A FastCGI client implementation in Node.js, mainly designed for cummunication with PHP.
npm install fastcgi-clientA FastCGI client implementation in Node.js, mainly designed for cummunication with PHP.
Not actively developing, and I have been away from PHP projects since 2018.
However, there are still some issues and pull requests from many developers, so I decide not to archive this repo.
Also, I believe it is a small and stable protocol, and it can still work for many years.
npm install fastcgi-client. Use require('fastcgi-client') to get a fastcgiConnector.
var client = fastcgiConnector(options) Create a FastCGI client. Available options:
* host The server name or IP, default to '127.0.0.1'.
* port The server port, default to 9000.
* sockFile Connect to php-fpm with sock file instead of 127.0.0.1:9000. If you set this option, host and port will be ignored
* skipCheckServer Skip checking and getting options from the server.
* maxConns The default value of maximum concurrent connections to the server.
* maxReqs The default value of maximum concurrent requests to the server.
* mpxsConns The default value of using concurrency over connections or not.
* Event ready Client is ready for accepting request.
* Event error An error occurred and returned as 1st argument of event handler.
client.request(params, cb) Create a new request.params Should be FastCGI params (key-value pairs).
An error object would be passed to cb as 1st argument on failed (request not sent at all), otherwise a request argument is passed as 2nd argument.
The request object:
* request.abort() Send an abort request. The request is not ended after the server responds.
* request.stdin The writable stdin stream.
* request.stdout The readable stdout stream.
* request.stderr The readable stderr stream.
* request.getExitStatus() Return exit code, or an error if not normally ended. It would be ready before the end events of stdout and stderr streams.
You should have PHP-CGI installed and PHP5 FPM service running in 127.0.0.1:9000.
Then use npm test to test. Use npm run coverage to see the test coverage.
MIT