Cross Platform Smart Fetch Ponyfill
npm install @whatwg-node/fetch@whatwg-node/fetchA ponyfill package for the Fetch Standard. If your JavaScript
environment doesn't implement this standard natively, this package automatically ponyfills the
missing parts, and export them as a module; otherwise it exports the native ones without touching
the environment's internals. It also exports some additional standard APIs that are required by the
Fetch Standard.
``bash`
npm install @whatwg-node/fetch
If you are building a JavaScript library, and you want it to support all JavaScript environments not
only Node.js. Fetch API is the best choice for you. Because it's a standard, and it's implemented by
the most environments out there expect Node.js :). So you can use Fetch API in your library, and
your users can use it in their browsers, Deno, Bun, Cloudflare Works, and in Node.js.
> This is how we support all JavaScript environments in
> GraphQL Yoga.
> In GraphQL Yoga, we don't care which JavaScript environment you prefer, we support all of them.
Even if newer Node.js already implements Fetch API and Data Text Encoding API natively, we still
recommend to use this package, because this package implements them for Node.js in more efficient
way.
- See problems with the global fetch/undici in Node.js
- - We offer a patched version of node-fetch that doesn't use undici and Node.js streamsBuffer
internally, so it's more efficient than the native one.
- See problems with text encoding API in Node.js
- - We use instead of the native one, becauseBuffer
is faster than the native one unfortunately.Body.formData()
- is not implemented by Node.js, so we implement it with busboy internally. So.formData
you can consume incoming multipart(file uploads) requests with in Node.js.fetch
- implementation of Node.js uses undici and it doesn't support HTTP 2, our implementationnode-libcurl
supports it natively thanks to .
If you install node-libcurl seperately, @whatwg-node/fetch will select libcurl instead ofnode:http which is faster.
`ts
import { Request } from '@whatwg-node/fetch'
// See how you can handle file uploads with Fetch API
http.createServer(async (req, res) => {
const request = new Request(req)
const formData = await request.formData()
const file = formData.get('file')
// ...
})
`
> If you want to limit the size of the multipart form data, you can use createFetch. See the
> API section for more details.
The following are exported by this package:
- fetch
- Request
- Response
- Headers
- FormData
- AbortController
- ReadableStream
- WritableStream
- TransformStream
- URL
- URLSearchParams
- URLPattern
- TextEncoder
- TextDecoder
- btoa
- crypto
- createFetch
createFetch allows you to create an API with some specific flags that are not available in the
actual API.
#### Limit the multipart form data size
This is useful if you parse the multipart request bodies with .formData().
`ts
import { createFetch } from '@whatwg-node/fetch'
const fetchAPI = createFetch({
formDataLimits: {
// Maximum allowed file size (in bytes)
fileSize: 1000000,
// Maximum allowed number of files
files: 10,
// Maximum allowed size of content (operations, variables etc...)
fieldSize: 1000000,
// Maximum allowed header size for form data
headerSize: 1000000
}
})
// See how you can handle file uploads with Fetch API
http.createServer(async (req, res) => {
const request = new Request(req)
const formData = await request.formData()
const file = formData.get('file')
// ...
})
``