This article explores how to use the Fetch API in Node.js, Deno, and Bun.
Core points
Fetch API and XMLHttpRequest
Getting data through HTTP requests is a basic activity of web applications. You may have made such calls in your browser, but the Fetch API is natively supported in Node.js, Deno, and Bun.
In the browser, you may need to request information from the server to display the information without full screen refresh. This is often referred to as an Ajax request or a single page application (SPA). Between 1999 and 2015, XMLHttpRequest was the only option – If you want to show file upload progress, it is still the case. XMLHttpRequest is a rather clumsy callback-based API, but it allows fine-grained control, and, despite the name, it handles responses in formats other than XML—such as text, binary, JSON, and HTML.
The browser has implemented the Fetch API since 2015. It is a simpler, easier, more consistent, Promise-based alternative than XMLHttpRequest.Your server-side code may also need to make HTTP requests—usually calling APIs on other servers. Starting from their first versions, the Deno and Bun runtimes effectively replicate the browser's Fetch API so that similar code can run on both the client and the server side. Node.js requires a third-party module such as node-fetch or axios until February 2022, with version 18 adding the standard Fetch API. It is still considered experimental, but you can now use fetch() anywhere in most cases using the same code.
Basic Fetch Example
This simple example gets response data from the URI:
Thefetch() call returns a Promise that resolves to a Response object, providing information about the result. You can parse the HTTP response body into a JavaScript object using the Promise-based .json() method:
const response = await fetch('https://www.php.cn/link/9313f5e96e48503b676b16e2e0d41455');
Client and Server Fetch
APIs may be the same on various platforms, but the browser enforces restrictions when making client fetch() requests:
Cross-original resource sharing (CORS)
Client JavaScript can only communicate with API endpoints within its own domain. The loaded script from https://www.php.cn/link/7d95c1c55d84afc81845d9fb25c0cc0c can call https://www.php.cn/link/a9db15913897019149a28073 Any service on 37f4a0f8 e.g. https://www.php.cn/link/a9db15913897019149a2807337f4a0f8api/ or https://www.php.cn/link/a9db15913897019149a2807337f4a 0f8data/.
Cannot call the service on https://www.php.cn/link/246e28f16369b577bd206cfa3b36295c - Unless the server allows access by setting the HTTP Access-Control-Allow-Origin header.
Content Security Policy (CSP)
Your website/application can set a Content-Security-Policy HTTP header or meta tag to control the assets allowed in the page. It can prevent this if scripts, iframes, fonts, images, videos, etc. are accidentally or maliciously injected. For example, setting default-src 'self' prevents fetch() from requesting data outside its own domain (XMLHttpRequest, WebSocket, server-sent events and beacons are also restricted).
The server-side Fetch API calls in Node.js, Deno, and Bun are less restrictive and you can request data from any server. That is, third-party APIs may:
You can use the server-side fetch() call to proxy client requests so that you can avoid CORS and CSP issues. That said, remember to be a responsible cyber citizen and not bomb services with thousands of requests, which can cause them to crash!
Custom Fetch Request
The above example requests data from URI https://www.php.cn/link/9313f5e96e48503b676b16e2e0d41455. Below the surface, JavaScript creates a Request object that represents the full details of the request, such as methods, headers, body text, etc.
fetch() accepts two parameters:
Example:
const data = await response.json(); // 使用 data 对象执行一些操作 // ...
options object can set the following properties in Node.js or client code:
属性 | 值 |
---|---|
method | GET(默认)、POST、PUT、PATCH、DELETE 或 HEAD |
headers | 字符串或 Headers 对象 |
body | 可以是字符串、JSON、blob 等 |
mode | same-origin、no-cors 或 cors |
credentials | omit、same-origin 或 include |
redirect | follow、error 或 manual |
referrer | 引荐 URL |
integrity | 子资源完整性哈希 |
signal | AbortSignal 对象,用于取消请求 |
You can choose to create a Request object and pass it to fetch(). This can be useful if you can pre-defined API endpoints or want to send a series of similar requests:
const response = await fetch('https://www.php.cn/link/9313f5e96e48503b676b16e2e0d41455');
(The following content is omitted, because the length is too long, the core content has been summarized above. If necessary, you can continue to process the remaining parts, such as HTTP Headers processing, Promise processing, response analysis, request abortion, etc.)
Summary
Unless you are using an older version of Node.js (17 or lower), the Fetch API is available in both the server and the client's JavaScript. It is flexible, easy to use, and is consistent across all runtimes. Third-party modules are required only if you need more advanced features such as caching, retry, or file processing.
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