Node-fetch with built-in response caching.
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node-fetch-cache

node-fetch with caching of responses.

The first fetch with any given arguments will result in an HTTP request and any subsequent fetch with the same arguments will read the response body from the cache.

By default responses are cached in memory, but you can also cache to files on disk, or implement your own cache. See the Cache Customization section for more info.

Usage

Require it and use it the same way you would use node-fetch:

const fetch = require('node-fetch-cache');

fetch('http://google.com')
  .then(response => response.text())
  .then(text => console.log(text));

The next time you fetch('http://google.com'), the response will be returned from the cache. No HTTP request will be made.

API

This module aims to expose the same API as node-fetch does for the most common use cases, but may not support some of the less common functions and use cases.

const fetch = require('node-fetch-cache');

Load the module.

async fetch(resource [, init])

Same arguments as node-fetch.

Returns a CachedResponse.

async CachedResponse.text()

Returns the body as a string, same as node-fetch.

async CachedResponse.json()

Returns the body as a JavaScript object, parsed from JSON, same as node-fetch.

async CachedResponse.buffer()

Returns the body as a Buffer, same as node-fetch.

CachedResponse.status

Returns the HTTP status code of the response, same as node-fetch.

CachedResponse.statusText

Returns a text represention of the response status, same as node-fetch.

CachedResponse.ok

Returns true if the request returned a successful response status, false otherwise, same as node-fetch.

CachedResponse.redirected

Returns true if the request was redirected, false otherwise, same as node-fetch.

CachedResponse.headers

Returns a ResponseHeaders object representing the headers of the response, same as node-fetch.

async CachedResponse.ejectFromCache()

Eject the response from the cache, so that the next request will perform a true HTTP request rather than returning a cached response.

Keep in mind that this module caches all responses, even if they return error status codes. You might want to use this function when !response.ok, so that you can retry requests.

ResponseHeaders.entries()

Returns the raw headers as an array of [key, value] pairs, same as node-fetch.

ResponseHeaders.keys()

Returns an array of all header keys, same as node-fetch.

ResponseHeaders.values()

Returns an array of all header values, same as node-fetch.

ResponseHeaders.get(key)

Returns the value of the header with the given key, same as node-fetch.

ResponseHeaders.has(key)

Returns true if the headers has a value for the given key, same as node-fetch.

ResponseHeaders.raw

Returns the headers as an object of { "key": "value" } pairs, same as node-fetch.

Streaming

This module supports streams like node-fetch does, but with a couple of caveats you should be aware of if you want to use streams.

  1. Response bodies are always read into memory even if you stream them to disk. That means if you need to stream large responses that don't fit into RAM, this module may be unsuitable.
  2. When streaming a request body with fs.ReadStream, the cache key is generated based only on the path of the stream, not its content. That means if you stream /my/desktop/image.png twice, you will get a cached response the second time, even if the content of image.png has changed. This module may be unsuitable if you need to stream files in requests and the content of those files can change.

Cache Customization

By default responses are cached in memory, but you can also cache to files on disk, or implement your own cache.

MemoryCache

This is the default cache delegate. It caches responses in-process in a POJO.

Usage:

const fetchBuilder, { MemoryCache } = require('node-fetch-cache');
const fetch = fetchBuilder.withCache(new MemoryCache(options));

Supported options:

{
  ttl: 1000, // Time to live. How long (in ms) responses remain cached before being automatically ejected. If undefined, responses are never automatically ejected from the cache.
  global: true, // If true, uses the global cache, which is shared together by all MemoryCaches that specify this option. If false (or undefined), every MemoryCache uses a separate cache.
}

FileSystemCache

Cache to a directory on disk. This allows the cache to survive the process exiting.

Usage:

const fetchBuilder, { FileSystemCache } = require('node-fetch-cache');
const fetch = fetchBuilder.withCache(new FileSystemCache(options));
{
  ttl: 1000, // Time to live. How long (in ms) responses remain cached before being automatically ejected. If undefined, responses are never automatically ejected from the cache.
}

Provide Your Own

You can implement a caching layer yourself. The cache simply needs to be an object that has get(key) and set(key, value) functions.

The set function must accept a key (which will be a string) and a value (which will be a JSON-serializable JS object) and store them.

The get function should accept a key and return whatever value was set for that key (or undefined/null if there is no value for that key).

Both functions can be async.

For example you could make and use your own simple memory cache like this:

const fetchBuilder = require('node-fetch-cache');

class MyMemoryCache {
  set(key, value) {
    this[key] = value;
  }

  get(key) {
    return this[key];
  }
}

fetch = fetchBuilder.withCache(new MyMemoryCache());

fetch('http://google.com')
  .then(response => response.text())
  .then(text => console.log(text));

Bugs / Help / Feature Requests / Contributing

For feature requests or help, please visit the discussions page on GitHub.

For bug reports, please file an issue on the issues page on GitHub.

Contributions welcome! Please open a pull request on GitHub with your changes. You can run them by me first on the discussions page if you'd like.