be included. The client itself will not follow redirects, it is up to you to do so.

try {
    const result = await foo.fetch();
} catch (err) {
    // err.statusCode === 302
    // err.isRedirect === true
    // err.redirectUrl === 'http://redirects.are.us.com'
}

Podlet update life cycle

A podlets main entry is a manifest which contains metadata about that component. This manifest is fetched on the first request to the podlet and cached by the client together with its fallback content if a fallback has been defined in the manifest. On the second and subsequent requests for a podlet the manifest is read from the internal cache in the client and the client goes straight to fetching the content.

Detection of updates to a component is done by the content route in the component serving an HTTP header with the same version number as in the component's manifest and if the client detects a difference between the HTTP header version number and the version in the manifest cached in the client, the component has changed.

In the event of an update the client will throw away the cached manifest and make multiple HTTP requests to refetch the manifest, fallback and content.

On retrying

In a distributed system there can be windows where a component can exist with two versions at the same time during a rolling deploy. In such a scenario the client might go into an "update loop" due to hitting different versions of the component.

In a rolling deploy this is not nessessery a bad thing. But to protect both the application using the client and the component itself, the client will terminate the process of updating if such an "update loop" is detected.

This feature will also protect against cases where there might be a mismatch between the version number in a manifest file and what's set as a header on the content route.

How many times the client will retry settling an update before termination can be set by the retries argument in the client constructor and the .register() method.

Missing version header

There might be error situations where a content route is missing the version header so the client does not have anything to compare the version in the manifest against. In such a situation the client will continue to fetch the content, but the manifest and its fallback will never be re-evaluated for an update.

Health status

During the life cycle of updating one or more podlets the client will be in different states. The state is a representation of all registered podlets in the client. In other words; if one of five podlets enters a given state, the state is representative for all five podlets.

These states are:

The most common state is stable.

When a podlet is updated and the client detects this the client will enter unstable state. This state will live for a given time and depends on how the deployment of a podlet is done. For example, during a rolling deploy of a podlet, the unstable state will live as long as the podlet exists in two different versions during deployment plus some additional extra time afterward to ensure everything has settled. The duration of this window can be configured using the resolveThreshold argument in the Client constructor.

When a podlet update is detected the client will also start to monitor if the new podlet gets into a stable state within a given time. In other words; if a podlet enters an "update loop" as described above, the client will detect this and after a given time set the state to unhealthy. How long it should go before the unhealthy state is entered can be configured by the resolveMax argument on the Client constructor.

The state can be checked by the .state property on the Client object. The client will also emit a state event each time the client enters one of the above states.

License

Copyright (c) 2019 FINN.no

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.