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http.Agent
instanceThis module is a thin wrapper around the base http.Agent
class.
It provides an abstract class that must define a connect()
function, which is responsible for creating the underlying socket that the HTTP client requests will use.
The connect()
function may return an arbitrary Duplex
stream, or another http.Agent
instance to delegate the request to, and may be asynchronous (by defining an async
function).
Instances of this agent can be used with the http
and https
modules. To differentiate, the options parameter in the connect()
function includes a secureEndpoint
property, which can be checked to determine what type of socket should be returned.
Here are some more interesting uses of agent-base
. Send a pull request to list yours!
http-proxy-agent
: An HTTP(s) proxy http.Agent
implementation for HTTP endpointshttps-proxy-agent
: An HTTP(s) proxy http.Agent
implementation for HTTPS endpointspac-proxy-agent
: A PAC file proxy http.Agent
implementation for HTTP and HTTPSsocks-proxy-agent
: A SOCKS proxy http.Agent
implementation for HTTP and HTTPSHere's a minimal example that creates a new net.Socket
or tls.Socket
based on the secureEndpoint
property. This agent can be used with both the http
and https
modules.
import * as net from 'net'; import * as tls from 'tls'; import * as http from 'http'; import { Agent } from 'agent-base'; class MyAgent extends Agent { connect(req, opts) { // `secureEndpoint` is true when using the "https" module if (opts.secureEndpoint) { return tls.connect(opts); } else { return net.connect(opts); } } }); // Keep alive enabled means that `connect()` will only be // invoked when a new connection needs to be created const agent = new MyAgent({ keepAlive: true }); // Pass the `agent` option when creating the HTTP request http.get('http://nodejs.org/api/', { agent }, (res) => { console.log('"response" event!', res.headers); res.pipe(process.stdout); });