Schema-based HTTP client powered by axios. Built with Typescript. Heavily inspired by AngularJS' $resource.
- Installation
- Quick start
- URL token substituion
- Method Interface Customization
- Custom resource schema
- In depth
npm i axios-rest-resource axios
-
Create resource module in your utils folder
// utils/resource.ts import { ResourceBuilder } from 'axios-rest-resource' export const resourceBuilder = new ResourceBuilder({ baseURL: 'http://localhost:3000', })
-
Using a newly created resource builder create an actual resource
// api/entity1.js import { resourceBuilder } from 'utils/resource' export const entity1Resource = resourceBuilder.build('/entity1') // exports an object // { // create: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity1, // read: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity1, // readOne: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity1/{id}, // remove: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends DELETE http://localhost:3000/entity1/{id}, // update: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends PUT http://localhost:3000/entity1/{id} // }
-
Use your resource whenever you want to make an AJAX call
import { entity1Resource } from 'api/entity1' const resRead = entity1Resource.read() // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity1 // resRead is a Promise of data received from the server const resReadOne = entity1Resource.readOne({ params: { id } }) // for id = '123' // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity1/123 // resReadOne is a Promise of data received from the server const resCreate = entity1Resource.create({ data }) // for data = { field1: 'test' } // sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity1 with body { field1: 'test' } // resCreate is a Promise of data received from the server const resUpdate = entity1Resource.update({ data, params: { id } }) // for data = { field1: 'test' } and id = '123' // sends PUT http://localhost:3000/entity1/123 with body { field1: 'test' } // resUpdate is a Promise of data received from the server const resRemove = entity1Resource.remove({ params: { id } }) // for id = '123' // sends DELETE http://localhost:3000/entity1/123 // resRemove is a Promise of data received from the server
axios-rest-resource applies interceptorUrlFormatter interceptor by default. It handles {token} substitution in URLs.
You can customize the interface of your resource methods using withParams and withResult. These allow you to define type-safe parameter handling and response transformation, making your API calls more intuitive and type-safe.
Note: These are different from axios's built-in
transformRequestandtransformResponse. While axios's transforms modify the request/response data internally, ourwithParamsandwithResultchange the method's interface - how you call it and what it returns.
// api/users.ts
import { resourceBuilder } from 'utils/resource'
interface User {
id: number
email: string
}
interface SignInResponse {
token: string
user: User
}
export const usersResource = resourceBuilder.build('/users', {
signIn: {
method: 'post',
url: '/sign_in',
// Define method parameters and how they map to request config
withParams: (email: string, password: string) => ({
data: { email, password },
headers: { 'X-Custom': 'test' },
}),
// Define how response data maps to your type
withResult: (response): SignInResponse => ({
token: response.data.auth_token,
user: {
id: response.data.user.id,
email: response.data.user.email,
},
}),
},
getProfile: {
method: 'get',
// Only transform response
withResult: (response): User => ({
id: response.data.id,
email: response.data.email,
}),
},
register: {
method: 'post',
// Only transform parameters
withParams: (email: string, password: string) => ({
data: { email, password },
}),
},
})
// Usage with full type inference
const signInResult = await usersResource.signIn('email@example.com', 'password')
console.log(signInResult.token) // string
console.log(signInResult.user.id) // number
const profile = await usersResource.getProfile()
console.log(profile.email) // string
const registerResult = await usersResource.register('email@example.com', 'password')
console.log(registerResult.data) // axios response dataThe interface customization provides:
- Type-safe parameter transformation with optional parameters
- Type-safe response data transformation
- Custom headers support
- Independent use of transforms (can use either or both)
- Full TypeScript type inference for parameters and return types
Create resource module in your utils folder:
// utils/resource.ts
import { ResourceBuilder } from 'axios-rest-resource'
export const resourceBuilder = new ResourceBuilder({
baseURL: 'http://localhost:3000',
})Extend the default schema with additional methods:
// api/entity2.js
import { resourceSchemaDefault } from 'axios-rest-resource'
import { resourceBuilder } from 'utils/resource'
export const entity2Resource = resourceBuilder.build('/entity2', {
...resourceSchemaDefault,
doSomething: {
method: 'post',
url: '/do-something',
},
})
// exports an object
// {
// create: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity2,
// read: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity2,
// readOne: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity2/{id},
// remove: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends DELETE http://localhost:3000/entity2/{id},
// update: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends PUT http://localhost:3000/entity2/{id},
// doSomething: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity2/do-something
// }Example usage:
import { entity2Resource } from 'api/entity2'
const resRead = entity2Resource.read()
// sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity2
// resRead is a Promise of data received from the server
const resReadOne = entity2Resource.readOne({ params: { id } })
// for id = '123'
// sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity2/123
// resReadOne is a Promise of data received from the server
const resCreate = entity2Resource.create({ data })
// for data = { field1: 'test' }
// sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity2 with body { field1: 'test' }
// resCreate is a Promise of data received from the server
const resUpdate = entity2Resource.update({ data, params: { id } })
// for data = { field1: 'test' } and id = '123'
// sends PUT http://localhost:3000/entity2/123 with body { field1: 'test' }
// resUpdate is a Promise of data received from the server
const resRemove = entity2Resource.remove({ params: { id } })
// for id = '123'
// sends DELETE http://localhost:3000/entity2/123
// resRemove is a Promise of data received from the server
const resDoSomething = entity2Resource.doSomething()
// sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity2/do-something
// resDoSomething is a Promise of data received from the serverCreate a completely custom schema without extending the default:
// api/entity.js
import { resourceBuilder } from 'utils/resource'
export const entityResource = resourceBuilder.build('/entity', {
doSomething: {
method: 'post',
url: '/do-something',
},
})
// exports an object
// {
// doSomething: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends POST http://localhost:3000/entity/do-something
// }Use only specific methods from the default schema:
// api/entity.js
import { resourceSchemaDefault } from 'axios-rest-resource'
import { resourceBuilder } from 'utils/resource'
const { read, readOne } = resourceSchemaDefault
export const entityResource = resourceBuilder.build('/entity', {
read,
readOne,
})
// exports an object
// {
// read: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity,
// readOne: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // sends GET http://localhost:3000/entity/{id},
// }If you're using Ruby on Rails, there is also a default schema that matches Rails' conventions for controller actions:
// api/entity.js
import { railsResourceSchema } from 'axios-rest-resource'
import { resourceBuilder } from 'utils/resource'
export const entityResource = resourceBuilder.build('/entity', railsResourceSchema)
// exports an object with Rails conventional action names:
// {
// index: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // GET /entity (mapped from read)
// show: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // GET /entity/{id} (mapped from readOne)
// create: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // POST /entity
// update: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // PUT /entity/{id}
// destroy: (requestConfig) => axiosPromise // DELETE /entity/{id} (mapped from remove)
// }What does ResourceBuilder do exactly upon creation?
When you call new ResourceBuilder(axiosConfig)
- If your
axiosConfigdoesn't haveheaders.Acceptproperty it sets it to 'application/json'. - It creates a new instance of axios passing
axiosConfigtoaxios.create. - It adds
interceptorUrlFormatterto request interceptors of the newly created instance of axios. - It exposes the newly created instance of axios for further modifications at
axiosInstance.
Each instance of ResourceBuilder has its own axiosInstance. It's useful if you want to do something more with your axios instance like adding an interceptor.
import { ResourceBuilder } from 'axios-rest-resource'
import axios, { AxiosInstance } from 'axios'
const resourceBuilder = new ResourceBuilder({
baseURL: 'http://localhost:3000',
})
resourceBuilder.axiosInstance.interceptors.response.use(myCustomResponeInterceptor)
export { resourceBuilder }