vercel / micro

Asynchronous HTTP microservices
MIT License
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async await micro microservice vercel

Micro — Asynchronous HTTP microservices

Features

Disclaimer: Micro was created for use within containers and is not intended for use in serverless environments. For those using Vercel, this means that there is no requirement to use Micro in your projects as the benefits it provides are not applicable to the platform. Utility features provided by Micro, such as json, are readily available in the form of Serverless Function helpers.

Installation

Important: Micro is only meant to be used in production. In development, you should use micro-dev, which provides you with a tool belt specifically tailored for developing microservices.

To prepare your microservice for running in the production environment, firstly install micro:

npm install --save micro

Usage

Create an index.js file and export a function that accepts the standard http.IncomingMessage and http.ServerResponse objects:

module.exports = (req, res) => {
  res.end('Welcome to Micro');
};

Micro provides useful helpers but also handles return values – so you can write it even shorter!

module.exports = () => 'Welcome to Micro';

Next, ensure that the main property inside package.json points to your microservice (which is inside index.js in this example case) and add a start script:

{
  "main": "index.js",
  "scripts": {
    "start": "micro"
  }
}

Once all of that is done, the server can be started like this:

npm start

And go to this URL: http://localhost:3000 - 🎉

Command line

  micro - Asynchronous HTTP microservices

  USAGE

      $ micro --help
      $ micro --version
      $ micro [-l listen_uri [-l ...]] [entry_point.js]

      By default micro will listen on 0.0.0.0:3000 and will look first
      for the "main" property in package.json and subsequently for index.js
      as the default entry_point.

      Specifying a single --listen argument will overwrite the default, not supplement it.

  OPTIONS

      --help                              shows this help message

      -v, --version                       displays the current version of micro

      -l, --listen listen_uri             specify a URI endpoint on which to listen (see below) -
                                          more than one may be specified to listen in multiple places

  ENDPOINTS

      Listen endpoints (specified by the --listen or -l options above) instruct micro
      to listen on one or more interfaces/ports, UNIX domain sockets, or Windows named pipes.

      For TCP (traditional host/port) endpoints:

          $ micro -l tcp://hostname:1234

      For UNIX domain socket endpoints:

          $ micro -l unix:/path/to/socket.sock

      For Windows named pipe endpoints:

          $ micro -l pipe:\\.\pipe\PipeName

async & await

Examples

Micro is built for usage with async/await.

const sleep = require('then-sleep');

module.exports = async (req, res) => {
  await sleep(500);
  return 'Ready!';
};

Port Based on Environment Variable

When you want to set the port using an environment variable you can use:

micro -l tcp://0.0.0.0:$PORT

Optionally you can add a default if it suits your use case:

micro -l tcp://0.0.0.0:${PORT-3000}

${PORT-3000} will allow a fallback to port 3000 when $PORT is not defined.

Note that this only works in Bash.

Body parsing

Examples

For parsing the incoming request body we included an async functions buffer, text and json

const { buffer, text, json } = require('micro');

module.exports = async (req, res) => {
  const buf = await buffer(req);
  console.log(buf);
  // <Buffer 7b 22 70 72 69 63 65 22 3a 20 39 2e 39 39 7d>
  const txt = await text(req);
  console.log(txt);
  // '{"price": 9.99}'
  const js = await json(req);
  console.log(js.price);
  // 9.99
  return '';
};

API

buffer(req, { limit = '1mb', encoding = 'utf8' })
text(req, { limit = '1mb', encoding = 'utf8' })
json(req, { limit = '1mb', encoding = 'utf8' })

For other types of data check the examples

Sending a different status code

So far we have used return to send data to the client. return 'Hello World' is the equivalent of send(res, 200, 'Hello World').

const { send } = require('micro');

module.exports = async (req, res) => {
  const statusCode = 400;
  const data = { error: 'Custom error message' };

  send(res, statusCode, data);
};
send(res, statusCode, data = null)

Programmatic use

You can use Micro programmatically by requiring Micro directly:

const http = require('http');
const sleep = require('then-sleep');
const { serve } = require('micro');

const server = new http.Server(
  serve(async (req, res) => {
    await sleep(500);
    return 'Hello world';
  }),
);

server.listen(3000);
serve(fn)
sendError(req, res, error)
createError(code, msg, orig)

Error Handling

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: Error stacks will be printed as console.error and during development mode (if the env variable NODE_ENV is 'development'), they will also be 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 (req, res) => {
  await rateLimit(req);
  // ... your code
};

If the API endpoint is abused, it can throw an error with createError like so:

if (tooMany) {
  throw createError(429, 'Rate limit exceeded');
}

Alternatively you can create the Error object yourself

if (tooMany) {
  const err = new Error('Rate limit exceeded');
  err.statusCode = 429;
  throw err;
}

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:

const { send } = require('micro');

const handleErrors = (fn) => async (req, res) => {
  try {
    return await fn(req, res);
  } catch (err) {
    console.log(err.stack);
    send(res, 500, 'My custom error!');
  }
};

module.exports = handleErrors(async (req, res) => {
  throw new Error('What happened here?');
});

Testing

Micro makes tests compact and a pleasure to read and write. We recommend Node TAP or AVA, a highly parallel test framework with built-in support for async tests:

const http = require('http');
const { send, serve } = require('micro');
const test = require('ava');
const listen = require('test-listen');
const fetch = require('node-fetch');

test('my endpoint', async (t) => {
  const service = new http.Server(
    serve(async (req, res) => {
      send(res, 200, {
        test: 'woot',
      });
    }),
  );

  const url = await listen(service);
  const response = await fetch(url);
  const body = await response.json();

  t.deepEqual(body.test, 'woot');
  service.close();
});

Look at test-listen for a function that returns a URL with an ephemeral port every time it's called.

Contributing

  1. Fork this repository to your own GitHub account and then clone it to your local device
  2. Link the package to the global module directory: npm link
  3. 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!

You can run the tests using: npm test.

Credits

Thanks to Tom Yandell and Richard Hodgson for donating the name "micro" on npm!

Authors