I have /logout action, that should redirect to /login. /login renders template, where I read flash message from context. This works, but url in browser is still remains "/logout":
router.get("/logout").handler((ctx) => {
if (ctx.user()!=null) {
ctx.clearUser()
//flash message
ctx.put("msg", "Logout succeed")
}
ctx.reroute("/login")
})
What I want, but url should be "/login":
Better to use(?):
ctx.response.putHeader("location", "/login").setStatusCode(302).end()
But there is different context. So I haven't flash message.
How to redirect to /login within same context?
Upd.
Question related to this issue
In order to work with flash messages you should add a cookie to the redirect with the content:
// this makes the message available to the client
ctx
.addCookie(Cookie.cookie("flashMessage", "Logout succeed"));
// configure where to redirect
ctx.response()
.putHeader("location", "/login");
// perform the redirect
ctx.end(302);
Then on the client side you need a bit of JavaScript to read the message and
perform the display as you wish. Since there is no simple way to read cookies on the browser if you're using jQuery with the cookie plugin you can do something like:
$.fn.flashMessage = function (options) {
var target = this;
options = $.extend({}, options, { timeout: 3000 });
if (!options.message) {
options.message = getFlashMessageFromCookie();
deleteFlashMessageCookie();
}
if (options.message) {
if (typeof options.message === "string") {
target.html("<span>" + options.message + "</span>");
} else {
target.empty().append(options.message);
}
}
if (target.children().length === 0) return;
target.fadeIn().one("click", function () {
$(this).fadeOut();
});
if (options.timeout > 0) {
setTimeout(function () { target.fadeOut(); }, options.timeout);
}
return this;
function getFlashMessageFromCookie() {
return $.cookie("FlashMessage");
}
function deleteFlashMessageCookie() {
$.cookie("FlashMessage", null, { path: '/' });
}
};
And add a placeholder in your HTML like:
<div id="flash-message"></div>
And trigger it like:
$(function() {
$("#flash-message").flashMessage();
});
I'm trying to create a Facebook chatbot with NodeJS, Express, and a Heroku server.
I created my webhook on heroku and had it verified and saved by facebook. I then started adding code that would reply to the incoming messages and I can't seem to get it connected. It keeps saying "Error, wrong validation token" when I try to load my webhook in my browser. And when I try to send my bot a message I get no response. Even though I already had it verified and didn't change the code.
Here is my code:
var express = require('express');
var bodyParser = require('body-parser');
var app = express();
var port = process.env.PORT || 3000;
// body parser middleware
app.use(bodyParser.urlencoded({ extended: true }));
// test route
//app.get('/', function (req, res) { res.status(200).send('Hello world!') });
app.get('/', function (req, res) {
if (req.query['hub.verify_token'] === '8FKU9XWeSjnZN4ae') {
res.send(req.query['hub.challenge']);
}
res.send('Error, wrong validation token');
})
app.post('/', function (req, res) {
messaging_events = req.body.entry[0].messaging;
for (i = 0; i < messaging_events.length; i++) {
event = req.body.entry[0].messaging[i];
sender = event.sender.id;
if (event.message && event.message.text) {
text = event.message.text;
sendTextMessage(sender, "Text received, echo: "+ text.substring(0, 200));
}
}
res.sendStatus(200);
});
// error handler
app.use(function (err, req, res, next) {
console.error(err.stack);
res.status(400).send(err.message);
});
app.listen(port, function () {
console.log('Listening on port ' + port);
});
var token = <myToken>;
function sendTextMessage(sender, text) {
messageData = {
text:text
}
request({
url: 'https://graph.facebook.com/v2.6/me/messages',
qs: {access_token:token},
method: 'POST',
json: {
recipient: {id:sender},
message: messageData,
}
}, function(error, response, body) {
if (error) {
console.log('Error sending message: ', error);
} else if (response.body.error) {
console.log('Error: ', response.body.error);
}
});
}
So I'm confused as to why nothing is happening and why I'm getting that error. I feel like I'm missing a whole step. I am following this tutorial by the way: https://developers.facebook.com/docs/messenger-platform/quickstart
Any help is appreciated. Thanks!
Edit: Here are my heroku logs
Do not post your full access tokens here!
Have you tested the output of the challenge? Since it's just a GET and you know all values you can try it yourself: your-app-domain.com/your-callback-url?hub_mode=subscribe&hub_verify_token=the_token_you_set_in_your_app_config&hub_challenge=ping which sould print 'ping' if everything work fine.
Make sure you add sendStatus(200) to the hub challenge response, too.
You need to subscribe your page to the app first. To do so make a POST request to /your-page-id/subscribed_apps which should return "success". You can make a GET request to the same endpoint afterwards to double check your app is subscribed to your page
You did not mention which events you subscribed to (needs to be message_deliveries, messages, messaging_optins, messaging_postbacks)
Make sure the webhooks tab in your app dashboard now says "complete"
Test again
You are actually using "request" but you are never importing it anywhere. Here's how to fix it:
var request = require("request")
Once you have added that to your index.js or app.js file (basically whatever this file is), make sure you do:
npm install request --save
This should fix it. Unfortunately, Heroku doesn't error out and say that it does not know what "request" is and that's why it was so hard to figure this out in the first place!
Currently I am capturing the image of the camera, this Base64 format,and I'm sending through ajax.
xhr({
uri: 'http://localhost:1337/file/upload',
method: 'post',
body:'data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQAAAQABAA...'
}
0 file(s) uploaded successfully!
Here is a nice link that will guide you to do send an image from an Ajax Client to an ajax server.
http://www.nickdesteffen.com/blog/file-uploading-over-ajax-using-html5
You can read this sails documentation to receive files on a sails server :
http://sailsjs.org/documentation/reference/request-req/req-file
You can do as the following example :
Client side ( ajax ):
var files = [];
$("input[type=file]").change(function(event) {
$.each(event.target.files, function(index, file) {
var reader = new FileReader();
reader.onload = function(event) {
object = {};
object.filename = file.name;
object.data = event.target.result;
files.push(object);
};
reader.readAsDataURL(file);
});
});
$("form").submit(function(form) {
$.each(files, function(index, file) {
$.ajax({url: "/ajax-upload",
type: 'POST',
data: {filename: file.filename, data: file.data}, // file.data is your base 64
success: function(data, status, xhr) {}
});
});
files = [];
form.preventDefault();
});
Server side ( sails ) :
[let's say you have a model Picture that take an ID and a URL]
[here is a sample of Picture controller, just to give you an idea]
module.exports = {
uploadPicture: function(req, res) {
req.file('picture').upload({
// don't allow the total upload size to exceed ~10MB
maxBytes: 10000000
},
function onDone(err, uploadedFiles) {
if (err) {
return res.negotiate(err);
}
// If no files were uploaded, respond with an error.
if (uploadedFiles.length === 0){
return res.badRequest('No file was uploaded');
}
// Save the "fd" and the url where the avatar for a user can be accessed
Picture
.update(777, { // give real ID
// Generate a unique URL where the avatar can be downloaded.
pictureURL: require('util').format('%s/user/pictures/%s', sails.getBaseUrl(), 777), // GIVE REAL ID
// Grab the first file and use it's `fd` (file descriptor)
pictureFD: uploadedFiles[0].fd
})
.exec(function (err){
if (err) return res.negotiate(err);
return res.ok();
});
});
}
};
Hope this will help in your research.
I also recommand you to use Postman to test your API first, then code your client.
Let's say you have an AngularJS application hooked up to a RESTful API and you have a route for "/item/:itemId".
.when('/item/:itemId', {
templateUrl: '/static/partials/item-detail.html',
controller: ItemDetailController
})
angular.module('angServices', ['ngResource']).factory('Item', function($resource) {
return $resource('/api/item/:itemId', {}, {
query: { method: 'GET', params: { itemId: '' }, isArray: true }
});
});
If the user goes to "/item/9" and an object with the itemId 9 does not exist, Angular will receive a 404 from the API, but will not naturally return a 404 to the user.
In other questions, I've seen people suggest creating an interceptor and having Angular redirect to a 404 error page when a resource is not found.
var interceptor = ['$rootScope', '$q', function(scope, $q) {
...
function error(response) {
if (response.status == 404) { window.location = '/404'; }
...
$httpProvider.responseInterceptors.push(interceptor);
However, I want to return a correct 404 with the original requested URL for SEO purposes.
Also, the solution above first loads the page and then redirects (just like Twitter used to do), so its sub-optimal.
Should I check server-side to first see if the resource exists before passing the request on to the Angular app? The downside of this is that it wouldn't work for broken links within the application.
What is the best way to approach this?
Maybe this jsfiddle can help you.
http://jsfiddle.net/roadprophet/VwS2t/
angular.module('dgService', ['ngResource']).factory("DriveGroup", function ($resource) {
return $resource(
'/', {}, {
update: {
method: 'PUT'
},
fetch: {
method: 'GET',
// This is what I tried.
interceptor: {
response: function (data) {
console.log('response in interceptor', data);
},
responseError: function (data) {
console.log('error in interceptor', data);
}
},
isArray: false
}
}
);
});
var app = angular.module('myApp', ['ngResource', 'dgService']);
app.controller('MainController', ['$scope', 'DriveGroup', function ($scope, svc) {
$scope.title = 'Interceptors Test';
svc.fetch(function (data) {
console.log('SUCCESS');
}, function () {
console.log('FAILURE');
});
}]);
I tried with this and works fine. I only change the fetch method to get.
In your case, you will need to change the console.log('FALIURE'); to $location.path('/404');.
GL!
In Node.js, other than using child process to make CURL call, is there a way to make CURL call to remote server REST API and get the return data?
I also need to set up the request header to the remote REST call, and also query string as well in GET (or POST).
I find this one: http://blog.nodejitsu.com/jsdom-jquery-in-5-lines-on-nodejs
but it doesn't show any way to POST query string.
Look at http.request
var options = {
host: url,
port: 80,
path: '/resource?id=foo&bar=baz',
method: 'POST'
};
http.request(options, function(res) {
console.log('STATUS: ' + res.statusCode);
console.log('HEADERS: ' + JSON.stringify(res.headers));
res.setEncoding('utf8');
res.on('data', function (chunk) {
console.log('BODY: ' + chunk);
});
}).end();
How about using Request — Simplified HTTP client.
Edit February 2020: Request has been deprecated so you probably shouldn't use it any more.
Here's a GET:
var request = require('request');
request('http://www.google.com', function (error, response, body) {
if (!error && response.statusCode === 200) {
console.log(body) // Print the google web page.
}
})
OP also wanted a POST:
request.post('http://service.com/upload', {form:{key:'value'}})
I use node-fetch because it uses the familiar (if you are a web developer) fetch() API. fetch() is the new way to make arbitrary HTTP requests from the browser.
Yes I know this is a node js question, but don't we want to reduce the number of API's developers have to memorize and understand, and improve re-useability of our javascript code? Fetch is a standard so how about we converge on that?
The other nice thing about fetch() is that it returns a javascript Promise, so you can write async code like this:
let fetch = require('node-fetch');
fetch('http://localhost', {
method: 'POST',
headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/json'},
body: '{}'
}).then(response => {
return response.json();
}).catch(err => {console.log(err);});
Fetch superseeds XMLHTTPRequest. Here's some more info.
Look at http://isolasoftware.it/2012/05/28/call-rest-api-with-node-js/
var https = require('https');
/**
* HOW TO Make an HTTP Call - GET
*/
// options for GET
var optionsget = {
host : 'graph.facebook.com', // here only the domain name
// (no http/https !)
port : 443,
path : '/youscada', // the rest of the url with parameters if needed
method : 'GET' // do GET
};
console.info('Options prepared:');
console.info(optionsget);
console.info('Do the GET call');
// do the GET request
var reqGet = https.request(optionsget, function(res) {
console.log("statusCode: ", res.statusCode);
// uncomment it for header details
// console.log("headers: ", res.headers);
res.on('data', function(d) {
console.info('GET result:\n');
process.stdout.write(d);
console.info('\n\nCall completed');
});
});
reqGet.end();
reqGet.on('error', function(e) {
console.error(e);
});
/**
* HOW TO Make an HTTP Call - POST
*/
// do a POST request
// create the JSON object
jsonObject = JSON.stringify({
"message" : "The web of things is approaching, let do some tests to be ready!",
"name" : "Test message posted with node.js",
"caption" : "Some tests with node.js",
"link" : "http://www.youscada.com",
"description" : "this is a description",
"picture" : "http://youscada.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/logo2.png",
"actions" : [ {
"name" : "youSCADA",
"link" : "http://www.youscada.com"
} ]
});
// prepare the header
var postheaders = {
'Content-Type' : 'application/json',
'Content-Length' : Buffer.byteLength(jsonObject, 'utf8')
};
// the post options
var optionspost = {
host : 'graph.facebook.com',
port : 443,
path : '/youscada/feed?access_token=your_api_key',
method : 'POST',
headers : postheaders
};
console.info('Options prepared:');
console.info(optionspost);
console.info('Do the POST call');
// do the POST call
var reqPost = https.request(optionspost, function(res) {
console.log("statusCode: ", res.statusCode);
// uncomment it for header details
// console.log("headers: ", res.headers);
res.on('data', function(d) {
console.info('POST result:\n');
process.stdout.write(d);
console.info('\n\nPOST completed');
});
});
// write the json data
reqPost.write(jsonObject);
reqPost.end();
reqPost.on('error', function(e) {
console.error(e);
});
/**
* Get Message - GET
*/
// options for GET
var optionsgetmsg = {
host : 'graph.facebook.com', // here only the domain name
// (no http/https !)
port : 443,
path : '/youscada/feed?access_token=you_api_key', // the rest of the url with parameters if needed
method : 'GET' // do GET
};
console.info('Options prepared:');
console.info(optionsgetmsg);
console.info('Do the GET call');
// do the GET request
var reqGet = https.request(optionsgetmsg, function(res) {
console.log("statusCode: ", res.statusCode);
// uncomment it for header details
// console.log("headers: ", res.headers);
res.on('data', function(d) {
console.info('GET result after POST:\n');
process.stdout.write(d);
console.info('\n\nCall completed');
});
});
reqGet.end();
reqGet.on('error', function(e) {
console.error(e);
});
Axios
An example (axios_example.js) using Axios in Node.js:
const axios = require('axios');
const express = require('express');
const app = express();
const port = process.env.PORT || 5000;
app.get('/search', function(req, res) {
let query = req.query.queryStr;
let url = `https://your.service.org?query=${query}`;
axios({
method:'get',
url,
auth: {
username: 'the_username',
password: 'the_password'
}
})
.then(function (response) {
res.send(JSON.stringify(response.data));
})
.catch(function (error) {
console.log(error);
});
});
var server = app.listen(port);
Be sure in your project directory you do:
npm init
npm install express
npm install axios
node axios_example.js
You can then test the Node.js REST API using your browser at: http://localhost:5000/search?queryStr=xxxxxxxxx
Similarly you can do post, such as:
axios({
method: 'post',
url: 'https://your.service.org/user/12345',
data: {
firstName: 'Fred',
lastName: 'Flintstone'
}
});
SuperAgent
Similarly you can use SuperAgent.
superagent.get('https://your.service.org?query=xxxx')
.end((err, response) => {
if (err) { return console.log(err); }
res.send(JSON.stringify(response.body));
});
And if you want to do basic authentication:
superagent.get('https://your.service.org?query=xxxx')
.auth('the_username', 'the_password')
.end((err, response) => {
if (err) { return console.log(err); }
res.send(JSON.stringify(response.body));
});
Ref:
https://github.com/axios/axios
https://www.twilio.com/blog/2017/08/http-requests-in-node-js.html
I have been using restler for making webservices call, works like charm and is pretty neat.
To use latest Async/Await features
https://www.npmjs.com/package/request-promise-native
npm install --save request
npm install --save request-promise-native
//code
async function getData (){
try{
var rp = require ('request-promise-native');
var options = {
uri:'https://reqres.in/api/users/2',
json:true
};
var response = await rp(options);
return response;
}catch(error){
throw error;
}
}
try{
console.log(getData());
}catch(error){
console.log(error);
}
Warning: As of Feb 11th 2020, request is fully deprecated.
One another example - you need to install request module for that
var request = require('request');
function get_trustyou(trust_you_id, callback) {
var options = {
uri : 'https://api.trustyou.com/hotels/'+trust_you_id+'/seal.json',
method : 'GET'
};
var res = '';
request(options, function (error, response, body) {
if (!error && response.statusCode == 200) {
res = body;
}
else {
res = 'Not Found';
}
callback(res);
});
}
get_trustyou("674fa44c-1fbd-4275-aa72-a20f262372cd", function(resp){
console.log(resp);
});
const http = require('http');
const url = process.argv[2];
http.get(url, function(response) {
let finalData = "";
response.on("data", function (data) {
finalData += data.toString();
});
response.on("end", function() {
console.log(finalData.length);
console.log(finalData.toString());
});
});
I didn't find any with cURL so I wrote a wrapper around node-libcurl and can be found at https://www.npmjs.com/package/vps-rest-client.
To make a POST is like so:
var host = 'https://api.budgetvm.com/v2/dns/record';
var key = 'some___key';
var domain_id = 'some___id';
var rest = require('vps-rest-client');
var client = rest.createClient(key, {
verbose: false
});
var post = {
domain: domain_id,
record: 'test.example.net',
type: 'A',
content: '111.111.111.111'
};
client.post(host, post).then(function(resp) {
console.info(resp);
if (resp.success === true) {
// some action
}
client.close();
}).catch((err) => console.info(err));
If you have Node.js 4.4+, take a look at reqclient, it allows you to make calls and log the requests in cURL style, so you can easily check and reproduce the calls outside the application.
Returns Promise objects instead of pass simple callbacks, so you can handle the result in a more "fashion" way, chain the result easily, and handle errors in a standard way. Also removes a lot of boilerplate configurations on each request: base URL, time out, content type format, default headers, parameters and query binding in the URL, and basic cache features.
This is an example of how to initialize it, make a call and log the operation with curl style:
var RequestClient = require("reqclient").RequestClient;
var client = new RequestClient({
baseUrl:"http://baseurl.com/api/", debugRequest:true, debugResponse:true});
client.post("client/orders", {"client": 1234, "ref_id": "A987"},{"x-token": "AFF01XX"});
This will log in the console...
[Requesting client/orders]-> -X POST http://baseurl.com/api/client/orders -d '{"client": 1234, "ref_id": "A987"}' -H '{"x-token": "AFF01XX"}' -H Content-Type:application/json
And when the response is returned ...
[Response client/orders]<- Status 200 - {"orderId": 1320934}
This is an example of how to handle the response with the promise object:
client.get("reports/clients")
.then(function(response) {
// Do something with the result
}).catch(console.error); // In case of error ...
Of course, it can be installed with: npm install reqclient.
You can use curlrequest to easily set what time of request you want to do... you can even set headers in the options to "fake" a browser call.
Warning: As of Feb 11th 2020, request is fully deprecated.
If you implement with form-data, for more info (https://tanaikech.github.io/2017/07/27/multipart-post-request-using-node.js):
var fs = require('fs');
var request = require('request');
request.post({
url: 'https://slack.com/api/files.upload',
formData: {
file: fs.createReadStream('sample.zip'),
token: '### access token ###',
filetype: 'zip',
filename: 'samplefilename',
channels: 'sample',
title: 'sampletitle',
},
}, function (error, response, body) {
console.log(body);
});
I found superagent to be really useful,
it is very simple
for example
const superagent=require('superagent')
superagent
.get('google.com')
.set('Authorization','Authorization object')
.set('Accept','application/json')
Update from 2022:
from node.js version v18 on you can use the globally available fetch API (see https://nodejs.org/en/blog/announcements/v18-release-announce/)
There is also an example usage included on their announcement page:
const res = await fetch('https://nodejs.org/api/documentation.json');
if (res.ok) {
const data = await res.json();
console.log(data);
}