1 |
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3 | </td><td align="center" width="33.333333333333336%"> <a href="https://www.principal.com/about-us?utm_source=axios&utm_medium=sponsorlist&utm_campaign=sponsorship" style="padding: 10px; display: inline-block"> <img width="133px" height="43px" src="https://axios-http.com/assets/sponsors/principal.svg" alt="Principal Financial Group"/> </a> <p align="center" title="Weβre bound by one common purpose: to give you the financial tools, resources and information you need to live your best life.">Weβre bound by one common purpose: to give you the financial tools, resources and information you ne...</p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://www.principal.com/about-us?utm_source=axios&utm_medium=readme_sponsorlist&utm_campaign=sponsorship"><b>www.principal.com</b></a> </p>
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5 | </td></tr><tr width="33.333333333333336%"><td align="center" width="33.333333333333336%"> <a href="https://buzzoid.com/buy-instagram-followers/?utm_source=axios&utm_medium=sponsorlist&utm_campaign=sponsorship" style="padding: 10px; display: inline-block"> <img width="62px" height="70px" src="https://axios-http.com/assets/sponsors/opencollective/buzzoid-buy-instagram-followers.png" alt="Buzzoid - Buy Instagram Followers"/> </a> <p align="center" title="At Buzzoid, you can buy Instagram followers quickly, safely, and easily with just a few clicks. Rated world's #1 IG service since 2012.">At Buzzoid, you can buy Instagram followers quickly, safely, and easily with just a few clicks. Rate...</p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://buzzoid.com/buy-instagram-followers/?utm_source=axios&utm_medium=readme_sponsorlist&utm_campaign=sponsorship"><b>buzzoid.com</b></a> </p>
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6 | </td><td align="center" width="33.333333333333336%"> <a href="https://www.famety.com/buy-tiktok-likes?utm_source=axios&utm_medium=sponsorlist&utm_campaign=sponsorship" style="padding: 10px; display: inline-block"> <img width="70px" height="70px" src="https://axios-http.com/assets/sponsors/opencollective/famety-buy-instagram-followers.png" alt="Famety - Buy Instagram Followers"/> </a> <p align="center" title="At Famety, you can grow your social media following quickly, safely, and easily with just a few clicks. Rated the worldβs #1 social media service since 2013.">At Famety, you can grow your social media following quickly, safely, and easily with just a few clic...</p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://www.famety.com/buy-tiktok-likes?utm_source=axios&utm_medium=readme_sponsorlist&utm_campaign=sponsorship"><b>www.famety.com</b></a> </p>
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7 | </td><td align="center" width="33.333333333333336%"> <a href="https://poprey.com/?utm_source=axios&utm_medium=sponsorlist&utm_campaign=sponsorship" style="padding: 10px; display: inline-block"> <img width="70px" height="70px" src="https://axios-http.com/assets/sponsors/opencollective/instagram-likes.png" alt="Poprey - Buy Instagram Likes"/> </a> <p align="center" title="Buy Instagram Likes">Buy Instagram Likes</p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://poprey.com/?utm_source=axios&utm_medium=readme_sponsorlist&utm_campaign=sponsorship"><b>poprey.com</b></a> </p>
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8 | </td></tr><tr width="33.333333333333336%"><td align="center" width="33.333333333333336%"> <a href="https://opencollective.com/axios/contribute">π Become a sponsor</a>
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9 | </td><td align="center" width="33.333333333333336%"> <a href="https://opencollective.com/axios/contribute">π Become a sponsor</a>
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10 | </td><td align="center" width="33.333333333333336%"> <a href="https://opencollective.com/axios/contribute">π Become a sponsor</a>
|
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11 | </td></tr></table>
|
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12 |
|
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13 | <!--<div>marker</div>-->
|
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14 | <br><br>
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15 | <div align="center">
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16 | <a href="https://axios-http.com"><img src="https://axios-http.com/assets/logo.svg" /></a><br>
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17 | </div>
|
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18 |
|
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19 | <p align="center">Promise based HTTP client for the browser and node.js</p>
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20 |
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21 | <p align="center">
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22 | <a href="https://axios-http.com/"><b>Website</b></a> β’
|
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23 | <a href="https://axios-http.com/docs/intro"><b>Documentation</b></a>
|
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24 | </p>
|
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25 |
|
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26 | <div align="center">
|
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27 |
|
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28 | [![npm version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/axios)
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29 | [![CDNJS](https://img.shields.io/cdnjs/v/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://cdnjs.com/libraries/axios)
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30 | [![Build status](https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/axios/axios/ci.yml?branch=v1.x&label=CI&logo=github&style=flat-square)](https://github.com/axios/axios/actions/workflows/ci.yml)
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31 | [![Gitpod Ready-to-Code](https://img.shields.io/badge/Gitpod-Ready--to--Code-blue?logo=gitpod&style=flat-square)](https://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/axios/axios)
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32 | [![code coverage](https://img.shields.io/coveralls/mzabriskie/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://coveralls.io/r/mzabriskie/axios)
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33 | [![install size](https://img.shields.io/badge/dynamic/json?url=https://packagephobia.com/v2/api.json?p=axios&query=$.install.pretty&label=install%20size&style=flat-square)](https://packagephobia.now.sh/result?p=axios)
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34 | [![npm bundle size](https://img.shields.io/bundlephobia/minzip/axios?style=flat-square)](https://bundlephobia.com/package/axios@latest)
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35 | [![npm downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://npm-stat.com/charts.html?package=axios)
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36 | [![gitter chat](https://img.shields.io/gitter/room/mzabriskie/axios.svg?style=flat-square)](https://gitter.im/mzabriskie/axios)
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37 | [![code helpers](https://www.codetriage.com/axios/axios/badges/users.svg)](https://www.codetriage.com/axios/axios)
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38 | [![Known Vulnerabilities](https://snyk.io/test/npm/axios/badge.svg)](https://snyk.io/test/npm/axios)
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39 |
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40 |
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41 |
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42 |
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43 | </div>
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44 |
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45 | ## Table of Contents
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46 |
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47 | - [Features](#features)
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48 | - [Browser Support](#browser-support)
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49 | - [Installing](#installing)
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50 | - [Package manager](#package-manager)
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51 | - [CDN](#cdn)
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52 | - [Example](#example)
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53 | - [Axios API](#axios-api)
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54 | - [Request method aliases](#request-method-aliases)
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55 | - [Concurrency π](#concurrency-deprecated)
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56 | - [Creating an instance](#creating-an-instance)
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57 | - [Instance methods](#instance-methods)
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58 | - [Request Config](#request-config)
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59 | - [Response Schema](#response-schema)
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60 | - [Config Defaults](#config-defaults)
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61 | - [Global axios defaults](#global-axios-defaults)
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62 | - [Custom instance defaults](#custom-instance-defaults)
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63 | - [Config order of precedence](#config-order-of-precedence)
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64 | - [Interceptors](#interceptors)
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65 | - [Multiple Interceptors](#multiple-interceptors)
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66 | - [Handling Errors](#handling-errors)
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67 | - [Cancellation](#cancellation)
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68 | - [AbortController](#abortcontroller)
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69 | - [CancelToken π](#canceltoken-deprecated)
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70 | - [Using application/x-www-form-urlencoded format](#using-applicationx-www-form-urlencoded-format)
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71 | - [URLSearchParams](#urlsearchparams)
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72 | - [Query string](#query-string-older-browsers)
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73 | - [π Automatic serialization](#-automatic-serialization-to-urlsearchparams)
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74 | - [Using multipart/form-data format](#using-multipartform-data-format)
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75 | - [FormData](#formdata)
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76 | - [π Automatic serialization](#-automatic-serialization-to-formdata)
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77 | - [Files Posting](#files-posting)
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78 | - [HTML Form Posting](#-html-form-posting-browser)
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79 | - [π Progress capturing](#-progress-capturing)
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80 | - [π Rate limiting](#-progress-capturing)
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81 | - [π AxiosHeaders](#-axiosheaders)
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82 | - [π₯ Fetch adapter](#-fetch-adapter)
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83 | - [Semver](#semver)
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84 | - [Promises](#promises)
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85 | - [TypeScript](#typescript)
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86 | - [Resources](#resources)
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87 | - [Credits](#credits)
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88 | - [License](#license)
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89 |
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90 | ## Features
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91 |
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92 | - Make [XMLHttpRequests](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/XMLHttpRequest) from the browser
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93 | - Make [http](https://nodejs.org/api/http.html) requests from node.js
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94 | - Supports the [Promise](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise) API
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95 | - Intercept request and response
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96 | - Transform request and response data
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97 | - Cancel requests
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98 | - Automatic transforms for [JSON](https://www.json.org/json-en.html) data
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99 | - π Automatic data object serialization to `multipart/form-data` and `x-www-form-urlencoded` body encodings
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100 | - Client side support for protecting against [XSRF](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery)
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101 |
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102 | ## Browser Support
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103 |
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104 | ![Chrome](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/alrra/browser-logos/main/src/chrome/chrome_48x48.png) | ![Firefox](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/alrra/browser-logos/main/src/firefox/firefox_48x48.png) | ![Safari](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/alrra/browser-logos/main/src/safari/safari_48x48.png) | ![Opera](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/alrra/browser-logos/main/src/opera/opera_48x48.png) | ![Edge](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/alrra/browser-logos/main/src/edge/edge_48x48.png) |
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105 | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
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106 | Latest β | Latest β | Latest β | Latest β | Latest β | 11 β |
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107 |
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108 | [![Browser Matrix](https://saucelabs.com/open_sauce/build_matrix/axios.svg)](https://saucelabs.com/u/axios)
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109 |
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110 | ## Installing
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111 |
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112 | ### Package manager
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113 |
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114 | Using npm:
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115 |
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116 | ```bash
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117 | $ npm install axios
|
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118 | ```
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119 |
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120 | Using bower:
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121 |
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122 | ```bash
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123 | $ bower install axios
|
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124 | ```
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125 |
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126 | Using yarn:
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127 |
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128 | ```bash
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129 | $ yarn add axios
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130 | ```
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131 |
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132 | Using pnpm:
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133 |
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134 | ```bash
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135 | $ pnpm add axios
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136 | ```
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137 |
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138 | Once the package is installed, you can import the library using `import` or `require` approach:
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139 |
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140 | ```js
|
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141 | import axios, {isCancel, AxiosError} from 'axios';
|
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142 | ```
|
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143 |
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144 | You can also use the default export, since the named export is just a re-export from the Axios factory:
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145 |
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146 | ```js
|
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147 | import axios from 'axios';
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148 |
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149 | console.log(axios.isCancel('something'));
|
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150 | ````
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151 |
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152 | If you use `require` for importing, **only default export is available**:
|
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153 |
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154 | ```js
|
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155 | const axios = require('axios');
|
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156 |
|
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157 | console.log(axios.isCancel('something'));
|
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158 | ```
|
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159 |
|
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160 | For some bundlers and some ES6 linter's you may need to do the following:
|
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161 |
|
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162 | ```js
|
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163 | import { default as axios } from 'axios';
|
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164 | ```
|
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165 |
|
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166 | For cases where something went wrong when trying to import a module into a custom or legacy environment,
|
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167 | you can try importing the module package directly:
|
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168 |
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169 | ```js
|
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170 | const axios = require('axios/dist/browser/axios.cjs'); // browser commonJS bundle (ES2017)
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171 | // const axios = require('axios/dist/node/axios.cjs'); // node commonJS bundle (ES2017)
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172 | ```
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173 |
|
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174 | ### CDN
|
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175 |
|
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176 | Using jsDelivr CDN (ES5 UMD browser module):
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177 |
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178 | ```html
|
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179 | <script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/axios@1.6.7/dist/axios.min.js"></script>
|
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180 | ```
|
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181 |
|
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182 | Using unpkg CDN:
|
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183 |
|
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184 | ```html
|
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185 | <script src="https://unpkg.com/axios@1.6.7/dist/axios.min.js"></script>
|
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186 | ```
|
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187 |
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188 | ## Example
|
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189 |
|
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190 | > **Note**: CommonJS usage
|
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191 | > In order to gain the TypeScript typings (for intellisense / autocomplete) while using CommonJS imports with `require()`, use the following approach:
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192 |
|
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193 | ```js
|
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194 | import axios from 'axios';
|
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195 | //const axios = require('axios'); // legacy way
|
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196 |
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197 | // Make a request for a user with a given ID
|
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198 | axios.get('/user?ID=12345')
|
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199 | .then(function (response) {
|
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200 | // handle success
|
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201 | console.log(response);
|
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202 | })
|
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203 | .catch(function (error) {
|
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204 | // handle error
|
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205 | console.log(error);
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206 | })
|
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207 | .finally(function () {
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208 | // always executed
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209 | });
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210 |
|
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211 | // Optionally the request above could also be done as
|
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212 | axios.get('/user', {
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213 | params: {
|
---|
214 | ID: 12345
|
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215 | }
|
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216 | })
|
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217 | .then(function (response) {
|
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218 | console.log(response);
|
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219 | })
|
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220 | .catch(function (error) {
|
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221 | console.log(error);
|
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222 | })
|
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223 | .finally(function () {
|
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224 | // always executed
|
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225 | });
|
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226 |
|
---|
227 | // Want to use async/await? Add the `async` keyword to your outer function/method.
|
---|
228 | async function getUser() {
|
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229 | try {
|
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230 | const response = await axios.get('/user?ID=12345');
|
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231 | console.log(response);
|
---|
232 | } catch (error) {
|
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233 | console.error(error);
|
---|
234 | }
|
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235 | }
|
---|
236 | ```
|
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237 |
|
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238 | > **Note**: `async/await` is part of ECMAScript 2017 and is not supported in Internet
|
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239 | > Explorer and older browsers, so use with caution.
|
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240 |
|
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241 | Performing a `POST` request
|
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242 |
|
---|
243 | ```js
|
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244 | axios.post('/user', {
|
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245 | firstName: 'Fred',
|
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246 | lastName: 'Flintstone'
|
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247 | })
|
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248 | .then(function (response) {
|
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249 | console.log(response);
|
---|
250 | })
|
---|
251 | .catch(function (error) {
|
---|
252 | console.log(error);
|
---|
253 | });
|
---|
254 | ```
|
---|
255 |
|
---|
256 | Performing multiple concurrent requests
|
---|
257 |
|
---|
258 | ```js
|
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259 | function getUserAccount() {
|
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260 | return axios.get('/user/12345');
|
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261 | }
|
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262 |
|
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263 | function getUserPermissions() {
|
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264 | return axios.get('/user/12345/permissions');
|
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265 | }
|
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266 |
|
---|
267 | Promise.all([getUserAccount(), getUserPermissions()])
|
---|
268 | .then(function (results) {
|
---|
269 | const acct = results[0];
|
---|
270 | const perm = results[1];
|
---|
271 | });
|
---|
272 | ```
|
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273 |
|
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274 | ## axios API
|
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275 |
|
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276 | Requests can be made by passing the relevant config to `axios`.
|
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277 |
|
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278 | ##### axios(config)
|
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279 |
|
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280 | ```js
|
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281 | // Send a POST request
|
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282 | axios({
|
---|
283 | method: 'post',
|
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284 | url: '/user/12345',
|
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285 | data: {
|
---|
286 | firstName: 'Fred',
|
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287 | lastName: 'Flintstone'
|
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288 | }
|
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289 | });
|
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290 | ```
|
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291 |
|
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292 | ```js
|
---|
293 | // GET request for remote image in node.js
|
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294 | axios({
|
---|
295 | method: 'get',
|
---|
296 | url: 'https://bit.ly/2mTM3nY',
|
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297 | responseType: 'stream'
|
---|
298 | })
|
---|
299 | .then(function (response) {
|
---|
300 | response.data.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('ada_lovelace.jpg'))
|
---|
301 | });
|
---|
302 | ```
|
---|
303 |
|
---|
304 | ##### axios(url[, config])
|
---|
305 |
|
---|
306 | ```js
|
---|
307 | // Send a GET request (default method)
|
---|
308 | axios('/user/12345');
|
---|
309 | ```
|
---|
310 |
|
---|
311 | ### Request method aliases
|
---|
312 |
|
---|
313 | For convenience, aliases have been provided for all common request methods.
|
---|
314 |
|
---|
315 | ##### axios.request(config)
|
---|
316 | ##### axios.get(url[, config])
|
---|
317 | ##### axios.delete(url[, config])
|
---|
318 | ##### axios.head(url[, config])
|
---|
319 | ##### axios.options(url[, config])
|
---|
320 | ##### axios.post(url[, data[, config]])
|
---|
321 | ##### axios.put(url[, data[, config]])
|
---|
322 | ##### axios.patch(url[, data[, config]])
|
---|
323 |
|
---|
324 | ###### NOTE
|
---|
325 | When using the alias methods `url`, `method`, and `data` properties don't need to be specified in config.
|
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326 |
|
---|
327 | ### Concurrency (Deprecated)
|
---|
328 | Please use `Promise.all` to replace the below functions.
|
---|
329 |
|
---|
330 | Helper functions for dealing with concurrent requests.
|
---|
331 |
|
---|
332 | axios.all(iterable)
|
---|
333 | axios.spread(callback)
|
---|
334 |
|
---|
335 | ### Creating an instance
|
---|
336 |
|
---|
337 | You can create a new instance of axios with a custom config.
|
---|
338 |
|
---|
339 | ##### axios.create([config])
|
---|
340 |
|
---|
341 | ```js
|
---|
342 | const instance = axios.create({
|
---|
343 | baseURL: 'https://some-domain.com/api/',
|
---|
344 | timeout: 1000,
|
---|
345 | headers: {'X-Custom-Header': 'foobar'}
|
---|
346 | });
|
---|
347 | ```
|
---|
348 |
|
---|
349 | ### Instance methods
|
---|
350 |
|
---|
351 | The available instance methods are listed below. The specified config will be merged with the instance config.
|
---|
352 |
|
---|
353 | ##### axios#request(config)
|
---|
354 | ##### axios#get(url[, config])
|
---|
355 | ##### axios#delete(url[, config])
|
---|
356 | ##### axios#head(url[, config])
|
---|
357 | ##### axios#options(url[, config])
|
---|
358 | ##### axios#post(url[, data[, config]])
|
---|
359 | ##### axios#put(url[, data[, config]])
|
---|
360 | ##### axios#patch(url[, data[, config]])
|
---|
361 | ##### axios#getUri([config])
|
---|
362 |
|
---|
363 | ## Request Config
|
---|
364 |
|
---|
365 | These are the available config options for making requests. Only the `url` is required. Requests will default to `GET` if `method` is not specified.
|
---|
366 |
|
---|
367 | ```js
|
---|
368 | {
|
---|
369 | // `url` is the server URL that will be used for the request
|
---|
370 | url: '/user',
|
---|
371 |
|
---|
372 | // `method` is the request method to be used when making the request
|
---|
373 | method: 'get', // default
|
---|
374 |
|
---|
375 | // `baseURL` will be prepended to `url` unless `url` is absolute.
|
---|
376 | // It can be convenient to set `baseURL` for an instance of axios to pass relative URLs
|
---|
377 | // to methods of that instance.
|
---|
378 | baseURL: 'https://some-domain.com/api/',
|
---|
379 |
|
---|
380 | // `transformRequest` allows changes to the request data before it is sent to the server
|
---|
381 | // This is only applicable for request methods 'PUT', 'POST', 'PATCH' and 'DELETE'
|
---|
382 | // The last function in the array must return a string or an instance of Buffer, ArrayBuffer,
|
---|
383 | // FormData or Stream
|
---|
384 | // You may modify the headers object.
|
---|
385 | transformRequest: [function (data, headers) {
|
---|
386 | // Do whatever you want to transform the data
|
---|
387 |
|
---|
388 | return data;
|
---|
389 | }],
|
---|
390 |
|
---|
391 | // `transformResponse` allows changes to the response data to be made before
|
---|
392 | // it is passed to then/catch
|
---|
393 | transformResponse: [function (data) {
|
---|
394 | // Do whatever you want to transform the data
|
---|
395 |
|
---|
396 | return data;
|
---|
397 | }],
|
---|
398 |
|
---|
399 | // `headers` are custom headers to be sent
|
---|
400 | headers: {'X-Requested-With': 'XMLHttpRequest'},
|
---|
401 |
|
---|
402 | // `params` are the URL parameters to be sent with the request
|
---|
403 | // Must be a plain object or a URLSearchParams object
|
---|
404 | params: {
|
---|
405 | ID: 12345
|
---|
406 | },
|
---|
407 |
|
---|
408 | // `paramsSerializer` is an optional config that allows you to customize serializing `params`.
|
---|
409 | paramsSerializer: {
|
---|
410 |
|
---|
411 | //Custom encoder function which sends key/value pairs in an iterative fashion.
|
---|
412 | encode?: (param: string): string => { /* Do custom operations here and return transformed string */ },
|
---|
413 |
|
---|
414 | // Custom serializer function for the entire parameter. Allows user to mimic pre 1.x behaviour.
|
---|
415 | serialize?: (params: Record<string, any>, options?: ParamsSerializerOptions ),
|
---|
416 |
|
---|
417 | //Configuration for formatting array indexes in the params.
|
---|
418 | indexes: false // Three available options: (1) indexes: null (leads to no brackets), (2) (default) indexes: false (leads to empty brackets), (3) indexes: true (leads to brackets with indexes).
|
---|
419 | },
|
---|
420 |
|
---|
421 | // `data` is the data to be sent as the request body
|
---|
422 | // Only applicable for request methods 'PUT', 'POST', 'DELETE , and 'PATCH'
|
---|
423 | // When no `transformRequest` is set, must be of one of the following types:
|
---|
424 | // - string, plain object, ArrayBuffer, ArrayBufferView, URLSearchParams
|
---|
425 | // - Browser only: FormData, File, Blob
|
---|
426 | // - Node only: Stream, Buffer, FormData (form-data package)
|
---|
427 | data: {
|
---|
428 | firstName: 'Fred'
|
---|
429 | },
|
---|
430 |
|
---|
431 | // syntax alternative to send data into the body
|
---|
432 | // method post
|
---|
433 | // only the value is sent, not the key
|
---|
434 | data: 'Country=Brasil&City=Belo Horizonte',
|
---|
435 |
|
---|
436 | // `timeout` specifies the number of milliseconds before the request times out.
|
---|
437 | // If the request takes longer than `timeout`, the request will be aborted.
|
---|
438 | timeout: 1000, // default is `0` (no timeout)
|
---|
439 |
|
---|
440 | // `withCredentials` indicates whether or not cross-site Access-Control requests
|
---|
441 | // should be made using credentials
|
---|
442 | withCredentials: false, // default
|
---|
443 |
|
---|
444 | // `adapter` allows custom handling of requests which makes testing easier.
|
---|
445 | // Return a promise and supply a valid response (see lib/adapters/README.md)
|
---|
446 | adapter: function (config) {
|
---|
447 | /* ... */
|
---|
448 | },
|
---|
449 | // Also, you can set the name of the built-in adapter, or provide an array with their names
|
---|
450 | // to choose the first available in the environment
|
---|
451 | adapter: 'xhr' // 'fetch' | 'http' | ['xhr', 'http', 'fetch']
|
---|
452 |
|
---|
453 | // `auth` indicates that HTTP Basic auth should be used, and supplies credentials.
|
---|
454 | // This will set an `Authorization` header, overwriting any existing
|
---|
455 | // `Authorization` custom headers you have set using `headers`.
|
---|
456 | // Please note that only HTTP Basic auth is configurable through this parameter.
|
---|
457 | // For Bearer tokens and such, use `Authorization` custom headers instead.
|
---|
458 | auth: {
|
---|
459 | username: 'janedoe',
|
---|
460 | password: 's00pers3cret'
|
---|
461 | },
|
---|
462 |
|
---|
463 | // `responseType` indicates the type of data that the server will respond with
|
---|
464 | // options are: 'arraybuffer', 'document', 'json', 'text', 'stream'
|
---|
465 | // browser only: 'blob'
|
---|
466 | responseType: 'json', // default
|
---|
467 |
|
---|
468 | // `responseEncoding` indicates encoding to use for decoding responses (Node.js only)
|
---|
469 | // Note: Ignored for `responseType` of 'stream' or client-side requests
|
---|
470 | // options are: 'ascii', 'ASCII', 'ansi', 'ANSI', 'binary', 'BINARY', 'base64', 'BASE64', 'base64url',
|
---|
471 | // 'BASE64URL', 'hex', 'HEX', 'latin1', 'LATIN1', 'ucs-2', 'UCS-2', 'ucs2', 'UCS2', 'utf-8', 'UTF-8',
|
---|
472 | // 'utf8', 'UTF8', 'utf16le', 'UTF16LE'
|
---|
473 | responseEncoding: 'utf8', // default
|
---|
474 |
|
---|
475 | // `xsrfCookieName` is the name of the cookie to use as a value for xsrf token
|
---|
476 | xsrfCookieName: 'XSRF-TOKEN', // default
|
---|
477 |
|
---|
478 | // `xsrfHeaderName` is the name of the http header that carries the xsrf token value
|
---|
479 | xsrfHeaderName: 'X-XSRF-TOKEN', // default
|
---|
480 |
|
---|
481 | // `undefined` (default) - set XSRF header only for the same origin requests
|
---|
482 | withXSRFToken: boolean | undefined | ((config: InternalAxiosRequestConfig) => boolean | undefined),
|
---|
483 |
|
---|
484 | // `onUploadProgress` allows handling of progress events for uploads
|
---|
485 | // browser & node.js
|
---|
486 | onUploadProgress: function ({loaded, total, progress, bytes, estimated, rate, upload = true}) {
|
---|
487 | // Do whatever you want with the Axios progress event
|
---|
488 | },
|
---|
489 |
|
---|
490 | // `onDownloadProgress` allows handling of progress events for downloads
|
---|
491 | // browser & node.js
|
---|
492 | onDownloadProgress: function ({loaded, total, progress, bytes, estimated, rate, download = true}) {
|
---|
493 | // Do whatever you want with the Axios progress event
|
---|
494 | },
|
---|
495 |
|
---|
496 | // `maxContentLength` defines the max size of the http response content in bytes allowed in node.js
|
---|
497 | maxContentLength: 2000,
|
---|
498 |
|
---|
499 | // `maxBodyLength` (Node only option) defines the max size of the http request content in bytes allowed
|
---|
500 | maxBodyLength: 2000,
|
---|
501 |
|
---|
502 | // `validateStatus` defines whether to resolve or reject the promise for a given
|
---|
503 | // HTTP response status code. If `validateStatus` returns `true` (or is set to `null`
|
---|
504 | // or `undefined`), the promise will be resolved; otherwise, the promise will be
|
---|
505 | // rejected.
|
---|
506 | validateStatus: function (status) {
|
---|
507 | return status >= 200 && status < 300; // default
|
---|
508 | },
|
---|
509 |
|
---|
510 | // `maxRedirects` defines the maximum number of redirects to follow in node.js.
|
---|
511 | // If set to 0, no redirects will be followed.
|
---|
512 | maxRedirects: 21, // default
|
---|
513 |
|
---|
514 | // `beforeRedirect` defines a function that will be called before redirect.
|
---|
515 | // Use this to adjust the request options upon redirecting,
|
---|
516 | // to inspect the latest response headers,
|
---|
517 | // or to cancel the request by throwing an error
|
---|
518 | // If maxRedirects is set to 0, `beforeRedirect` is not used.
|
---|
519 | beforeRedirect: (options, { headers }) => {
|
---|
520 | if (options.hostname === "example.com") {
|
---|
521 | options.auth = "user:password";
|
---|
522 | }
|
---|
523 | },
|
---|
524 |
|
---|
525 | // `socketPath` defines a UNIX Socket to be used in node.js.
|
---|
526 | // e.g. '/var/run/docker.sock' to send requests to the docker daemon.
|
---|
527 | // Only either `socketPath` or `proxy` can be specified.
|
---|
528 | // If both are specified, `socketPath` is used.
|
---|
529 | socketPath: null, // default
|
---|
530 |
|
---|
531 | // `transport` determines the transport method that will be used to make the request. If defined, it will be used. Otherwise, if `maxRedirects` is 0, the default `http` or `https` library will be used, depending on the protocol specified in `protocol`. Otherwise, the `httpFollow` or `httpsFollow` library will be used, again depending on the protocol, which can handle redirects.
|
---|
532 | transport: undefined, // default
|
---|
533 |
|
---|
534 | // `httpAgent` and `httpsAgent` define a custom agent to be used when performing http
|
---|
535 | // and https requests, respectively, in node.js. This allows options to be added like
|
---|
536 | // `keepAlive` that are not enabled by default.
|
---|
537 | httpAgent: new http.Agent({ keepAlive: true }),
|
---|
538 | httpsAgent: new https.Agent({ keepAlive: true }),
|
---|
539 |
|
---|
540 | // `proxy` defines the hostname, port, and protocol of the proxy server.
|
---|
541 | // You can also define your proxy using the conventional `http_proxy` and
|
---|
542 | // `https_proxy` environment variables. If you are using environment variables
|
---|
543 | // for your proxy configuration, you can also define a `no_proxy` environment
|
---|
544 | // variable as a comma-separated list of domains that should not be proxied.
|
---|
545 | // Use `false` to disable proxies, ignoring environment variables.
|
---|
546 | // `auth` indicates that HTTP Basic auth should be used to connect to the proxy, and
|
---|
547 | // supplies credentials.
|
---|
548 | // This will set an `Proxy-Authorization` header, overwriting any existing
|
---|
549 | // `Proxy-Authorization` custom headers you have set using `headers`.
|
---|
550 | // If the proxy server uses HTTPS, then you must set the protocol to `https`.
|
---|
551 | proxy: {
|
---|
552 | protocol: 'https',
|
---|
553 | host: '127.0.0.1',
|
---|
554 | // hostname: '127.0.0.1' // Takes precedence over 'host' if both are defined
|
---|
555 | port: 9000,
|
---|
556 | auth: {
|
---|
557 | username: 'mikeymike',
|
---|
558 | password: 'rapunz3l'
|
---|
559 | }
|
---|
560 | },
|
---|
561 |
|
---|
562 | // `cancelToken` specifies a cancel token that can be used to cancel the request
|
---|
563 | // (see Cancellation section below for details)
|
---|
564 | cancelToken: new CancelToken(function (cancel) {
|
---|
565 | }),
|
---|
566 |
|
---|
567 | // an alternative way to cancel Axios requests using AbortController
|
---|
568 | signal: new AbortController().signal,
|
---|
569 |
|
---|
570 | // `decompress` indicates whether or not the response body should be decompressed
|
---|
571 | // automatically. If set to `true` will also remove the 'content-encoding' header
|
---|
572 | // from the responses objects of all decompressed responses
|
---|
573 | // - Node only (XHR cannot turn off decompression)
|
---|
574 | decompress: true, // default
|
---|
575 |
|
---|
576 | // `insecureHTTPParser` boolean.
|
---|
577 | // Indicates where to use an insecure HTTP parser that accepts invalid HTTP headers.
|
---|
578 | // This may allow interoperability with non-conformant HTTP implementations.
|
---|
579 | // Using the insecure parser should be avoided.
|
---|
580 | // see options https://nodejs.org/dist/latest-v12.x/docs/api/http.html#http_http_request_url_options_callback
|
---|
581 | // see also https://nodejs.org/en/blog/vulnerability/february-2020-security-releases/#strict-http-header-parsing-none
|
---|
582 | insecureHTTPParser: undefined, // default
|
---|
583 |
|
---|
584 | // transitional options for backward compatibility that may be removed in the newer versions
|
---|
585 | transitional: {
|
---|
586 | // silent JSON parsing mode
|
---|
587 | // `true` - ignore JSON parsing errors and set response.data to null if parsing failed (old behaviour)
|
---|
588 | // `false` - throw SyntaxError if JSON parsing failed (Note: responseType must be set to 'json')
|
---|
589 | silentJSONParsing: true, // default value for the current Axios version
|
---|
590 |
|
---|
591 | // try to parse the response string as JSON even if `responseType` is not 'json'
|
---|
592 | forcedJSONParsing: true,
|
---|
593 |
|
---|
594 | // throw ETIMEDOUT error instead of generic ECONNABORTED on request timeouts
|
---|
595 | clarifyTimeoutError: false,
|
---|
596 | },
|
---|
597 |
|
---|
598 | env: {
|
---|
599 | // The FormData class to be used to automatically serialize the payload into a FormData object
|
---|
600 | FormData: window?.FormData || global?.FormData
|
---|
601 | },
|
---|
602 |
|
---|
603 | formSerializer: {
|
---|
604 | visitor: (value, key, path, helpers) => {}; // custom visitor function to serialize form values
|
---|
605 | dots: boolean; // use dots instead of brackets format
|
---|
606 | metaTokens: boolean; // keep special endings like {} in parameter key
|
---|
607 | indexes: boolean; // array indexes format null - no brackets, false - empty brackets, true - brackets with indexes
|
---|
608 | },
|
---|
609 |
|
---|
610 | // http adapter only (node.js)
|
---|
611 | maxRate: [
|
---|
612 | 100 * 1024, // 100KB/s upload limit,
|
---|
613 | 100 * 1024 // 100KB/s download limit
|
---|
614 | ]
|
---|
615 | }
|
---|
616 | ```
|
---|
617 |
|
---|
618 | ## Response Schema
|
---|
619 |
|
---|
620 | The response for a request contains the following information.
|
---|
621 |
|
---|
622 | ```js
|
---|
623 | {
|
---|
624 | // `data` is the response that was provided by the server
|
---|
625 | data: {},
|
---|
626 |
|
---|
627 | // `status` is the HTTP status code from the server response
|
---|
628 | status: 200,
|
---|
629 |
|
---|
630 | // `statusText` is the HTTP status message from the server response
|
---|
631 | statusText: 'OK',
|
---|
632 |
|
---|
633 | // `headers` the HTTP headers that the server responded with
|
---|
634 | // All header names are lowercase and can be accessed using the bracket notation.
|
---|
635 | // Example: `response.headers['content-type']`
|
---|
636 | headers: {},
|
---|
637 |
|
---|
638 | // `config` is the config that was provided to `axios` for the request
|
---|
639 | config: {},
|
---|
640 |
|
---|
641 | // `request` is the request that generated this response
|
---|
642 | // It is the last ClientRequest instance in node.js (in redirects)
|
---|
643 | // and an XMLHttpRequest instance in the browser
|
---|
644 | request: {}
|
---|
645 | }
|
---|
646 | ```
|
---|
647 |
|
---|
648 | When using `then`, you will receive the response as follows:
|
---|
649 |
|
---|
650 | ```js
|
---|
651 | axios.get('/user/12345')
|
---|
652 | .then(function (response) {
|
---|
653 | console.log(response.data);
|
---|
654 | console.log(response.status);
|
---|
655 | console.log(response.statusText);
|
---|
656 | console.log(response.headers);
|
---|
657 | console.log(response.config);
|
---|
658 | });
|
---|
659 | ```
|
---|
660 |
|
---|
661 | When using `catch`, or passing a [rejection callback](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise/then) as second parameter of `then`, the response will be available through the `error` object as explained in the [Handling Errors](#handling-errors) section.
|
---|
662 |
|
---|
663 | ## Config Defaults
|
---|
664 |
|
---|
665 | You can specify config defaults that will be applied to every request.
|
---|
666 |
|
---|
667 | ### Global axios defaults
|
---|
668 |
|
---|
669 | ```js
|
---|
670 | axios.defaults.baseURL = 'https://api.example.com';
|
---|
671 |
|
---|
672 | // Important: If axios is used with multiple domains, the AUTH_TOKEN will be sent to all of them.
|
---|
673 | // See below for an example using Custom instance defaults instead.
|
---|
674 | axios.defaults.headers.common['Authorization'] = AUTH_TOKEN;
|
---|
675 |
|
---|
676 | axios.defaults.headers.post['Content-Type'] = 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded';
|
---|
677 | ```
|
---|
678 |
|
---|
679 | ### Custom instance defaults
|
---|
680 |
|
---|
681 | ```js
|
---|
682 | // Set config defaults when creating the instance
|
---|
683 | const instance = axios.create({
|
---|
684 | baseURL: 'https://api.example.com'
|
---|
685 | });
|
---|
686 |
|
---|
687 | // Alter defaults after instance has been created
|
---|
688 | instance.defaults.headers.common['Authorization'] = AUTH_TOKEN;
|
---|
689 | ```
|
---|
690 |
|
---|
691 | ### Config order of precedence
|
---|
692 |
|
---|
693 | Config will be merged with an order of precedence. The order is library defaults found in [lib/defaults.js](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/master/lib/defaults/index.js#L28), then `defaults` property of the instance, and finally `config` argument for the request. The latter will take precedence over the former. Here's an example.
|
---|
694 |
|
---|
695 | ```js
|
---|
696 | // Create an instance using the config defaults provided by the library
|
---|
697 | // At this point the timeout config value is `0` as is the default for the library
|
---|
698 | const instance = axios.create();
|
---|
699 |
|
---|
700 | // Override timeout default for the library
|
---|
701 | // Now all requests using this instance will wait 2.5 seconds before timing out
|
---|
702 | instance.defaults.timeout = 2500;
|
---|
703 |
|
---|
704 | // Override timeout for this request as it's known to take a long time
|
---|
705 | instance.get('/longRequest', {
|
---|
706 | timeout: 5000
|
---|
707 | });
|
---|
708 | ```
|
---|
709 |
|
---|
710 | ## Interceptors
|
---|
711 |
|
---|
712 | You can intercept requests or responses before they are handled by `then` or `catch`.
|
---|
713 |
|
---|
714 | ```js
|
---|
715 | // Add a request interceptor
|
---|
716 | axios.interceptors.request.use(function (config) {
|
---|
717 | // Do something before request is sent
|
---|
718 | return config;
|
---|
719 | }, function (error) {
|
---|
720 | // Do something with request error
|
---|
721 | return Promise.reject(error);
|
---|
722 | });
|
---|
723 |
|
---|
724 | // Add a response interceptor
|
---|
725 | axios.interceptors.response.use(function (response) {
|
---|
726 | // Any status code that lie within the range of 2xx cause this function to trigger
|
---|
727 | // Do something with response data
|
---|
728 | return response;
|
---|
729 | }, function (error) {
|
---|
730 | // Any status codes that falls outside the range of 2xx cause this function to trigger
|
---|
731 | // Do something with response error
|
---|
732 | return Promise.reject(error);
|
---|
733 | });
|
---|
734 | ```
|
---|
735 |
|
---|
736 | If you need to remove an interceptor later you can.
|
---|
737 |
|
---|
738 | ```js
|
---|
739 | const myInterceptor = axios.interceptors.request.use(function () {/*...*/});
|
---|
740 | axios.interceptors.request.eject(myInterceptor);
|
---|
741 | ```
|
---|
742 |
|
---|
743 | You can also clear all interceptors for requests or responses.
|
---|
744 | ```js
|
---|
745 | const instance = axios.create();
|
---|
746 | instance.interceptors.request.use(function () {/*...*/});
|
---|
747 | instance.interceptors.request.clear(); // Removes interceptors from requests
|
---|
748 | instance.interceptors.response.use(function () {/*...*/});
|
---|
749 | instance.interceptors.response.clear(); // Removes interceptors from responses
|
---|
750 | ```
|
---|
751 |
|
---|
752 | You can add interceptors to a custom instance of axios.
|
---|
753 |
|
---|
754 | ```js
|
---|
755 | const instance = axios.create();
|
---|
756 | instance.interceptors.request.use(function () {/*...*/});
|
---|
757 | ```
|
---|
758 |
|
---|
759 | When you add request interceptors, they are presumed to be asynchronous by default. This can cause a delay
|
---|
760 | in the execution of your axios request when the main thread is blocked (a promise is created under the hood for
|
---|
761 | the interceptor and your request gets put on the bottom of the call stack). If your request interceptors are synchronous you can add a flag
|
---|
762 | to the options object that will tell axios to run the code synchronously and avoid any delays in request execution.
|
---|
763 |
|
---|
764 | ```js
|
---|
765 | axios.interceptors.request.use(function (config) {
|
---|
766 | config.headers.test = 'I am only a header!';
|
---|
767 | return config;
|
---|
768 | }, null, { synchronous: true });
|
---|
769 | ```
|
---|
770 |
|
---|
771 | If you want to execute a particular interceptor based on a runtime check,
|
---|
772 | you can add a `runWhen` function to the options object. The request interceptor will not be executed **if and only if** the return
|
---|
773 | of `runWhen` is `false`. The function will be called with the config
|
---|
774 | object (don't forget that you can bind your own arguments to it as well.) This can be handy when you have an
|
---|
775 | asynchronous request interceptor that only needs to run at certain times.
|
---|
776 |
|
---|
777 | ```js
|
---|
778 | function onGetCall(config) {
|
---|
779 | return config.method === 'get';
|
---|
780 | }
|
---|
781 | axios.interceptors.request.use(function (config) {
|
---|
782 | config.headers.test = 'special get headers';
|
---|
783 | return config;
|
---|
784 | }, null, { runWhen: onGetCall });
|
---|
785 | ```
|
---|
786 |
|
---|
787 | > **Note:** options parameter(having `synchronous` and `runWhen` properties) is only supported for request interceptors at the moment.
|
---|
788 |
|
---|
789 | ### Multiple Interceptors
|
---|
790 |
|
---|
791 | Given you add multiple response interceptors
|
---|
792 | and when the response was fulfilled
|
---|
793 | - then each interceptor is executed
|
---|
794 | - then they are executed in the order they were added
|
---|
795 | - then only the last interceptor's result is returned
|
---|
796 | - then every interceptor receives the result of its predecessor
|
---|
797 | - and when the fulfillment-interceptor throws
|
---|
798 | - then the following fulfillment-interceptor is not called
|
---|
799 | - then the following rejection-interceptor is called
|
---|
800 | - once caught, another following fulfill-interceptor is called again (just like in a promise chain).
|
---|
801 |
|
---|
802 | Read [the interceptor tests](./test/specs/interceptors.spec.js) for seeing all this in code.
|
---|
803 |
|
---|
804 | ## Error Types
|
---|
805 |
|
---|
806 | There are many different axios error messages that can appear that can provide basic information about the specifics of the error and where opportunities may lie in debugging.
|
---|
807 |
|
---|
808 | The general structure of axios errors is as follows:
|
---|
809 | | Property | Definition |
|
---|
810 | | -------- | ---------- |
|
---|
811 | | message | A quick summary of the error message and the status it failed with. |
|
---|
812 | | name | This defines where the error originated from. For axios, it will always be an 'AxiosError'. |
|
---|
813 | | stack | Provides the stack trace of the error. |
|
---|
814 | | config | An axios config object with specific instance configurations defined by the user from when the request was made |
|
---|
815 | | code | Represents an axios identified error. The table below lists out specific definitions for internal axios error. |
|
---|
816 | | status | HTTP response status code. See [here](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HTTP_status_codes) for common HTTP response status code meanings.
|
---|
817 |
|
---|
818 | Below is a list of potential axios identified error
|
---|
819 | | Code | Definition |
|
---|
820 | | -------- | ---------- |
|
---|
821 | | ERR_BAD_OPTION_VALUE | Invalid or unsupported value provided in axios configuration. |
|
---|
822 | | ERR_BAD_OPTION | Invalid option provided in axios configuration. |
|
---|
823 | | ECONNABORTED | Request timed out due to exceeding timeout specified in axios configuration. |
|
---|
824 | | ETIMEDOUT | Request timed out due to exceeding default axios timelimit. |
|
---|
825 | | ERR_NETWORK | Network-related issue.
|
---|
826 | | ERR_FR_TOO_MANY_REDIRECTS | Request is redirected too many times; exceeds max redirects specified in axios configuration.
|
---|
827 | | ERR_DEPRECATED | Deprecated feature or method used in axios.
|
---|
828 | | ERR_BAD_RESPONSE | Response cannot be parsed properly or is in an unexpected format.
|
---|
829 | | ERR_BAD_REQUEST | Requested has unexpected format or missing required parameters. |
|
---|
830 | | ERR_CANCELED | Feature or method is canceled explicitly by the user.
|
---|
831 | | ERR_NOT_SUPPORT | Feature or method not supported in the current axios environment.
|
---|
832 | | ERR_INVALID_URL | Invalid URL provided for axios request.
|
---|
833 |
|
---|
834 | ## Handling Errors
|
---|
835 |
|
---|
836 | the default behavior is to reject every response that returns with a status code that falls out of the range of 2xx and treat it as an error.
|
---|
837 |
|
---|
838 | ```js
|
---|
839 | axios.get('/user/12345')
|
---|
840 | .catch(function (error) {
|
---|
841 | if (error.response) {
|
---|
842 | // The request was made and the server responded with a status code
|
---|
843 | // that falls out of the range of 2xx
|
---|
844 | console.log(error.response.data);
|
---|
845 | console.log(error.response.status);
|
---|
846 | console.log(error.response.headers);
|
---|
847 | } else if (error.request) {
|
---|
848 | // The request was made but no response was received
|
---|
849 | // `error.request` is an instance of XMLHttpRequest in the browser and an instance of
|
---|
850 | // http.ClientRequest in node.js
|
---|
851 | console.log(error.request);
|
---|
852 | } else {
|
---|
853 | // Something happened in setting up the request that triggered an Error
|
---|
854 | console.log('Error', error.message);
|
---|
855 | }
|
---|
856 | console.log(error.config);
|
---|
857 | });
|
---|
858 | ```
|
---|
859 |
|
---|
860 | Using the `validateStatus` config option, you can override the default condition (status >= 200 && status < 300) and define HTTP code(s) that should throw an error.
|
---|
861 |
|
---|
862 | ```js
|
---|
863 | axios.get('/user/12345', {
|
---|
864 | validateStatus: function (status) {
|
---|
865 | return status < 500; // Resolve only if the status code is less than 500
|
---|
866 | }
|
---|
867 | })
|
---|
868 | ```
|
---|
869 |
|
---|
870 | Using `toJSON` you get an object with more information about the HTTP error.
|
---|
871 |
|
---|
872 | ```js
|
---|
873 | axios.get('/user/12345')
|
---|
874 | .catch(function (error) {
|
---|
875 | console.log(error.toJSON());
|
---|
876 | });
|
---|
877 | ```
|
---|
878 |
|
---|
879 | ## Cancellation
|
---|
880 |
|
---|
881 | ### AbortController
|
---|
882 |
|
---|
883 | Starting from `v0.22.0` Axios supports AbortController to cancel requests in fetch API way:
|
---|
884 |
|
---|
885 | ```js
|
---|
886 | const controller = new AbortController();
|
---|
887 |
|
---|
888 | axios.get('/foo/bar', {
|
---|
889 | signal: controller.signal
|
---|
890 | }).then(function(response) {
|
---|
891 | //...
|
---|
892 | });
|
---|
893 | // cancel the request
|
---|
894 | controller.abort()
|
---|
895 | ```
|
---|
896 |
|
---|
897 | ### CancelToken `πdeprecated`
|
---|
898 |
|
---|
899 | You can also cancel a request using a *CancelToken*.
|
---|
900 |
|
---|
901 | > The axios cancel token API is based on the withdrawn [cancellable promises proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-cancelable-promises).
|
---|
902 |
|
---|
903 | > This API is deprecated since v0.22.0 and shouldn't be used in new projects
|
---|
904 |
|
---|
905 | You can create a cancel token using the `CancelToken.source` factory as shown below:
|
---|
906 |
|
---|
907 | ```js
|
---|
908 | const CancelToken = axios.CancelToken;
|
---|
909 | const source = CancelToken.source();
|
---|
910 |
|
---|
911 | axios.get('/user/12345', {
|
---|
912 | cancelToken: source.token
|
---|
913 | }).catch(function (thrown) {
|
---|
914 | if (axios.isCancel(thrown)) {
|
---|
915 | console.log('Request canceled', thrown.message);
|
---|
916 | } else {
|
---|
917 | // handle error
|
---|
918 | }
|
---|
919 | });
|
---|
920 |
|
---|
921 | axios.post('/user/12345', {
|
---|
922 | name: 'new name'
|
---|
923 | }, {
|
---|
924 | cancelToken: source.token
|
---|
925 | })
|
---|
926 |
|
---|
927 | // cancel the request (the message parameter is optional)
|
---|
928 | source.cancel('Operation canceled by the user.');
|
---|
929 | ```
|
---|
930 |
|
---|
931 | You can also create a cancel token by passing an executor function to the `CancelToken` constructor:
|
---|
932 |
|
---|
933 | ```js
|
---|
934 | const CancelToken = axios.CancelToken;
|
---|
935 | let cancel;
|
---|
936 |
|
---|
937 | axios.get('/user/12345', {
|
---|
938 | cancelToken: new CancelToken(function executor(c) {
|
---|
939 | // An executor function receives a cancel function as a parameter
|
---|
940 | cancel = c;
|
---|
941 | })
|
---|
942 | });
|
---|
943 |
|
---|
944 | // cancel the request
|
---|
945 | cancel();
|
---|
946 | ```
|
---|
947 |
|
---|
948 | > **Note:** you can cancel several requests with the same cancel token/abort controller.
|
---|
949 | > If a cancellation token is already cancelled at the moment of starting an Axios request, then the request is cancelled immediately, without any attempts to make a real request.
|
---|
950 |
|
---|
951 | > During the transition period, you can use both cancellation APIs, even for the same request:
|
---|
952 |
|
---|
953 | ## Using `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` format
|
---|
954 |
|
---|
955 | ### URLSearchParams
|
---|
956 |
|
---|
957 | By default, axios serializes JavaScript objects to `JSON`. To send data in the [`application/x-www-form-urlencoded` format](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Methods/POST) instead, you can use the [`URLSearchParams`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URLSearchParams) API, which is [supported](http://www.caniuse.com/#feat=urlsearchparams) in the vast majority of browsers,and [ Node](https://nodejs.org/api/url.html#url_class_urlsearchparams) starting with v10 (released in 2018).
|
---|
958 |
|
---|
959 | ```js
|
---|
960 | const params = new URLSearchParams({ foo: 'bar' });
|
---|
961 | params.append('extraparam', 'value');
|
---|
962 | axios.post('/foo', params);
|
---|
963 | ```
|
---|
964 |
|
---|
965 | ### Query string (Older browsers)
|
---|
966 |
|
---|
967 | For compatibility with very old browsers, there is a [polyfill](https://github.com/WebReflection/url-search-params) available (make sure to polyfill the global environment).
|
---|
968 |
|
---|
969 | Alternatively, you can encode data using the [`qs`](https://github.com/ljharb/qs) library:
|
---|
970 |
|
---|
971 | ```js
|
---|
972 | const qs = require('qs');
|
---|
973 | axios.post('/foo', qs.stringify({ 'bar': 123 }));
|
---|
974 | ```
|
---|
975 |
|
---|
976 | Or in another way (ES6),
|
---|
977 |
|
---|
978 | ```js
|
---|
979 | import qs from 'qs';
|
---|
980 | const data = { 'bar': 123 };
|
---|
981 | const options = {
|
---|
982 | method: 'POST',
|
---|
983 | headers: { 'content-type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded' },
|
---|
984 | data: qs.stringify(data),
|
---|
985 | url,
|
---|
986 | };
|
---|
987 | axios(options);
|
---|
988 | ```
|
---|
989 |
|
---|
990 | ### Older Node.js versions
|
---|
991 |
|
---|
992 | For older Node.js engines, you can use the [`querystring`](https://nodejs.org/api/querystring.html) module as follows:
|
---|
993 |
|
---|
994 | ```js
|
---|
995 | const querystring = require('querystring');
|
---|
996 | axios.post('https://something.com/', querystring.stringify({ foo: 'bar' }));
|
---|
997 | ```
|
---|
998 |
|
---|
999 | You can also use the [`qs`](https://github.com/ljharb/qs) library.
|
---|
1000 |
|
---|
1001 | > **Note**: The `qs` library is preferable if you need to stringify nested objects, as the `querystring` method has [known issues](https://github.com/nodejs/node-v0.x-archive/issues/1665) with that use case.
|
---|
1002 |
|
---|
1003 | ### π Automatic serialization to URLSearchParams
|
---|
1004 |
|
---|
1005 | Axios will automatically serialize the data object to urlencoded format if the content-type header is set to "application/x-www-form-urlencoded".
|
---|
1006 |
|
---|
1007 | ```js
|
---|
1008 | const data = {
|
---|
1009 | x: 1,
|
---|
1010 | arr: [1, 2, 3],
|
---|
1011 | arr2: [1, [2], 3],
|
---|
1012 | users: [{name: 'Peter', surname: 'Griffin'}, {name: 'Thomas', surname: 'Anderson'}],
|
---|
1013 | };
|
---|
1014 |
|
---|
1015 | await axios.postForm('https://postman-echo.com/post', data,
|
---|
1016 | {headers: {'content-type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}}
|
---|
1017 | );
|
---|
1018 | ```
|
---|
1019 |
|
---|
1020 | The server will handle it as:
|
---|
1021 |
|
---|
1022 | ```js
|
---|
1023 | {
|
---|
1024 | x: '1',
|
---|
1025 | 'arr[]': [ '1', '2', '3' ],
|
---|
1026 | 'arr2[0]': '1',
|
---|
1027 | 'arr2[1][0]': '2',
|
---|
1028 | 'arr2[2]': '3',
|
---|
1029 | 'arr3[]': [ '1', '2', '3' ],
|
---|
1030 | 'users[0][name]': 'Peter',
|
---|
1031 | 'users[0][surname]': 'griffin',
|
---|
1032 | 'users[1][name]': 'Thomas',
|
---|
1033 | 'users[1][surname]': 'Anderson'
|
---|
1034 | }
|
---|
1035 | ````
|
---|
1036 |
|
---|
1037 | If your backend body-parser (like `body-parser` of `express.js`) supports nested objects decoding, you will get the same object on the server-side automatically
|
---|
1038 |
|
---|
1039 | ```js
|
---|
1040 | var app = express();
|
---|
1041 |
|
---|
1042 | app.use(bodyParser.urlencoded({ extended: true })); // support encoded bodies
|
---|
1043 |
|
---|
1044 | app.post('/', function (req, res, next) {
|
---|
1045 | // echo body as JSON
|
---|
1046 | res.send(JSON.stringify(req.body));
|
---|
1047 | });
|
---|
1048 |
|
---|
1049 | server = app.listen(3000);
|
---|
1050 | ```
|
---|
1051 |
|
---|
1052 | ## Using `multipart/form-data` format
|
---|
1053 |
|
---|
1054 | ### FormData
|
---|
1055 |
|
---|
1056 | To send the data as a `multipart/formdata` you need to pass a formData instance as a payload.
|
---|
1057 | Setting the `Content-Type` header is not required as Axios guesses it based on the payload type.
|
---|
1058 |
|
---|
1059 | ```js
|
---|
1060 | const formData = new FormData();
|
---|
1061 | formData.append('foo', 'bar');
|
---|
1062 |
|
---|
1063 | axios.post('https://httpbin.org/post', formData);
|
---|
1064 | ```
|
---|
1065 |
|
---|
1066 | In node.js, you can use the [`form-data`](https://github.com/form-data/form-data) library as follows:
|
---|
1067 |
|
---|
1068 | ```js
|
---|
1069 | const FormData = require('form-data');
|
---|
1070 |
|
---|
1071 | const form = new FormData();
|
---|
1072 | form.append('my_field', 'my value');
|
---|
1073 | form.append('my_buffer', new Buffer(10));
|
---|
1074 | form.append('my_file', fs.createReadStream('/foo/bar.jpg'));
|
---|
1075 |
|
---|
1076 | axios.post('https://example.com', form)
|
---|
1077 | ```
|
---|
1078 |
|
---|
1079 | ### π Automatic serialization to FormData
|
---|
1080 |
|
---|
1081 | Starting from `v0.27.0`, Axios supports automatic object serialization to a FormData object if the request `Content-Type`
|
---|
1082 | header is set to `multipart/form-data`.
|
---|
1083 |
|
---|
1084 | The following request will submit the data in a FormData format (Browser & Node.js):
|
---|
1085 |
|
---|
1086 | ```js
|
---|
1087 | import axios from 'axios';
|
---|
1088 |
|
---|
1089 | axios.post('https://httpbin.org/post', {x: 1}, {
|
---|
1090 | headers: {
|
---|
1091 | 'Content-Type': 'multipart/form-data'
|
---|
1092 | }
|
---|
1093 | }).then(({data}) => console.log(data));
|
---|
1094 | ```
|
---|
1095 |
|
---|
1096 | In the `node.js` build, the ([`form-data`](https://github.com/form-data/form-data)) polyfill is used by default.
|
---|
1097 |
|
---|
1098 | You can overload the FormData class by setting the `env.FormData` config variable,
|
---|
1099 | but you probably won't need it in most cases:
|
---|
1100 |
|
---|
1101 | ```js
|
---|
1102 | const axios = require('axios');
|
---|
1103 | var FormData = require('form-data');
|
---|
1104 |
|
---|
1105 | axios.post('https://httpbin.org/post', {x: 1, buf: new Buffer(10)}, {
|
---|
1106 | headers: {
|
---|
1107 | 'Content-Type': 'multipart/form-data'
|
---|
1108 | }
|
---|
1109 | }).then(({data}) => console.log(data));
|
---|
1110 | ```
|
---|
1111 |
|
---|
1112 | Axios FormData serializer supports some special endings to perform the following operations:
|
---|
1113 |
|
---|
1114 | - `{}` - serialize the value with JSON.stringify
|
---|
1115 | - `[]` - unwrap the array-like object as separate fields with the same key
|
---|
1116 |
|
---|
1117 | > **Note**: unwrap/expand operation will be used by default on arrays and FileList objects
|
---|
1118 |
|
---|
1119 | FormData serializer supports additional options via `config.formSerializer: object` property to handle rare cases:
|
---|
1120 |
|
---|
1121 | - `visitor: Function` - user-defined visitor function that will be called recursively to serialize the data object
|
---|
1122 | to a `FormData` object by following custom rules.
|
---|
1123 |
|
---|
1124 | - `dots: boolean = false` - use dot notation instead of brackets to serialize arrays and objects;
|
---|
1125 |
|
---|
1126 | - `metaTokens: boolean = true` - add the special ending (e.g `user{}: '{"name": "John"}'`) in the FormData key.
|
---|
1127 | The back-end body-parser could potentially use this meta-information to automatically parse the value as JSON.
|
---|
1128 |
|
---|
1129 | - `indexes: null|false|true = false` - controls how indexes will be added to unwrapped keys of `flat` array-like objects
|
---|
1130 |
|
---|
1131 | - `null` - don't add brackets (`arr: 1`, `arr: 2`, `arr: 3`)
|
---|
1132 | - `false`(default) - add empty brackets (`arr[]: 1`, `arr[]: 2`, `arr[]: 3`)
|
---|
1133 | - `true` - add brackets with indexes (`arr[0]: 1`, `arr[1]: 2`, `arr[2]: 3`)
|
---|
1134 |
|
---|
1135 | Let's say we have an object like this one:
|
---|
1136 |
|
---|
1137 | ```js
|
---|
1138 | const obj = {
|
---|
1139 | x: 1,
|
---|
1140 | arr: [1, 2, 3],
|
---|
1141 | arr2: [1, [2], 3],
|
---|
1142 | users: [{name: 'Peter', surname: 'Griffin'}, {name: 'Thomas', surname: 'Anderson'}],
|
---|
1143 | 'obj2{}': [{x:1}]
|
---|
1144 | };
|
---|
1145 | ```
|
---|
1146 |
|
---|
1147 | The following steps will be executed by the Axios serializer internally:
|
---|
1148 |
|
---|
1149 | ```js
|
---|
1150 | const formData = new FormData();
|
---|
1151 | formData.append('x', '1');
|
---|
1152 | formData.append('arr[]', '1');
|
---|
1153 | formData.append('arr[]', '2');
|
---|
1154 | formData.append('arr[]', '3');
|
---|
1155 | formData.append('arr2[0]', '1');
|
---|
1156 | formData.append('arr2[1][0]', '2');
|
---|
1157 | formData.append('arr2[2]', '3');
|
---|
1158 | formData.append('users[0][name]', 'Peter');
|
---|
1159 | formData.append('users[0][surname]', 'Griffin');
|
---|
1160 | formData.append('users[1][name]', 'Thomas');
|
---|
1161 | formData.append('users[1][surname]', 'Anderson');
|
---|
1162 | formData.append('obj2{}', '[{"x":1}]');
|
---|
1163 | ```
|
---|
1164 |
|
---|
1165 | Axios supports the following shortcut methods: `postForm`, `putForm`, `patchForm`
|
---|
1166 | which are just the corresponding http methods with the `Content-Type` header preset to `multipart/form-data`.
|
---|
1167 |
|
---|
1168 | ## Files Posting
|
---|
1169 |
|
---|
1170 | You can easily submit a single file:
|
---|
1171 |
|
---|
1172 | ```js
|
---|
1173 | await axios.postForm('https://httpbin.org/post', {
|
---|
1174 | 'myVar' : 'foo',
|
---|
1175 | 'file': document.querySelector('#fileInput').files[0]
|
---|
1176 | });
|
---|
1177 | ```
|
---|
1178 |
|
---|
1179 | or multiple files as `multipart/form-data`:
|
---|
1180 |
|
---|
1181 | ```js
|
---|
1182 | await axios.postForm('https://httpbin.org/post', {
|
---|
1183 | 'files[]': document.querySelector('#fileInput').files
|
---|
1184 | });
|
---|
1185 | ```
|
---|
1186 |
|
---|
1187 | `FileList` object can be passed directly:
|
---|
1188 |
|
---|
1189 | ```js
|
---|
1190 | await axios.postForm('https://httpbin.org/post', document.querySelector('#fileInput').files)
|
---|
1191 | ```
|
---|
1192 |
|
---|
1193 | All files will be sent with the same field names: `files[]`.
|
---|
1194 |
|
---|
1195 | ## π HTML Form Posting (browser)
|
---|
1196 |
|
---|
1197 | Pass HTML Form element as a payload to submit it as `multipart/form-data` content.
|
---|
1198 |
|
---|
1199 | ```js
|
---|
1200 | await axios.postForm('https://httpbin.org/post', document.querySelector('#htmlForm'));
|
---|
1201 | ```
|
---|
1202 |
|
---|
1203 | `FormData` and `HTMLForm` objects can also be posted as `JSON` by explicitly setting the `Content-Type` header to `application/json`:
|
---|
1204 |
|
---|
1205 | ```js
|
---|
1206 | await axios.post('https://httpbin.org/post', document.querySelector('#htmlForm'), {
|
---|
1207 | headers: {
|
---|
1208 | 'Content-Type': 'application/json'
|
---|
1209 | }
|
---|
1210 | })
|
---|
1211 | ```
|
---|
1212 |
|
---|
1213 | For example, the Form
|
---|
1214 |
|
---|
1215 | ```html
|
---|
1216 | <form id="form">
|
---|
1217 | <input type="text" name="foo" value="1">
|
---|
1218 | <input type="text" name="deep.prop" value="2">
|
---|
1219 | <input type="text" name="deep prop spaced" value="3">
|
---|
1220 | <input type="text" name="baz" value="4">
|
---|
1221 | <input type="text" name="baz" value="5">
|
---|
1222 |
|
---|
1223 | <select name="user.age">
|
---|
1224 | <option value="value1">Value 1</option>
|
---|
1225 | <option value="value2" selected>Value 2</option>
|
---|
1226 | <option value="value3">Value 3</option>
|
---|
1227 | </select>
|
---|
1228 |
|
---|
1229 | <input type="submit" value="Save">
|
---|
1230 | </form>
|
---|
1231 | ```
|
---|
1232 |
|
---|
1233 | will be submitted as the following JSON object:
|
---|
1234 |
|
---|
1235 | ```js
|
---|
1236 | {
|
---|
1237 | "foo": "1",
|
---|
1238 | "deep": {
|
---|
1239 | "prop": {
|
---|
1240 | "spaced": "3"
|
---|
1241 | }
|
---|
1242 | },
|
---|
1243 | "baz": [
|
---|
1244 | "4",
|
---|
1245 | "5"
|
---|
1246 | ],
|
---|
1247 | "user": {
|
---|
1248 | "age": "value2"
|
---|
1249 | }
|
---|
1250 | }
|
---|
1251 | ````
|
---|
1252 |
|
---|
1253 | Sending `Blobs`/`Files` as JSON (`base64`) is not currently supported.
|
---|
1254 |
|
---|
1255 | ## π Progress capturing
|
---|
1256 |
|
---|
1257 | Axios supports both browser and node environments to capture request upload/download progress.
|
---|
1258 | The frequency of progress events is forced to be limited to `3` times per second.
|
---|
1259 |
|
---|
1260 | ```js
|
---|
1261 | await axios.post(url, data, {
|
---|
1262 | onUploadProgress: function (axiosProgressEvent) {
|
---|
1263 | /*{
|
---|
1264 | loaded: number;
|
---|
1265 | total?: number;
|
---|
1266 | progress?: number; // in range [0..1]
|
---|
1267 | bytes: number; // how many bytes have been transferred since the last trigger (delta)
|
---|
1268 | estimated?: number; // estimated time in seconds
|
---|
1269 | rate?: number; // upload speed in bytes
|
---|
1270 | upload: true; // upload sign
|
---|
1271 | }*/
|
---|
1272 | },
|
---|
1273 |
|
---|
1274 | onDownloadProgress: function (axiosProgressEvent) {
|
---|
1275 | /*{
|
---|
1276 | loaded: number;
|
---|
1277 | total?: number;
|
---|
1278 | progress?: number;
|
---|
1279 | bytes: number;
|
---|
1280 | estimated?: number;
|
---|
1281 | rate?: number; // download speed in bytes
|
---|
1282 | download: true; // download sign
|
---|
1283 | }*/
|
---|
1284 | }
|
---|
1285 | });
|
---|
1286 | ```
|
---|
1287 |
|
---|
1288 | You can also track stream upload/download progress in node.js:
|
---|
1289 |
|
---|
1290 | ```js
|
---|
1291 | const {data} = await axios.post(SERVER_URL, readableStream, {
|
---|
1292 | onUploadProgress: ({progress}) => {
|
---|
1293 | console.log((progress * 100).toFixed(2));
|
---|
1294 | },
|
---|
1295 |
|
---|
1296 | headers: {
|
---|
1297 | 'Content-Length': contentLength
|
---|
1298 | },
|
---|
1299 |
|
---|
1300 | maxRedirects: 0 // avoid buffering the entire stream
|
---|
1301 | });
|
---|
1302 | ````
|
---|
1303 |
|
---|
1304 | > **Note:**
|
---|
1305 | > Capturing FormData upload progress is not currently supported in node.js environments.
|
---|
1306 |
|
---|
1307 | > **β οΈ Warning**
|
---|
1308 | > It is recommended to disable redirects by setting maxRedirects: 0 to upload the stream in the **node.js** environment,
|
---|
1309 | > as follow-redirects package will buffer the entire stream in RAM without following the "backpressure" algorithm.
|
---|
1310 |
|
---|
1311 |
|
---|
1312 | ## π Rate limiting
|
---|
1313 |
|
---|
1314 | Download and upload rate limits can only be set for the http adapter (node.js):
|
---|
1315 |
|
---|
1316 | ```js
|
---|
1317 | const {data} = await axios.post(LOCAL_SERVER_URL, myBuffer, {
|
---|
1318 | onUploadProgress: ({progress, rate}) => {
|
---|
1319 | console.log(`Upload [${(progress*100).toFixed(2)}%]: ${(rate / 1024).toFixed(2)}KB/s`)
|
---|
1320 | },
|
---|
1321 |
|
---|
1322 | maxRate: [100 * 1024], // 100KB/s limit
|
---|
1323 | });
|
---|
1324 | ```
|
---|
1325 |
|
---|
1326 | ## π AxiosHeaders
|
---|
1327 |
|
---|
1328 | Axios has its own `AxiosHeaders` class to manipulate headers using a Map-like API that guarantees caseless work.
|
---|
1329 | Although HTTP is case-insensitive in headers, Axios will retain the case of the original header for stylistic reasons
|
---|
1330 | and for a workaround when servers mistakenly consider the header's case.
|
---|
1331 | The old approach of directly manipulating headers object is still available, but deprecated and not recommended for future usage.
|
---|
1332 |
|
---|
1333 | ### Working with headers
|
---|
1334 |
|
---|
1335 | An AxiosHeaders object instance can contain different types of internal values. that control setting and merging logic.
|
---|
1336 | The final headers object with string values is obtained by Axios by calling the `toJSON` method.
|
---|
1337 |
|
---|
1338 | > Note: By JSON here we mean an object consisting only of string values intended to be sent over the network.
|
---|
1339 |
|
---|
1340 | The header value can be one of the following types:
|
---|
1341 | - `string` - normal string value that will be sent to the server
|
---|
1342 | - `null` - skip header when rendering to JSON
|
---|
1343 | - `false` - skip header when rendering to JSON, additionally indicates that `set` method must be called with `rewrite` option set to `true`
|
---|
1344 | to overwrite this value (Axios uses this internally to allow users to opt out of installing certain headers like `User-Agent` or `Content-Type`)
|
---|
1345 | - `undefined` - value is not set
|
---|
1346 |
|
---|
1347 | > Note: The header value is considered set if it is not equal to undefined.
|
---|
1348 |
|
---|
1349 | The headers object is always initialized inside interceptors and transformers:
|
---|
1350 |
|
---|
1351 | ```ts
|
---|
1352 | axios.interceptors.request.use((request: InternalAxiosRequestConfig) => {
|
---|
1353 | request.headers.set('My-header', 'value');
|
---|
1354 |
|
---|
1355 | request.headers.set({
|
---|
1356 | "My-set-header1": "my-set-value1",
|
---|
1357 | "My-set-header2": "my-set-value2"
|
---|
1358 | });
|
---|
1359 |
|
---|
1360 | request.headers.set('User-Agent', false); // disable subsequent setting the header by Axios
|
---|
1361 |
|
---|
1362 | request.headers.setContentType('text/plain');
|
---|
1363 |
|
---|
1364 | request.headers['My-set-header2'] = 'newValue' // direct access is deprecated
|
---|
1365 |
|
---|
1366 | return request;
|
---|
1367 | }
|
---|
1368 | );
|
---|
1369 | ````
|
---|
1370 |
|
---|
1371 | You can iterate over an `AxiosHeaders` instance using a `for...of` statement:
|
---|
1372 |
|
---|
1373 | ````js
|
---|
1374 | const headers = new AxiosHeaders({
|
---|
1375 | foo: '1',
|
---|
1376 | bar: '2',
|
---|
1377 | baz: '3'
|
---|
1378 | });
|
---|
1379 |
|
---|
1380 | for(const [header, value] of headers) {
|
---|
1381 | console.log(header, value);
|
---|
1382 | }
|
---|
1383 |
|
---|
1384 | // foo 1
|
---|
1385 | // bar 2
|
---|
1386 | // baz 3
|
---|
1387 | ````
|
---|
1388 |
|
---|
1389 | ### new AxiosHeaders(headers?)
|
---|
1390 |
|
---|
1391 | Constructs a new `AxiosHeaders` instance.
|
---|
1392 |
|
---|
1393 | ```
|
---|
1394 | constructor(headers?: RawAxiosHeaders | AxiosHeaders | string);
|
---|
1395 | ```
|
---|
1396 |
|
---|
1397 | If the headers object is a string, it will be parsed as RAW HTTP headers.
|
---|
1398 |
|
---|
1399 | ````js
|
---|
1400 | const headers = new AxiosHeaders(`
|
---|
1401 | Host: www.bing.com
|
---|
1402 | User-Agent: curl/7.54.0
|
---|
1403 | Accept: */*`);
|
---|
1404 |
|
---|
1405 | console.log(headers);
|
---|
1406 |
|
---|
1407 | // Object [AxiosHeaders] {
|
---|
1408 | // host: 'www.bing.com',
|
---|
1409 | // 'user-agent': 'curl/7.54.0',
|
---|
1410 | // accept: '*/*'
|
---|
1411 | // }
|
---|
1412 | ````
|
---|
1413 |
|
---|
1414 | ### AxiosHeaders#set
|
---|
1415 |
|
---|
1416 | ```ts
|
---|
1417 | set(headerName, value: Axios, rewrite?: boolean);
|
---|
1418 | set(headerName, value, rewrite?: (this: AxiosHeaders, value: string, name: string, headers: RawAxiosHeaders) => boolean);
|
---|
1419 | set(headers?: RawAxiosHeaders | AxiosHeaders | string, rewrite?: boolean);
|
---|
1420 | ```
|
---|
1421 |
|
---|
1422 | The `rewrite` argument controls the overwriting behavior:
|
---|
1423 | - `false` - do not overwrite if header's value is set (is not `undefined`)
|
---|
1424 | - `undefined` (default) - overwrite the header unless its value is set to `false`
|
---|
1425 | - `true` - rewrite anyway
|
---|
1426 |
|
---|
1427 | The option can also accept a user-defined function that determines whether the value should be overwritten or not.
|
---|
1428 |
|
---|
1429 | Returns `this`.
|
---|
1430 |
|
---|
1431 | ### AxiosHeaders#get(header)
|
---|
1432 |
|
---|
1433 | ```
|
---|
1434 | get(headerName: string, matcher?: true | AxiosHeaderMatcher): AxiosHeaderValue;
|
---|
1435 | get(headerName: string, parser: RegExp): RegExpExecArray | null;
|
---|
1436 | ````
|
---|
1437 |
|
---|
1438 | Returns the internal value of the header. It can take an extra argument to parse the header's value with `RegExp.exec`,
|
---|
1439 | matcher function or internal key-value parser.
|
---|
1440 |
|
---|
1441 | ```ts
|
---|
1442 | const headers = new AxiosHeaders({
|
---|
1443 | 'Content-Type': 'multipart/form-data; boundary=Asrf456BGe4h'
|
---|
1444 | });
|
---|
1445 |
|
---|
1446 | console.log(headers.get('Content-Type'));
|
---|
1447 | // multipart/form-data; boundary=Asrf456BGe4h
|
---|
1448 |
|
---|
1449 | console.log(headers.get('Content-Type', true)); // parse key-value pairs from a string separated with \s,;= delimiters:
|
---|
1450 | // [Object: null prototype] {
|
---|
1451 | // 'multipart/form-data': undefined,
|
---|
1452 | // boundary: 'Asrf456BGe4h'
|
---|
1453 | // }
|
---|
1454 |
|
---|
1455 |
|
---|
1456 | console.log(headers.get('Content-Type', (value, name, headers) => {
|
---|
1457 | return String(value).replace(/a/g, 'ZZZ');
|
---|
1458 | }));
|
---|
1459 | // multipZZZrt/form-dZZZtZZZ; boundZZZry=Asrf456BGe4h
|
---|
1460 |
|
---|
1461 | console.log(headers.get('Content-Type', /boundary=(\w+)/)?.[0]);
|
---|
1462 | // boundary=Asrf456BGe4h
|
---|
1463 |
|
---|
1464 | ```
|
---|
1465 |
|
---|
1466 | Returns the value of the header.
|
---|
1467 |
|
---|
1468 | ### AxiosHeaders#has(header, matcher?)
|
---|
1469 |
|
---|
1470 | ```
|
---|
1471 | has(header: string, matcher?: AxiosHeaderMatcher): boolean;
|
---|
1472 | ```
|
---|
1473 |
|
---|
1474 | Returns `true` if the header is set (has no `undefined` value).
|
---|
1475 |
|
---|
1476 | ### AxiosHeaders#delete(header, matcher?)
|
---|
1477 |
|
---|
1478 | ```
|
---|
1479 | delete(header: string | string[], matcher?: AxiosHeaderMatcher): boolean;
|
---|
1480 | ```
|
---|
1481 |
|
---|
1482 | Returns `true` if at least one header has been removed.
|
---|
1483 |
|
---|
1484 | ### AxiosHeaders#clear(matcher?)
|
---|
1485 |
|
---|
1486 | ```
|
---|
1487 | clear(matcher?: AxiosHeaderMatcher): boolean;
|
---|
1488 | ```
|
---|
1489 |
|
---|
1490 | Removes all headers.
|
---|
1491 | Unlike the `delete` method matcher, this optional matcher will be used to match against the header name rather than the value.
|
---|
1492 |
|
---|
1493 | ```ts
|
---|
1494 | const headers = new AxiosHeaders({
|
---|
1495 | 'foo': '1',
|
---|
1496 | 'x-foo': '2',
|
---|
1497 | 'x-bar': '3',
|
---|
1498 | });
|
---|
1499 |
|
---|
1500 | console.log(headers.clear(/^x-/)); // true
|
---|
1501 |
|
---|
1502 | console.log(headers.toJSON()); // [Object: null prototype] { foo: '1' }
|
---|
1503 | ```
|
---|
1504 |
|
---|
1505 | Returns `true` if at least one header has been cleared.
|
---|
1506 |
|
---|
1507 | ### AxiosHeaders#normalize(format);
|
---|
1508 |
|
---|
1509 | If the headers object was changed directly, it can have duplicates with the same name but in different cases.
|
---|
1510 | This method normalizes the headers object by combining duplicate keys into one.
|
---|
1511 | Axios uses this method internally after calling each interceptor.
|
---|
1512 | Set `format` to true for converting headers name to lowercase and capitalize the initial letters (`cOntEnt-type` => `Content-Type`)
|
---|
1513 |
|
---|
1514 | ```js
|
---|
1515 | const headers = new AxiosHeaders({
|
---|
1516 | 'foo': '1',
|
---|
1517 | });
|
---|
1518 |
|
---|
1519 | headers.Foo = '2';
|
---|
1520 | headers.FOO = '3';
|
---|
1521 |
|
---|
1522 | console.log(headers.toJSON()); // [Object: null prototype] { foo: '1', Foo: '2', FOO: '3' }
|
---|
1523 | console.log(headers.normalize().toJSON()); // [Object: null prototype] { foo: '3' }
|
---|
1524 | console.log(headers.normalize(true).toJSON()); // [Object: null prototype] { Foo: '3' }
|
---|
1525 | ```
|
---|
1526 |
|
---|
1527 | Returns `this`.
|
---|
1528 |
|
---|
1529 | ### AxiosHeaders#concat(...targets)
|
---|
1530 |
|
---|
1531 | ```
|
---|
1532 | concat(...targets: Array<AxiosHeaders | RawAxiosHeaders | string | undefined | null>): AxiosHeaders;
|
---|
1533 | ```
|
---|
1534 |
|
---|
1535 | Merges the instance with targets into a new `AxiosHeaders` instance. If the target is a string, it will be parsed as RAW HTTP headers.
|
---|
1536 |
|
---|
1537 | Returns a new `AxiosHeaders` instance.
|
---|
1538 |
|
---|
1539 | ### AxiosHeaders#toJSON(asStrings?)
|
---|
1540 |
|
---|
1541 | ````
|
---|
1542 | toJSON(asStrings?: boolean): RawAxiosHeaders;
|
---|
1543 | ````
|
---|
1544 |
|
---|
1545 | Resolve all internal headers values into a new null prototype object.
|
---|
1546 | Set `asStrings` to true to resolve arrays as a string containing all elements, separated by commas.
|
---|
1547 |
|
---|
1548 | ### AxiosHeaders.from(thing?)
|
---|
1549 |
|
---|
1550 | ````
|
---|
1551 | from(thing?: AxiosHeaders | RawAxiosHeaders | string): AxiosHeaders;
|
---|
1552 | ````
|
---|
1553 |
|
---|
1554 | Returns a new `AxiosHeaders` instance created from the raw headers passed in,
|
---|
1555 | or simply returns the given headers object if it's an `AxiosHeaders` instance.
|
---|
1556 |
|
---|
1557 | ### AxiosHeaders.concat(...targets)
|
---|
1558 |
|
---|
1559 | ````
|
---|
1560 | concat(...targets: Array<AxiosHeaders | RawAxiosHeaders | string | undefined | null>): AxiosHeaders;
|
---|
1561 | ````
|
---|
1562 |
|
---|
1563 | Returns a new `AxiosHeaders` instance created by merging the target objects.
|
---|
1564 |
|
---|
1565 | ### Shortcuts
|
---|
1566 |
|
---|
1567 | The following shortcuts are available:
|
---|
1568 |
|
---|
1569 | - `setContentType`, `getContentType`, `hasContentType`
|
---|
1570 |
|
---|
1571 | - `setContentLength`, `getContentLength`, `hasContentLength`
|
---|
1572 |
|
---|
1573 | - `setAccept`, `getAccept`, `hasAccept`
|
---|
1574 |
|
---|
1575 | - `setUserAgent`, `getUserAgent`, `hasUserAgent`
|
---|
1576 |
|
---|
1577 | - `setContentEncoding`, `getContentEncoding`, `hasContentEncoding`
|
---|
1578 |
|
---|
1579 | ## π₯ Fetch adapter
|
---|
1580 |
|
---|
1581 | Fetch adapter was introduced in `v1.7.0`. By default, it will be used if `xhr` and `http` adapters are not available in the build,
|
---|
1582 | or not supported by the environment.
|
---|
1583 | To use it by default, it must be selected explicitly:
|
---|
1584 |
|
---|
1585 | ```js
|
---|
1586 | const {data} = axios.get(url, {
|
---|
1587 | adapter: 'fetch' // by default ['xhr', 'http', 'fetch']
|
---|
1588 | })
|
---|
1589 | ```
|
---|
1590 |
|
---|
1591 | You can create a separate instance for this:
|
---|
1592 |
|
---|
1593 | ```js
|
---|
1594 | const fetchAxios = axios.create({
|
---|
1595 | adapter: 'fetch'
|
---|
1596 | });
|
---|
1597 |
|
---|
1598 | const {data} = fetchAxios.get(url);
|
---|
1599 | ```
|
---|
1600 |
|
---|
1601 | The adapter supports the same functionality as `xhr` adapter, **including upload and download progress capturing**.
|
---|
1602 | Also, it supports additional response types such as `stream` and `formdata` (if supported by the environment).
|
---|
1603 |
|
---|
1604 | ## Semver
|
---|
1605 |
|
---|
1606 | Until axios reaches a `1.0` release, breaking changes will be released with a new minor version. For example `0.5.1`, and `0.5.4` will have the same API, but `0.6.0` will have breaking changes.
|
---|
1607 |
|
---|
1608 | ## Promises
|
---|
1609 |
|
---|
1610 | axios depends on a native ES6 Promise implementation to be [supported](https://caniuse.com/promises).
|
---|
1611 | If your environment doesn't support ES6 Promises, you can [polyfill](https://github.com/jakearchibald/es6-promise).
|
---|
1612 |
|
---|
1613 | ## TypeScript
|
---|
1614 |
|
---|
1615 | axios includes [TypeScript](https://typescriptlang.org) definitions and a type guard for axios errors.
|
---|
1616 |
|
---|
1617 | ```typescript
|
---|
1618 | let user: User = null;
|
---|
1619 | try {
|
---|
1620 | const { data } = await axios.get('/user?ID=12345');
|
---|
1621 | user = data.userDetails;
|
---|
1622 | } catch (error) {
|
---|
1623 | if (axios.isAxiosError(error)) {
|
---|
1624 | handleAxiosError(error);
|
---|
1625 | } else {
|
---|
1626 | handleUnexpectedError(error);
|
---|
1627 | }
|
---|
1628 | }
|
---|
1629 | ```
|
---|
1630 |
|
---|
1631 | Because axios dual publishes with an ESM default export and a CJS `module.exports`, there are some caveats.
|
---|
1632 | The recommended setting is to use `"moduleResolution": "node16"` (this is implied by `"module": "node16"`). Note that this requires TypeScript 4.7 or greater.
|
---|
1633 | If use ESM, your settings should be fine.
|
---|
1634 | If you compile TypeScript to CJS and you canβt use `"moduleResolution": "node 16"`, you have to enable `esModuleInterop`.
|
---|
1635 | If you use TypeScript to type check CJS JavaScript code, your only option is to use `"moduleResolution": "node16"`.
|
---|
1636 |
|
---|
1637 | ## Online one-click setup
|
---|
1638 |
|
---|
1639 | You can use Gitpod, an online IDE(which is free for Open Source) for contributing or running the examples online.
|
---|
1640 |
|
---|
1641 | [![Open in Gitpod](https://gitpod.io/button/open-in-gitpod.svg)](https://gitpod.io/#https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/main/examples/server.js)
|
---|
1642 |
|
---|
1643 |
|
---|
1644 | ## Resources
|
---|
1645 |
|
---|
1646 | * [Changelog](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/v1.x/CHANGELOG.md)
|
---|
1647 | * [Ecosystem](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/v1.x/ECOSYSTEM.md)
|
---|
1648 | * [Contributing Guide](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/v1.x/CONTRIBUTING.md)
|
---|
1649 | * [Code of Conduct](https://github.com/axios/axios/blob/v1.x/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md)
|
---|
1650 |
|
---|
1651 | ## Credits
|
---|
1652 |
|
---|
1653 | axios is heavily inspired by the [$http service](https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$http) provided in [AngularJS](https://angularjs.org/). Ultimately axios is an effort to provide a standalone `$http`-like service for use outside of AngularJS.
|
---|
1654 |
|
---|
1655 | ## License
|
---|
1656 |
|
---|
1657 | [MIT](LICENSE)
|
---|