Package Exports
- polka
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Readme
Polka
Polka is an extremely minimal, highly performant Express.js alternative. Yes, you're right, Express is already super fast & not that big 🤔 — but Polka shows that there was (somehow) room for improvement!
Essentially, Polka is just a native HTTP server with added support for routing, middleware, and sub-applications. That's it! 🎉
And, of course, in mandatory bullet-point format:
- 33-50% faster than Express for simple applications
- Middleware support, including Express middleware you already know & love
- Nearly identical application API & route pattern definitions
- 70 LOC for Polka, 105 including its router
Install
$ npm install --save polkaUsage
const polka = require('polka');
function one(req, res, next) {
req.hello = 'world';
next();
}
function two(req, res, next) {
req.foo = '...needs better demo 😔';
next();
}
polka()
.use(one, two)
.get('/users/:id', (req, res) => {
console.log(`~> Hello, ${req.hello}`);
res.end(`User: ${req.params.id}`);
})
.listen(3000).then(_ => {
console.log(`> Running on localhost:3000`);
});API
Polka extends Trouter which means it inherits its API, too!
use(...fn)
Attach middleware(s) and/or sub-application(s) to the server. These will execute before your routes' handlers.
fn
Type: Function|Array
You may pass one or more functions at a time. Each function must have the standardized (req, res, next) signature.
Please see Middleware and Express' middleware examples for more info.
parse(req)
Returns: Object
This is an alias of the awesome parseurl module. There are no Polka-specific changes.
start(port, hostname)
Returns: Promise
Wraps the native server.listen with a Promise, rejecting on any error.
listen(port, hostname)
Returns: Promise
This is an alias of start.
send(res, code, body, type)
A minimal helper that terminates the ServerResponse with desired values.
res
Type: ServerResponse
code
Type: Number
Default: 200
body
Type: String
Default: http.STATUS_CODES[code]
Returns the default statusText for a given code.
type
Type: String
Default: 'text/plain'
The Content-Type header value for the response.
handler(req, res, parsed)
The main Polka ClientRequest handler. It receives all requests and tries to match the incoming URL against known routes.
If the req.url is not matched, a (501) Not Implemented response is returned. Otherwise, all middleware will be called. At the end of the loop, the (user-defined) route handler will be executed — assuming that a middleware hasn't already returned a response or thrown an error!
req
Type: ClientRequest
res
Type: ServerResponse
parsed
Type: Object
Optionally provide a parsed URL object. Useful if you've already parsed the incoming path. Otherwise, app.parse (aka parseurl) will run by default.
Routing
Routes are used to define how an application responds to varying HTTP methods and endpoints.
If you're coming from Express, there's nothing new here!
However, do check out Comparisons for some pattern changes.
Basics
Each route is comprised of a path pattern, a HTTP method, and a handler (aka, what you want to do).
In code, this looks like:
app.METHOD(pattern, handler);wherein:
appis an instance ofpolkaMETHODis any valid HTTP method, lowercasedpatternis a routing pattern (string)handleris the function to execute whenpatternis matched
Also, a single pathname (or pattern) may be reused with multiple METHODs.
The following example demonstrates some simple routes.
const app = polka();
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
res.end('Hello world!');
});
app.get('/users', (req, res) => {
res.end('Get all users!');
});
app.post('/users', (req, res) => {
res.end('Create a new User!');
});
app.put('/users/:id', (req, res) => {
res.end(`Update User with ID of ${req.params.id}`);
});
app.delete('/users/:id', (req, res) => {
res.end(`CY@ User ${req.params.id}!`);
});Patterns
Unlike the very popular path-to-regexp, Polka uses string comparison to locate route matches. While faster & more memory efficient, this does also prevent complex pattern matching.
However, have no fear! 💥 All the basic and most commonly used patterns are supported. You probably only ever used these patterns in the first place. 😉
See Comparisons for the list of
RegExp-based patterns that Polka does not support.
The supported pattern types are:
- static (
/users) - named parameters (
/users/:id) - nested parameters (
/users/:id/books/:title) - optional parameters (
/users/:id?/books/:title?) - any match / wildcards (
/users/*)
Parameters
Any named parameters included within your route pattern will be automatically added to your incoming req object. All parameters will be found within req.params under the same name they were given.
Important: Your parameter names should be unique, as shared names will overwrite each other!
app.get('/users/:id/books/:title', (req, res) => {
let { id, title } = req.params;
res.end(`User: ${id} && Book: ${title}`);
});$ curl /users/123/books/Narnia
#=> User: 123 && Book: NarniaMethods
Any valid HTTP method is supported! However, only the most common methods are used throughout this documentation for demo purposes.
Note: For a full list of valid METHODs, please see this list.
Handlers
Request handlers accept the incoming ClientRequest and the formulating ServerResponse.
Every route definition must contain a valid handler function, or else an error will be thrown at runtime.
Important: You must always terminate a
ServerResponse!
It's a very good practice to always terminate your response (res.end) inside a handler, even if you expect a middleware to do it for you. In the event a response is/was not terminated, the server will hang & eventually exit with a TIMEOUT error.
Note: This is a native
httpbehavior.
Async Handlers
If using Node 7.4 or later, you may leverage native async and await syntax! 😻
No special preparation is needed — simply add the appropriate keywords.
const app = polka();
const sleep = ms => new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, ms));
async function authenticate(req, res, next) {
let token = req.getHeader('authorization');
if (!token) return app.send(res, 401);
req.user = await Users.find(token); // <== fake
next(); // done, woot!
}
app
.use(authenticate)
.get('/', async (req, res) => {
// log middleware's findings
console.log('~> current user', req.user);
// force sleep, because we can~!
await sleep(500);
// send greeting
res.end(`Hello, ${req.user.name}`);
});Middleware
Middleware are functions that run in between (hence "middle") receiving the request & executing your route's handler response.
Coming from Express? Use any middleware you already know & love! 🎉
The middleware signature receives the request (req), the response (res), and a callback (next).
These can apply mutations to the req and res objects, and unlike Express, have access to req.params, req.pathname, req.search, and req.query!
Most importantly, a middleware must either call next() or terminate the response (res.end). Failure to do this will result in a never-ending response, which will eventually crash the http.Server.
// Log every request
function logger(req, res, next) {
console.log(`~> Received ${req.method} on ${req.url}`);
next(); // move on
}
function authorize(req, res, next) {
// mutate req; available later
req.token = req.getHeader('authorization');
req.token ? next() : ((res.statusCode=401) && res.end('No token!'));
}
polka().use(logger, authorize).get('*', (req, res) => {
console.log(`~> user token: ${req.token}`);
res.end('Hello, valid user');
});$ curl /
# ~> Received GET on /
#=> (401) No token!
$ curl -H "authorization: secret" /foobar
# ~> Received GET on /foobar
# ~> user token: secret
#=> (200) Hello, valid userIn Polka, middleware functions are mounted globally, which means that they'll run on every request (see Comparisons). Instead, you'll have to apply internal filters to determine when & where your middleware should run.
Note: This might change in Polka 1.0 🤔
function foobar(req, res, next) {
if (req.pathname.startsWith('/users')) {
// do something magical
}
next();
}Middleware Errors
If an error arises within a middleware, the loop will be exited. This means that no other middleware will execute & neither will the route handler.
Similarly, regardless of statusCode, an early response termination will also exit the loop & prevent the route handler from running.
There are three ways to "throw" an error from within a middleware function.
Hint: None of them use
throw😹
Pass any string to
next()This will exit the loop & send a
500status code, with your error string as the response body.polka() .use((req, res, next) => next('💩')) .get('*', (req, res) => res.end('wont run'));
$ curl / #=> (500) 💩
Pass an
Errortonext()This is similar to the above option, but gives you a window in changing the
statusCodeto something other than the500default.function oopsies(req, res, next) { let err = new Error('Try again'); err.code = 422; next(err); }
$ curl / #=> (422) Try again
Terminate the response early
Once the response has been ended, there's no reason to continue the loop!
This approach is the most versatile as it allows to control every aspect of the outgoing
res.function oopsies(req, res, next) { if (true) { // something bad happened~ res.writeHead(400, { 'Content-Type': 'application/json', 'X-Error-Code': 'Please dont do this IRL' }); let json = JSON.stringify({ error:'Missing CSRF token' }); res.end(json); } else { next(); // never called FYI } }
$ curl / #=> (400) {"error":"Missing CSRF token"}
Benchmarks
A round of Polka-vs-Express benchmarks across varying Node versions can be found here.
Important: Time is mostly spent in your application code rather than Express or Polka code!
Switching from Express to Polka will (likely) not show such drastic performance gains.
Node 8.9.0
Native
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 2.23ms 98.59us 6.51ms 86.53%
Req/Sec 5.41k 73.21 5.61k 75.62%
435050 requests in 10.10s, 43.15MB read
Requests/sec: 43064.72
Transfer/sec: 4.27MB
Polka
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 2.31ms 138.06us 7.69ms 89.18%
Req/Sec 5.22k 96.92 5.46k 74.88%
420120 requests in 10.10s, 41.67MB read
Requests/sec: 41583.07
Transfer/sec: 4.12MB
Express
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 5.36ms 443.33us 11.94ms 65.87%
Req/Sec 2.25k 69.99 2.42k 71.12%
178907 requests in 10.01s, 35.49MB read
Requests/sec: 17877.63
Transfer/sec: 3.55MB
Fastify
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 3.00ms 207.92us 9.42ms 58.75%
Req/Sec 4.01k 123.35 4.32k 65.10%
322606 requests in 10.10s, 40.00MB read
Requests/sec: 31930.70
Transfer/sec: 3.96MBComparisons
Polka's API aims to be very similar to Express since most Node.js developers are already familiar with it. If you know Express, you already know Polka! 💃
There are, however, a few main differences. Polka does not support or offer:
Any built-in view/rendering engines.
Most templating engines can be incorporated into middleware functions or used directly within a route handler.
The ability to
throwfrom within middleware.However, all other forms of middleware-errors are supported. (See Middleware Errors.)
function middleware(res, res, next) { // pass an error message to next() next('uh oh'); // pass an Error to next() next(new Error('🙀')); // send an early, customized error response res.statusCode = 401; res.end('Who are you?'); }
Response helpers... yet!
Express has a nice set of response helpers. While Polka relies on the native Node.js response methods, it would be very easy/possible to attach a global middleware that contained a similar set of helpers. (TODO)
The
.use()method does not accept apathnamefilter....This might change before a 1.0 release 🤔
RegExp-based route patterns.Polka's router uses string comparison to match paths against patterns. It's a lot quicker & more efficient.
The following routing patterns are not supported:
app.get('/ab?cd', _ => {}); app.get('/ab+cd', _ => {}); app.get('/ab*cd', _ => {}); app.get('/ab(cd)?e', _ => {}); app.get(/a/, _ => {}); app.get(/.*fly$/, _ => {});
The following routing patterns are supported:
app.get('/users', _ => {}); app.get('/users/:id', _ => {}); app.get('/users/:id?', _ => {}); app.get('/users/:id/books/:title', _ => {}); app.get('/users/*', _ => {});
License
MIT © Luke Edwards