Skip to content

Multi-transport and multi-protocol simple RPC server and (optional) client. Boilerplate-less. Opinionated. Minimalistic. DX-first.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

flash-oss/allserver

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Allserver

Multi-transport and multi-protocol simple RPC server and (optional) client. Boilerplate-less. Opinionated. Minimalistic. DX-first.

Think of Remote Procedure Calls using exactly the same client and server code but via multiple protocols/mechanisms such as HTTP, gRPC, GraphQL, WebSockets, job queues, Lambda, inter-process, (Web)Workers, unix sockets, etc etc etc.

Should be used in (micro)services where JavaScript is able to run - your computer, Docker, k8s, virtual machines, serverless functions (Lambdas, Google Cloud Functions, Azure Functions, etc), RaspberryPI, SharedWorker, thread, you name it.

Superpowers the Allserver gives you:

  • Call gRPC server methods from browser/curl/Postman.
  • Run your HTTP server as gRPC with a single line change (almost).
  • Serve same logic via HTTP and gRPC (or more) simultaneously in the same node.js process.
  • Deploy and run your HTTP server on AWS Lambda with no code changes.
  • Embed same exact code into your existing Express.js, no need to implement any handlers/middleware.
  • Use Redis-backed job queue BullMQ to call remote procedures reliably.
  • And moar!

Superpowers the AllserverClient gives you:

  • (Optionally) Stop writing try-catch when calling a remote procedure.
  • Call remote procedures just like regular methods.
  • Call any transport/protocol server methods with exactly the same client-side code.
  • And moar!

Evan You quote about "bad" ideas

Spelling

"Allserver" is a single word, capital "A", lowercase "s".

Quick example

This is how your code would look like in all execution environments using any communication protocol out there.

Server side:

const procedures = {
  sayHello: ({ name }) => "Hello " + name,
};
require("allserver").Allserver({ procedures }).start();

AllserverClient call:

const AllserverClient = require("allserver/Client");
const client = AllserverClient({ uri: process.env.REMOTE_SERVER_URI });

const { success, code, sayHello } = await client.sayHello({ name: "Joe" });

if (success) {
  // "Hello Joe"
  console.log(sayHello);
} else {
  // something like "ALLSERVER_CLIENT_PROCEDURE_UNREACHABLE"
  console.error(code);
}

Or use your own client library, e.g. fetch for HTTP or @grpc/grpc-js for gRPC.

Why Allserver exists?

There are loads of developer video presentations where people rant about how things are complex and how we must do extra effort to simplify things. Allserver is about simplicity and developer experience.

Problems I had:

  • Error handling while calling remote procedures are exhausting.
    • Firstly, I wrap the HTTP call in a try-catch. Then, I always had to analise: the status code, then detect the response body content type - text or json, then analyse the body for the actual error. I got very much annoyed by this repetitive boilerplate code.
  • REST route naming is not clear enough.
    • What is this route for - /user? You need to read the docs! I want it to be as simple and clear as calling a JS function/method - createUser(), or updateUser(), or getUser(), or removeUser(), or findUsers(), etc.
  • The HTTP methods are a pain point of any REST API.
    • Is it POST or PUT or PATCH? What if a route removes a permission to a file from a user, should it be DELETE or POST? I know it should be POST, but it's confusing to call POST when I need to REMOVE something. Protocol-level methods are never enough.
  • The HTTP status codes are never enough and overly confusing.
    • If a user record in the database is readonly, and you are trying to modify it, a typical server would reply 400 Bad Request. However, the request, the user data, the system are all perfectly fine. The HTTP statuses were not designed for you business logic errors.
  • The GraphQL has great DX and tooling, but it's not a good fit for microservices.
    • It adds too much complexity and is performance unfriendly (slow). Allserver is about simplicity, not complexity.
  • Performance scaling
    • When a performance scaling was needed I had to rewrite an entire service and client source code in multiple projects to a more performant network protocol implementation. This was a significant and avoidable time waste in my opinion.
  • HTTP monitoring tools show business errors as alarms.
    • I was trying to check if a user with email [email protected] exists. REST reply was HTTP 404. It alarmed our monitoring tools. Whereas, I don't want that alarm. That's not an error, but a regular true/false check. I want to monitor only the "route not found" errors with ease.

When calling a remote procedure I want something which:

  • Does not throw exceptions client-side no matter what. All kinds of errors should be handled exactly the same way.
  • Can be easily mapped to any language, any protocol. Especially to upstream GraphQL mutations.
  • Is simple to read in the source code, just like a method/function call. Without thinking of protocol-level details for every damn call.
  • Allows me to test gRPC server from my browser/Postman/curl (via HTTP!) by a simple one line config change.
  • Replace flaky HTTP with Kafka
  • Does not bring tons of npm dependencies with it.

Also, the main driving force was my vast experience splitting monolith servers onto (micro)services. Here is how I do it with much success.

  • Firstly, refactor a function to return object of the {success,code,message,...} shape, and to never throw.
  • Then, move the function over to a microservice.
  • Done.

Ideas are taken from multiple places.

Core principles

  1. Always choose DX (Developer Experience) over everything else
    • Otherwise, Allserver won't differ from the alternatives.
    • When newbie developer reads server-side code of an RPC (micro)service they should quickly understand what is what.
  2. Switching between data protocols must be as easy as changing single config value
    • Common example is when you want to convert your (micro)service from HTTP to gRPC.
    • Or if you want to call the gRPC server you are developing but don't have the gRPC client, so you use Postman, curl or a browser (HTTP) for that.
    • Or you are moving the procedure/function/method to another (micro)service employing different communication protocol and infrastructure. E.g. when migrating from a monolith to serverless architecture.
  3. Calling procedures client side must be as easy as a regular function call
    • const { success, user } = await client.updateUser({ id: 622, firstName: "Hui" })
    • Hence, the next core principle...
  4. Exceptions should be never thrown
    • The object of the following shape must always be returned: success,code,message,....
    • Although, this should be configurable (see neverThrow: false).
  5. Procedures (aka routes, aka methods, aka handlers) must always return same shaped interface regardless of everything
    • This makes your (micro)service protocol agnostic.
    • HTTP server must always return {success:Boolean, code:String, message:String}.
    • Same for gRPC - message Reply { bool success = 1; string code = 2; string message = 3; }.
    • Same for GraphQL - interface IAllserverReply { success:Boolean! code:String message:String }
    • Same for other protocols/languages.
  6. Protocol-level things must NOT be used for business-level logic (i.e. no REST)
    • This makes your (micro)service protocol agnostic.
    • E.g. the HTTP status codes must be used for protocol-level errors only.
  7. All procedures must accept single argument - JSON options object
    • This makes your (micro)service protocol agnostic.
  8. Procedures introspection (aka programmatic discovery) should work out of the box
    • This allows AllserverClient to know nothing about the remote server when your code starts to run.

Usage

Please note, that Allserver depends only on a single tiny npm module stampit. Every other dependency is optional.

HTTP protocol

Server

The default HttpTransport is using the micro npm module as an optional dependency.

npm i allserver micro@10

Alternatively, you can embed Allserver into your existing Express.js application:

npm i allserver express

Client

Optionally, you can use Allserver's built-in client:

npm i allserver node-fetch

Or do HTTP requests using any module you like.

AWS Lambda

Server

No dependencies other than allserver itself.

npm i allserver

Client

Two ways:

  • Same as the HTTP protocol client above.
  • Direct invocation via AWS SDK or AWS CLI.

gRPC protocol

Server

The default GrpcTransport is using the standard the @grpc/grpc-js npm module as an optional dependency.

npm i allserver @grpc/grpc-js@1 @grpc/[email protected]

Note, with gRPC server and client you'd need to have your own .proto file. See code example below.

Client

Optionally, you can use Allserver's built-in client:

npm i allserver @grpc/grpc-js@1 @grpc/[email protected]

Or do gRPC requests using any module you like.

BullMQ job queue

Server

The default BullmqTransport is using the bullmq module as a dependency, connects to Redis using Worker class.

npm i allserver bullmq

Client

Optionally, you can use Allserver's built-in client:

npm i allserver bullmq

Or use the bullmq module directly. You don't need to use Allserver to call remote procedures. See code example below.

Code examples

Procedures

(aka routes, aka schema, aka handlers, aka functions, aka methods)

These are your business logic functions. They are exactly the same for all the network protocols out there. They wouldn't need to change if you suddenly need to move them to another (micro)service, protocol, network transport, or expose via a GraphQL API.

const procedures = {
  async updateUser({ id, firstName, lastName }) {
    const db = await require("my-database").db("users");

    const user = await db.find({ id });
    if (!user) {
      return {
        success: false,
        code: "USER_ID_NOT_FOUND",
        message: `User ID ${id} not found`,
      };
    }

    if (user.isReadOnly()) {
      return {
        success: false,
        code: "USER_IS_READONLY",
        message: `User ${id} can't be modified`,
      };
    }

    if (user.firstName === firstName && user.lastName === lastName) {
      return {
        success: true, // NOTE! We return TRUE here,
        code: "NO_CHANGES", // but we also tell the client side that nothing was changed.
        message: `User ${id} already have that data`,
      };
    }

    user.firstName = firstName;
    user.lastName = lastName;
    await user.save();

    return { success: true, code: "UPDATED", user };
  },

  health() {}, // will return `{"success":true,"code":"SUCCESS","message":"Success"}`

  async reconnectDb() {
    const myDb = require("my-database");
    const now = Date.now(); // milliseconds
    await myDb.diconnect();
    await myDb.connect();
    const took = Date.now() - now;
    return took; // will return `{"reconnectDb":25,"success":true,"code":"SUCCESS","message":"Success"}`
  },
};

HTTP server side

Using the procedures declared above.

const { Allserver } = require("allserver");

Allserver({ procedures }).start();

The above code starts an HTTP server on port process.env.PORT if no transport was specified.

Here is the same server but more explicit:

const { Allserver, HttpTransport } = require("allserver");

Allserver({
  procedures,
  transport: HttpTransport({ port: process.env.PORT }),
}).start();

Replying non-standard HTTP response from a procedure

You'd need to deal with node.js res yourself.

const procedures = {
  processEntity({ someEntity }, ctx) {
    const res = ctx.http.res;
    res.statusCode = 422;
    const msg = "Unprocessable Entity";
    res.setHeader("Content-Length", Buffer.byteLength(msg));
    res.send(msg);
  },
};

Accessing Node request and its raw body

Occasionally, your HTTP method would need to access raw body of a request. This is how you do it:

const procedures = {
  async processEntity(_, ctx) {
    const micro = ctx.allserver.transport.micro; // same as require("micro")
    const req = ctx.http.req; // node.js Request

    // as a string
    const text = await micro.text(req);
    // as a node.js buffer
    const buffer = await micro.buffer(req);

    // ... process the request here ...
  },
};

More info can be found in the micro NPM module docs.

HTTP server in Express.js

Doesn't require a dedicated client transport. Use the HTTP client below.

const { Allserver, ExpressTransport } = require("allserver");

const middleware = Allserver({
  procedures,
  transport: ExpressTransport(),
}).start();

app.use("/route-with-allsever", middleware);

HTTP server in AWS Lambda

Doesn't require a dedicated client transport. Use the HTTP client below.

const { Allserver, LambdaTransport } = require("allserver");

exports.handler = Allserver({
  procedures,
  transport: LambdaTransport(),
}).start();

Server in Bare AWS Lambda

Invoke directly via AWS SDK or AWS CLI. But better use the LambdaClientTransport (aka "lambda://" scheme) below.

const { Allserver, LambdaTransport } = require("allserver");

exports.handler = Allserver({
  procedures,
  transport: LambdaTransport(),
}).start();

HTTP client side

Using built-in client

You'd need to install node-fetch optional dependency.

npm i allserver node-fetch

Note, that this code is same as the gRPC client code example below!

const { AllserverClient } = require("allserver");
// or
const AllserverClient = require("allserver/Client");

const client = AllserverClient({ uri: "http://localhost:40000" });

const { success, code, message, user } = await client.updateUser({
  id: "123412341234123412341234",
  firstName: "Fred",
  lastName: "Flinstone",
});

The AllserverClient will issue HTTP POST request to this URL: http://localhost:40000/updateUser. The path of the URL is dynamically taken straight from the client.updateUser calling code using the ES6 Proxy class. In other words, AllserverClient intercepts non-existent property access.

Using any HTTP client (axios in this example)

It's a regular HTTP POST call with JSON request and response. URI is /updateUser.

import axios from "axios";

const response = await axios.post("http://localhost:40000/updateUser", {
  id: "123412341234123412341234",
  firstName: "Fred",
  lastName: "Flinstone",
});
const { success, code, message, user } = response.data;

Alternatively, you can call the same API using GET request with search params (query): http://example.com/updateUser?id=123412341234123412341234&firstName=Fred&lastName=Flinstone

const response = await axios.get("updateUser", {
  params: {
    id: "123412341234123412341234",
    firstName: "Fred",
    lastName: "Flinstone",
  },
});

Yeah. This is a mutating call using HTTP GET. That's by design, and I love it. Allserver is an RPC server, not a website server! So we are free to do whatever we want here.

HTTP limitations

  1. Sub-routes are not well-supported, your procedure should be named "users/updateUser" or alike. Also, in the AllserverClient you'd want to use nameMapper.

gRPC server side

Note that we are reusing the procedures from the example above.

Make sure all the methods in your .proto file reply at least three properties: success, code, message. Otherwise, the server won't start and will throw an error.

Also, for now, you need to add these mandatory declarations to your .proto file.

Here is how your gRPC server can look like:

const { Allserver, GrpcTransport } = require("allserver");

Allserver({
  procedures,
  transport: GrpcTransport({
    protoFile: __dirname + "/my-server.proto",
    port: 50051,
  }),
}).start();

gRPC client side

Using built-in client

Note, that this code is same as the HTTP client code example above! The only difference is the URI.

const { AllserverClient } = require("allserver");
// or
const AllserverClient = require("allserver/Client");

const client = AllserverClient({ uri: "grpc://localhost:50051" });

const { success, code, message, user } = await client.updateUser({
  id: "123412341234123412341234",
  firstName: "Fred",
  lastName: "Flinstone",
});

The protoFile is automatically taken from the server side via the introspect() call.

Using any gPRS client (official module in this example)

const packageDefinition = require("@grpc/proto-loader").loadSync(
  __dirname + "/my-server.proto"
);

const grpc = require("@grpc/grpc-js");
const proto = grpc.loadPackageDefinition(packageDefinition);
var client = new proto.MyService(
  "localhost:50051",
  grpc.credentials.createInsecure()
);

// Promisifying because official gRPC modules do not support Promises async/await.
const { promisify } = require("util");
for (const k in client)
  if (typeof client[k] === "function")
    client[k] = promisify(client[k].bind(client));

const data = await client.updateUser({
  id: "123412341234123412341234",
  firstName,
  lastName,
});

const { success, code, message, user } = data;

gRPC limitations

  1. Only unary RPC. No streaming of any kind is available. By design.
  2. All the reply message definitions must have bool success = 1; string code = 2; string message = 3;. Otherwise, server won't start. By design.
  3. You can't have import statements in your .proto file. (Yet.)
  4. Your server-side .proto file must include Allserver's mandatory declarations. (Yet.)

BullMQ server side

Note that we are reusing the procedures from the example above.

Here is how your BullMQ server can look like:

const { Allserver, BullmqTransport } = require("allserver");

Allserver({
  procedures,
  transport: BullmqTransport({
    connectionOptions: { host: "localhost", port: 6379 },
  }),
}).start();

BullMQ client side

Using built-in client

Note, that this code is same as the HTTP client code example above! The only difference is the URI.

const { AllserverClient, BullmqClientTransport } = require("allserver");
// or
const AllserverClient = require("allserver/Client");

const client = AllserverClient({ uri: "bullmq://localhost:6379" });
// or
const client = AllserverClient({
  transport: BullmqClientTransport({ uri: "redis://localhost:6379" }),
});

const { success, code, message, user } = await client.updateUser({
  id: "123412341234123412341234",
  firstName: "Fred",
  lastName: "Flinstone",
});

The bullmq:// schema uses same connection string as Redis: bullmq://[[username:]password@]host[:port][/database]

Using any BullMQ Queue class without Allserver

const { Queue, QueueEvents } = require("bullmq");

const queue = new Queue("Allserver", {
  connection: { host: "localhost", port },
});
const queueEvents = new QueueEvents("Allserver", {
  connection: { host: "localhost", port },
});

const job = await queue.add("updateUser", {
  id: "123412341234123412341234",
  firstName,
  lastName,
});
const data = await job.waitUntilFinished(queueEvents, 30_000);

const { success, code, message, user } = data;

In memory

Sometimes you need to unit test your procedures via the AllserverClient. For that we have MemoryTransport.

const { Allserver, MemoryTransport } = require("allserver");

const memoryServer = Allserver({
  procedures,
  transport: MemoryTransport(),
});

const client = memoryServer.start();

const { success, code, message, user } = await client.updateUser({
  id: "123412341234123412341234",
  firstName: "Fred",
  lastName: "Flinstone",
});

assert(success === true);

Bare AWS Lambda invocation

First you need to install any of the AWS SDK versions.

npm i allserver aws-sdk

or

npm i allserver @aws-sdk/client-lambda

The invoke the lambda this way:

const { AllserverClient } = require("allserver");
// or
const AllserverClient = require("allserver/Client");

const client = AllserverClient({ uri: "lambda://my-lambda-name" });

const { success, code, message, user } = await client.updateUser({
  id: "123412341234123412341234",
  firstName: "Fred",
  lastName: "Flinstone",
});

Using AWS SDK

As usual, the client side does not require the Allserver packages at all.

import { Lambda } from "@aws-sdk/client-lambda";

const invocationResponse = await new Lambda().invoke({
  FunctionName: "my-lambda-name",
  Payload: JSON.stringify({
    _: { procedureName: "updateUser" },
    id: "123412341234123412341234",
    firstName: "Fred",
    lastName: "Flinstone",
  }),
});
const { success, code, message, user } = JSON.parse(invocationResponse.Payload);

Alternatively, you can call the same procedure using the aws CLI:

aws lambda invoke --function-name my-lambda-name --payload '{"_":{"procedureName":"updateUser"},"id":"123412341234123412341234","firstName":"Fred","lastName":"Flinstone"}}'

AllserverClient options

All the arguments are optional. But either uri or transport must be provided. We are trying to keep the highest possible DX here.

  • uri
    The remote server address string. Out of box supported schemas are: http, https, grpc, bullmq. (More to come.)

  • transport
    The transport implementation object. The uri is ignored if this option provided. If not given then it will be automatically created based on the uri schema. E.g. if it starts with http:// or https:// then HttpClientTransport will be used. If starts with grpc:// then GrpcClientTransport will be used. If starts with bullmq:// then BullmqClientTransport is used.

  • neverThrow=true
    Set it to false if you want to get exceptions when there are a network, or a server errors during a procedure call. Otherwise, the standard {success,code,message} object is returned from method calls. The Allserver error codes are always start with "ALLSERVER_". E.g. "ALLSERVER_CLIENT_MALFORMED_INTROSPECTION".

  • dynamicMethods=true
    Automatically find (introspect) and call corresponding remote procedures. If set to false the AllserverClient would use only the methods you defined explicitly client-side.

  • autoIntrospect=true
    Do not automatically search (introspect) for remote procedures, instead use the runtime method names. This mean AllserverClient won't guarantee the procedure existence until you try calling the procedure. E.g., this code allserverClient.myProcedureName() will do POST /myProcedureName HTTP request (aka "call of faith"). Useful when you don't want to expose introspection HTTP endpoint or don't want to add Allserver's mandatory proto in GRPC server.

  • callIntrospectedProceduresOnly=true
    If introspection couldn't find a procedure then do not attempt sending a "call of faith" to the server.

  • nameMapper
    A function to map/filter procedure names found on the server to something else. E.g. nameMapper: name => _.toCamelCase(name). If "falsy" value is returned from nameMapper() then this procedure won't be added to the AllserverClient object instance, like if it was not found on the server.

  • before
    The "before" client-side middleware(s). Can be either a function, or an array of functions.

  • after
    The "after" client-side middleware(s). Can be either a function, or an array of functions.

AllserverClient defaults

You can change the above mentioned options default values like this:

AllseverClient = AllserverClient.defaults({
  transport,
  neverThrow,
  dynamicMethods,
  autoIntrospect,
  callIntrospectedProceduresOnly,
  nameMapper,
  before,
  after,
});

// Then create your client instances as usual:
const httpClient = AllserverClient({ uri: "https://example.com" });

Your own client transport

You can add your own schema support to AllserverClient.

AllserverClient = AllserverClient.addTransport({
  schema: "unixsocket",
  Transport: MyUnixSocketTransport,
});

const client = AllserverClient({ uri: "unixsocket:///example/socket" });

You can overwrite the default client transport implementations:

HttpClientTransport = HttpClientTransport.props({
  fetch: require("./fetch-retry"),
});
AllserverClient = AllserverClient.addTransport({
  schema: "http",
  Transport: HttpClientTransport,
});
AllserverClient = AllserverClient.addTransport({
  schema: "https",
  Transport: HttpClientTransport,
});

FAQ

What happens if I call a procedure, but the remote server does not reply?

If using AllserverClient you'll get this result, no exceptions thrown client-side by default:

{
  "success": false,
  "code": "ALLSERVER_CLIENT_PROCEDURE_UNREACHABLE",
  "message": "Couldn't reach remote procedure: procedureName"
}

If using your own client module then you'll get your module default behaviour; typically an exception is thrown.

What happens if I call a procedure which does not exist?

If using AllserverClient you'll get this result, no exceptions thrown client-side by default:

{
  "success": false,
  "code": "ALLSERVER_CLIENT_PROCEDURE_NOT_FOUND",
  "message": "Procedure 'procedureName' not found"
}

If using your own client module then you'll get your module default behaviour; typically an exception is thrown.

What happens if I call a procedure which throws?

You'll get a normal reply, no exceptions thrown client-side, but the success field will be false.

{
  "success": false,
  "code": "ALLSERVER_PROCEDURE_ERROR",
  "message": "''undefined' is not a function' error in 'procedureName' procedure"
}

The Allserver logs to console. How to change that?

In case of internal errors the server would dump the full stack trace to the stderr using its logger property (defaults to console). Replace the Allserver's logger like this:

const allserver = Allserver({ procedures, logger: new MyShinyLogger() });
// or
Allserver = Allserver.defaults({ logger: new MyShinyLogger() });
const allserver = Allserver({ procedures });

Can I add a server middleware?

You can add one or multiple pre-middlewares, as well as one or multiple post-middlewares. Anything returned from a middleware (except the undefined) becomes the call result, and the rest of the middlewares will be skipped if any.

The after middleware(s) is always called.

const allserver = Allserver({
  procedures,

  async before(ctx) {
    console.log(ctx.procedureName, ctx.procedure, ctx.arg);
    // If you return anything from here, it will become the call result.
  },
  async after(ctx) {
    console.log(ctx.procedureName, ctx.procedure, ctx.arg);
    console.log(ctx.introspection, ctx.result, ctx.error);
    // If you return anything from here, it will become the call result.
  },
});

Multiple middlewares example:

const allserver = Allserver({
  procedures,

  before: myPreMiddlewaresArray,
  after: myPostMiddlewaresArray,
});

Can I add a client-side middleware?

Yep.

const { AllserverClient } = require("allserver");

const client = AllserverClient({
  uri: "http://example.com:40000",

  async before(ctx) {
    console.log(ctx.procedureName, ctx.arg);
    // If you return anything from here, it will become the call result.
  },
  async after(ctx) {
    console.log(ctx.result, ctx.error);
    // If you return anything from here, it will become the call result.
  },
});

How to add Auth?

Server side

Server side you do it yourself via the before pre-middleware. See above.

Allserver does not (yet) standardise how the "bad auth" replies should look and feel. That's a discussion we need to take. Refer to the Core principles above for insights.

Client side

This largely depends on the protocol and controlled by the so called "ClientTransport".

HTTP
const { AllserverClient, HttpClientTransport } = require("allserver");

const client = AllserverClient({
  transport: HttpClientTransport({
    uri: "http://my-server:40000",
    headers: { authorization: "Basic my-token" },
  }),
});
gRPC
const { AllserverClient, GrpcClientTransport } = require("allserver");

const client = AllserverClient({
  transport: GrpcClientTransport({
    uri: "grpc://my-server:50051",
    credentials: require("@grpc/grpc-js").credentials.createSsl(/* ... */),
  }),
});
My authorisation is not supported. What should I do?

If something more sophisticated is needed - you would need to mangle the ctx in the client before and after middlewares.

const { AllserverClient } = require("allserver");

const client = AllserverClient({
  uri: "http://my-server:40000",
  async before(ctx) {
    console.log(ctx.procedureName, ctx.arg);
    ctx.http.mode = "cors";
    ctx.http.credentials = "include";
    ctx.http.headers.authorization = "Basic my-token";
  },
  async after(ctx) {
    if (ctx.error) console.error(ctx.error); else console.log(ctx.result);
  },
});

Alternatively, you can "inherit" clients:

const { AllserverClient } = require("allserver");

const MyAllserverClientWithAuth = AllserverClient.defaults({
  async before(ctx) {
    ctx.http.mode = "cors";
    ctx.http.credentials = "include";
    ctx.http.headers.authorization = "Basic my-token";
  },
});

const client = MyAllserverClientWithAuth({
  uri: "http://my-server:40000",
});

Can I override AllserverClient's method?

Sure. This is useful if you need to add client-side logic before doing a remote call.

const { AllserverClient } = require("allserver");
const isEmail = require("is-email");

const MyRpcClient = AllserverClient.methods({
  async updateContact({ id, email }) {
    if (!isEmail(email))
      return {
        success: false,
        code: "BAD_EMAIL",
        message: `${email} is not an email address`,
      };

    // Calling the server
    return this.call("updateContact", { id, email });
  },
});

const myRpcClient = MyRpcClient({ uri: anyKindOfSupportedUri });
const { success } = await myRpcClient.updateContact({ id: 123, email: null });
console.log(success); // false

Important note! The code above does not require any special handling from you. The updateContact() returns exactly the same interface as the remove server. This is one of the reasons why Allserver exists.

Why success,code,message? I want different names.

  • success is a generic "all good" / "error happened" reply. Occasionally, you can't determine if it's success or a failure. E.g. if a user tries to unsubscribe from a mailing list, but there is no such user in the list. That's why we have code.
  • code is a hardcoded string for machines. Use it in the source code if statements.
  • message is an arbitrary string for humans. Use it as an error/success message on a UI.

I considered using ok instead of success, but Allserver is DX-first. The ok can be confused with the fetch API Response.ok property: if ((await fetch(uri)).ok), we don't want that. Also, the ok is not a noun, thus complicates code reading a bit for newbie developers.

The only mandatory property of the three is success. The code and message are optional. So, you can have different names. Add them to your returned object. Just don't forget to add success:Boolean property.

In the example below we mimic Slack's RPC. They use ok and error properties similar or Allserver's success and message properties.

const procedures = {
  async sendChatMessage({ channel = "#general", message = "" }) {
    try {
      await sns.sendMessage(/* ... */);
      return { success: true, ok: true };
    } catch (err) {
      return { success: false, ok: false, error: err.message, status: 50014 };
    }
  },
};

TypeScript support?

We are waiting for your contributions.

About

Multi-transport and multi-protocol simple RPC server and (optional) client. Boilerplate-less. Opinionated. Minimalistic. DX-first.

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks