Trailing slash redirect middleware for Connect and Express.js
npm install connect-slashesconnect-slashes
===============
Trailing slash redirect middleware for Connect and Express.js. Useful for creating canonical urls in your Node.js applications.
```
$ npm install connect-slashes
`javascript
var connect = require("connect")
, slashes = require("connect-slashes");
connect() // or express()
.use(connect.static())
.use(slashes()) // must come after static middleware!
.listen(3000);
`
Alternatively, you can pass false as the first argument to .slashes() in order to remove trailing slashes instead of appending them:
`javascript`
.use(slashes(false));
You can also pass a second argument with an options object. For example, if an application is behind a reverse proxy server that removes part of the URL (a base_path) before proxying to the application, then the base can be specified with an option:
`javascript`
.use(slashes(true, { base: "/blog" })); // prepends a base url to the redirect
By default, all redirects are using the 301 Moved Permanently header. You can change this behavior by passing in the optional code option:
`javascript`
.use(slashes(true, { code: 302 })); // 302 Temporary redirects
You can also set additional headers to the redirect response with the headers option:
`javascript`
.use(slashes(true, { headers: { "Cache-Control": "public" } }));
1. Only GET, HEAD, and OPTIONS requests will be redirected (to avoid losing POST/PUT data)
2. This middleware will append or remove a trailing slash to all request urls. This includes filenames (/app.css => /app.css/), so it may break your static files. Make sure to .use() this middleware only after the connect.static()` middleware.
MIT