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1<div align="center">
2
3<img src="logo/horizontal.png" alt="connect logo" width="450px">
4
5[![NPM Version][npm-version-image]][npm-url]
6[![NPM Downloads][npm-downloads-image]][npm-url]
7[![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url]
8[![Test Coverage][coveralls-image]][coveralls-url]
9
10</div>
11
12 Connect is an extensible HTTP server framework for [node](http://nodejs.org) using "plugins" known as _middleware_.
13
14```js
15var connect = require('connect');
16var http = require('http');
17
18var app = connect();
19
20// gzip/deflate outgoing responses
21var compression = require('compression');
22app.use(compression());
23
24// store session state in browser cookie
25var cookieSession = require('cookie-session');
26app.use(cookieSession({
27 keys: ['secret1', 'secret2']
28}));
29
30// parse urlencoded request bodies into req.body
31var bodyParser = require('body-parser');
32app.use(bodyParser.urlencoded({extended: false}));
33
34// respond to all requests
35app.use(function(req, res){
36 res.end('Hello from Connect!\n');
37});
38
39//create node.js http server and listen on port
40http.createServer(app).listen(3000);
41```
42
43## Getting Started
44
45Connect is a simple framework to glue together various "middleware" to handle requests.
46
47### Install Connect
48
49```sh
50$ npm install connect
51```
52
53### Create an app
54
55The main component is a Connect "app". This will store all the middleware
56added and is, itself, a function.
57
58```js
59var app = connect();
60```
61
62### Use middleware
63
64The core of Connect is "using" middleware. Middleware are added as a "stack"
65where incoming requests will execute each middleware one-by-one until a middleware
66does not call `next()` within it.
67
68```js
69app.use(function middleware1(req, res, next) {
70 // middleware 1
71 next();
72});
73app.use(function middleware2(req, res, next) {
74 // middleware 2
75 next();
76});
77```
78
79### Mount middleware
80
81The `.use()` method also takes an optional path string that is matched against
82the beginning of the incoming request URL. This allows for basic routing.
83
84```js
85app.use('/foo', function fooMiddleware(req, res, next) {
86 // req.url starts with "/foo"
87 next();
88});
89app.use('/bar', function barMiddleware(req, res, next) {
90 // req.url starts with "/bar"
91 next();
92});
93```
94
95### Error middleware
96
97There are special cases of "error-handling" middleware. There are middleware
98where the function takes exactly 4 arguments. When a middleware passes an error
99to `next`, the app will proceed to look for the error middleware that was declared
100after that middleware and invoke it, skipping any error middleware above that
101middleware and any non-error middleware below.
102
103```js
104// regular middleware
105app.use(function (req, res, next) {
106 // i had an error
107 next(new Error('boom!'));
108});
109
110// error middleware for errors that occurred in middleware
111// declared before this
112app.use(function onerror(err, req, res, next) {
113 // an error occurred!
114});
115```
116
117### Create a server from the app
118
119The last step is to actually use the Connect app in a server. The `.listen()` method
120is a convenience to start a HTTP server (and is identical to the `http.Server`'s `listen`
121method in the version of Node.js you are running).
122
123```js
124var server = app.listen(port);
125```
126
127The app itself is really just a function with three arguments, so it can also be handed
128to `.createServer()` in Node.js.
129
130```js
131var server = http.createServer(app);
132```
133
134## Middleware
135
136These middleware and libraries are officially supported by the Connect/Express team:
137
138 - [body-parser](https://www.npmjs.com/package/body-parser) - previous `bodyParser`, `json`, and `urlencoded`. You may also be interested in:
139 - [body](https://www.npmjs.com/package/body)
140 - [co-body](https://www.npmjs.com/package/co-body)
141 - [raw-body](https://www.npmjs.com/package/raw-body)
142 - [compression](https://www.npmjs.com/package/compression) - previously `compress`
143 - [connect-timeout](https://www.npmjs.com/package/connect-timeout) - previously `timeout`
144 - [cookie-parser](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cookie-parser) - previously `cookieParser`
145 - [cookie-session](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cookie-session) - previously `cookieSession`
146 - [csurf](https://www.npmjs.com/package/csurf) - previously `csrf`
147 - [errorhandler](https://www.npmjs.com/package/errorhandler) - previously `error-handler`
148 - [express-session](https://www.npmjs.com/package/express-session) - previously `session`
149 - [method-override](https://www.npmjs.com/package/method-override) - previously `method-override`
150 - [morgan](https://www.npmjs.com/package/morgan) - previously `logger`
151 - [response-time](https://www.npmjs.com/package/response-time) - previously `response-time`
152 - [serve-favicon](https://www.npmjs.com/package/serve-favicon) - previously `favicon`
153 - [serve-index](https://www.npmjs.com/package/serve-index) - previously `directory`
154 - [serve-static](https://www.npmjs.com/package/serve-static) - previously `static`
155 - [vhost](https://www.npmjs.com/package/vhost) - previously `vhost`
156
157Most of these are exact ports of their Connect 2.x equivalents. The primary exception is `cookie-session`.
158
159Some middleware previously included with Connect are no longer supported by the Connect/Express team, are replaced by an alternative module, or should be superseded by a better module. Use one of these alternatives instead:
160
161 - `cookieParser`
162 - [cookies](https://www.npmjs.com/package/cookies) and [keygrip](https://www.npmjs.com/package/keygrip)
163 - `limit`
164 - [raw-body](https://www.npmjs.com/package/raw-body)
165 - `multipart`
166 - [connect-multiparty](https://www.npmjs.com/package/connect-multiparty)
167 - [connect-busboy](https://www.npmjs.com/package/connect-busboy)
168 - `query`
169 - [qs](https://www.npmjs.com/package/qs)
170 - `staticCache`
171 - [st](https://www.npmjs.com/package/st)
172 - [connect-static](https://www.npmjs.com/package/connect-static)
173
174Checkout [http-framework](https://github.com/Raynos/http-framework/wiki/Modules) for many other compatible middleware!
175
176## API
177
178The Connect API is very minimalist, enough to create an app and add a chain
179of middleware.
180
181When the `connect` module is required, a function is returned that will construct
182a new app when called.
183
184```js
185// require module
186var connect = require('connect')
187
188// create app
189var app = connect()
190```
191
192### app(req, res[, next])
193
194The `app` itself is a function. This is just an alias to `app.handle`.
195
196### app.handle(req, res[, out])
197
198Calling the function will run the middleware stack against the given Node.js
199http request (`req`) and response (`res`) objects. An optional function `out`
200can be provided that will be called if the request (or error) was not handled
201by the middleware stack.
202
203### app.listen([...])
204
205Start the app listening for requests. This method will internally create a Node.js
206HTTP server and call `.listen()` on it.
207
208This is an alias to the `server.listen()` method in the version of Node.js running,
209so consult the Node.js documentation for all the different variations. The most
210common signature is [`app.listen(port)`](https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v6.x/docs/api/http.html#http_server_listen_port_hostname_backlog_callback).
211
212### app.use(fn)
213
214Use a function on the app, where the function represents a middleware. The function
215will be invoked for every request in the order that `app.use` is called. The function
216is called with three arguments:
217
218```js
219app.use(function (req, res, next) {
220 // req is the Node.js http request object
221 // res is the Node.js http response object
222 // next is a function to call to invoke the next middleware
223})
224```
225
226In addition to a plan function, the `fn` argument can also be a Node.js HTTP server
227instance or another Connect app instance.
228
229### app.use(route, fn)
230
231Use a function on the app, where the function represents a middleware. The function
232will be invoked for every request in which the URL (`req.url` property) starts with
233the given `route` string in the order that `app.use` is called. The function is
234called with three arguments:
235
236```js
237app.use('/foo', function (req, res, next) {
238 // req is the Node.js http request object
239 // res is the Node.js http response object
240 // next is a function to call to invoke the next middleware
241})
242```
243
244In addition to a plan function, the `fn` argument can also be a Node.js HTTP server
245instance or another Connect app instance.
246
247The `route` is always terminated at a path separator (`/`) or a dot (`.`) character.
248This means the given routes `/foo/` and `/foo` are the same and both will match requests
249with the URLs `/foo`, `/foo/`, `/foo/bar`, and `/foo.bar`, but not match a request with
250the URL `/foobar`.
251
252The `route` is matched in a case-insensitive manor.
253
254In order to make middleware easier to write to be agnostic of the `route`, when the
255`fn` is invoked, the `req.url` will be altered to remove the `route` part (and the
256original will be available as `req.originalUrl`). For example, if `fn` is used at the
257route `/foo`, the request for `/foo/bar` will invoke `fn` with `req.url === '/bar'`
258and `req.originalUrl === '/foo/bar'`.
259
260## Running Tests
261
262```bash
263npm install
264npm test
265```
266
267## People
268
269The Connect project would not be the same without all the people involved.
270
271The original author of Connect is [TJ Holowaychuk](https://github.com/tj)
272
273The current lead maintainer is [Douglas Christopher Wilson](https://github.com/dougwilson)
274
275[List of all contributors](https://github.com/senchalabs/connect/graphs/contributors)
276
277## Node Compatibility
278
279 - Connect `< 1.x` - node `0.2`
280 - Connect `1.x` - node `0.4`
281 - Connect `< 2.8` - node `0.6`
282 - Connect `>= 2.8 < 3` - node `0.8`
283 - Connect `>= 3` - node `0.10`, `0.12`, `4.x`, `5.x`, `6.x`, `7.x`, `8.x`, `9.x`, `10.x`, `11.x`, `12.x`; io.js `1.x`, `2.x`, `3.x`
284
285## License
286
287[MIT](LICENSE)
288
289[coveralls-image]: https://badgen.net/coveralls/c/github/senchalabs/connect/master
290[coveralls-url]: https://coveralls.io/r/senchalabs/connect?branch=master
291[npm-downloads-image]: https://badgen.net/npm/dm/connect
292[npm-url]: https://npmjs.org/package/connect
293[npm-version-image]: https://badgen.net/npm/v/connect
294[travis-image]: https://badgen.net/travis/senchalabs/connect/master
295[travis-url]: https://travis-ci.org/senchalabs/connect
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