The http module from node.js, but for browsers.
When you require('http')
in
browserify,
this module will be loaded.
var http = require('http');
http.get({ path : '/beep' }, function (res) {
var div = document.getElementById('result');
div.innerHTML += 'GET /beep<br>';
res.on('data', function (buf) {
div.innerHTML += buf;
});
res.on('end', function () {
div.innerHTML += '<br>__END__';
});
});
var http = require('http');
where opts
are:
opts.method='GET'
- http method verbopts.path
- path string, example:'/foo/bar?baz=555'
opts.headers={}
- as an object mapping key names to string or Array valuesopts.host=window.location.host
- http hostopts.port=window.location.port
- http portopts.responseType
- response type to set on the underlying xhr object
The callback will be called with the response object.
A shortcut for
options.method = 'GET';
var req = http.request(options, cb);
req.end();
Set an http header.
Get an http header.
Remove an http header.
Write some data to the request body.
If only 1 piece of data is written, data
can be a FormData, Blob, or
ArrayBuffer instance. Otherwise, data
should be a string or a buffer.
Close and send the request body, optionally with additional data
to append.
Return an http header, if set. key
is case-insensitive.
- res.statusCode, the numeric http response code
- res.headers, an object with all lowercase keys
This module has been tested and works with:
- Internet Explorer 5.5, 6, 7, 8, 9
- Firefox 3.5
- Chrome 7.0
- Opera 10.6
- Safari 5.0
Multipart streaming responses are buffered in all versions of Internet Explorer
and are somewhat buffered in Opera. In all the other browsers you get a nice
unbuffered stream of "data"
events when you send down a content-type of
multipart/octet-stream
or similar.
You can do:
var bundle = browserify({
require : { http : 'http-browserify' }
});
in order to map "http-browserify" over require('http')
in your browserified
source.
With npm do:
npm install http-browserify
MIT