Koa.js – Request Object

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Request objects

A Koa Request objects is an abstraction on top of node’s vanilla request object, providing additional functionality that is useful for everyday HTTP server development. The Koa request object is embedded in the context object, this. Let’s log out the request object whenever we get a request.

var koa = require('koa');
var router = require('koa-router');
var app = koa();

var _ = router();

_.get('/hello', getMessage);

function *getMessage(){
   console.log(this.request);
   this.body = 'Your request has been logged.';
}
app.use(_.routes());
app.listen(3000);

When you run this code and navigate to https://localhost:3000/hello, then you will receive the following response.

On your console, you’ll get the request objects logged out.

{ 
   method: 'GET',
   url: '/hello/',
   header: 
   { 
      host: 'localhost:3000',
      connection: 'keep-alive',
      'upgrade-insecure-requests': '1',
      'user-agent': 'Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64) 
         AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/52.0.2743.116 Safari/537.36',
      accept: 'text/html,application/xhtml+xml,
         application/xml;q = 0.9,image/webp,*/*;q = 0.8',
      dnt: '1',
      'accept-encoding': 'gzip, deflate, sdch',
      'accept-language': 'en-US,en;q = 0.8' 
   }
}

We have access to many useful properties of the request using this object. Let us look at some examples.

request.header

Provides all the request headers.

request.method

Provides the request method(GET, POST, etc.)

request.href

Provides the full request URL.

request.path

Provides the path of the request. Without query string and base url.

request.query

Gives the parsed query string. For example, if we log this on a request such as https://localhost:3000/hello/?name=Ayush&age=20&country=India, then we’ll get the following object.

{
   name: 'Ayush',
   age: '20',
   country: 'India'
}

request.accepts(type)

This function returns true or false based on whether the requested resources accept the given request type.

You can read more about the request object in the docs at Request.

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This Post Has 2 Comments

  1. superslot789

    Wow, great blog article.Really looking forward to read more. Really Great.

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