npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

osprey

v1.0.0

Published

Generate an API proxy from a RAML definition, which can be used locally or globally for validating API requests and responses

Downloads

1,562

Readme

Osprey

NPM version NPM Downloads Build status Test coverage Greenkeeper badge

Generate API middleware from a RAML definition, which can be used locally or globally for validating API requests and responses.

Features

  • Automatic Request Validations
    • Bodies
      • Form data
      • Url Encoded bodies
      • JSON schemas
      • XML schemas
    • Headers
    • Query parameters
    • RAML 1.0 types
  • Automatic Request Parameters
    • Default Headers
    • Default Parameters
  • RAML Router
  • Integrates with Express-format middleware servers
    • Simple req/res/next middleware format that works with Connect, Express and even http
  • API documentation Currently disabled
    • Optionally mount API documentation generated from your RAML definition
  • Built-in Error Handling Middleware
    • I18n support
    • Map validation paths to readable strings (with i18n support)
  • Built-in Response Handling Coming soon
    • Validate response bodies against status code definition
    • Automatically fill default response headers
  • Authentication
    • OAuth 1.0 Coming Soon
    • OAuth 2.0
    • Basic Authentication
    • Digest Authentication
    • Custom Security Schemes
  • RAML Mock Service

Osprey is built to enforce a documentation-first approach to APIs. It achieves this by:

Server

  1. 404ing on undocumented resources
  2. Rejecting invalid requests bodies, headers and query parameters
  3. Populating default headers and query parameters
  4. Filtering undocumented headers and query parameters
  5. Validating API responses Coming soon
  6. Fill default response headers Coming soon

Security

  1. Setting up authentication endpoints and methods for you
  2. Authenticating endpoints as defined in RAML

Installation

Global

npm install osprey -g

Osprey can be used as a validation proxy with any other API server. Just install the module globally and use the CLI to set up the application endpoint(s) to proxy, as well as the RAML definition to use. Invalid API requests will be blocked before they reach your application server.

# Proxy to a running application (with optional documentation)
osprey -f api.raml -p 3000 -a localhost:8080

Options

  • -a Application endpoint address (can be fully qualified URLs) and specify multiple, comma-separated addresses
  • -f Path to the root RAML definition (E.g. /path/to/api.raml)
  • -p Port number to bind the proxy locally

Locally

npm install osprey --save

Usage

Osprey is normally used as a local node module and is compatible with any library supporting HTTP middleware, including Express and Connect. Just require the module locally and generate the middleware from a RAML definition file.

const osprey = require('osprey')
const express = require('express')
const join = require('path').join
const app = express()

const path = join(__dirname, 'assets', 'api.raml')

// Be careful, this uses all middleware functions by default. You might just
// want to use each one separately instead - `osprey.server`, etc.
osprey.loadFile(path)
  .then(function (middleware) {
    app.use(middleware)

    app.use(function (err, req, res, next) {
      // Handle errors.
    })

    app.listen(3000)
  })
   .catch(function(e) { console.error("Error: %s", e.message); });

Please note: The middleware function does not use the RAML baseUri. Make sure you mount the application under the correct path. E.g. app.use('/v1', middleware).

Server (Resource Handling)

const wap = require('webapi-parser').WebApiParser

// webapi-parser.WebApiDocument
const model = wap.raml10.parse('/some/api.raml')
const handler = osprey.server(model, options)

console.log(handler) //=> function (req, res, next) {}

console.log(handler.ramlUriParameters) //=> {} // A merged object of used URI parameters.

Undefined API requests will always be rejected with a 404.

Options

These are also passed along to osprey-method-handler).

  • cors Enable CORS by setting to true or an object from cors (default: false)
  • compression Enable response compression using compression (default: false)
  • notFoundHandler Use a 404 error in middleware to skip over invalid/undefined routes from RAML (default: true)

From Osprey Method Handler:

  • discardUnknownBodies Discard undefined request bodies (default: true)
  • discardUnknownQueryParameters Discard undefined query parameters (default: true)
  • discardUnknownHeaders Discard undefined header parameters (always includes known headers) (default: true)
  • parseBodiesOnWildcard Toggle parsing bodies on wildcard body support (default: false)
  • reviver The reviver passed to JSON.parse for JSON endpoints
  • limit The maximum bytes for XML, JSON and URL-encoded endpoints (default: '100kb')
  • parameterLimit The maximum number of URL-encoded parameters (default: 1000)
  • busboyLimits The limits for Busboy multipart form parsing

If you disable the default "not found" handler, it should be mounted later using osprey.server.notFoundHandler. For example, app.use(osprey.server.notFoundHandler).

Invalid Headers and Query Parameters

Invalid headers and query parameters are removed from the request. To read them they need to be documented in the RAML definition.

Request Bodies

Request bodies are parsed and validated for you, when you define the schema.

For application/json and application/x-www-form-urlencoded, the data will be an object under req.body. For text/xml, the body is stored as a string under req.body while the parsed XML document is under req.xml (uses LibXMLJS, not included). For multipart/form-data, you will need to attach field and file listeners to the request form (uses Busboy):

app.post('/users/{userId}', function (req, res, next) {
  req.form.on('field', function (name, value) {
    console.log(name + '=' + value)
  })

  req.form.on('file', function (name, stream, filename) {
    stream.pipe(fs.createWriteStream(join(os.tmpDir(), filename)))
  })

  req.form.on('error', next)

  req.pipe(req.form)
})

Headers, Parameters and Query Parameters

All parameters are automatically validated and parsed to the correct types according to the RAML document using webapi-parser and raml-sanitize. URL parameter validation comes with Osprey Router, available using osprey.Router.

// Similar to `express.Router`, but uses RAML paths.
const Router = require('osprey').Router
const utils = require('./utils')

// Array<webapi-parser.Parameter>
const parameters = utils.getUriParameters()

const app = new Router()

app.use(...)

app.get('/{slug}', parameters, function (req, res) {
  res.send('success')
})

module.exports = app

You can initialize a Router with ramlUriParameters. This is helpful, since every router collects an object with merged URI parameters. For example, you can combine it with the server middleware to generate a router with your RAML URI parameters:

const handler = osprey.server(model)
const router = osprey.Router({ ramlUriParameters: handler.ramlUriParameters })

// Uses an existing `userId` URI parameter, if it exists.
router.get('/{userId}', function (req, res, next) {})

Handling Errors

Osprey returns a middleware router instance, so you can mount this within any compatible application and handle errors with the framework. For example, using HTTP with finalhandler (the same module Express uses):

const http = require('http')
const osprey = require('osprey')
const finalhandler = require('finalhandler')
const join = require('path').join

osprey.loadFile(join(__dirname, 'api.raml'))
  .then(function (middleware) {
    http.createServer(function (req, res) {
      middleware(req, res, finalhandler(req, res))
    }).listen(process.env.PORT || 3000)
  })
   .catch(function(e) { console.error("Error: %s", e.message); });

Error Types

  • error.ramlAuthorization = true An unauthorized error containing an array of errors that occured is set on error.authorizationErrors
  • error.ramlValidation = true A request failed validation and an array of validation data is set on error.requestErrors (beware, different types contain different information)
  • error.ramlNotFound = true A request 404'd because it was not specified in the RAML definition for the API

Add JSON Schemas

JSON schemas can be added to the application for when external JSON references are needed. From osprey-method-handler.

osprey.addJsonSchema(schema, key)

Error Handler

Osprey comes with support for a built-in error handler middleware that formats request errors for APIs. It comes with built-in i18n with some languages already included for certain formats (help us add more!). The default fallback language is en and the default responder renders JSON, XML, HTML and plain text - all options are overridable.

const osprey = require('osprey')
const app = require('express')()

// It's best to use the default responder, but it's overridable if you need it.
app.use(osprey.errorHandler(function (req, res, errors, stack) { /* Override */ }, 'en'))

You can override the i18n messages or provide your own by passing a nested object that conforms to the following interface:

interface CustomMessages {
  [type: string]: {
    [keyword: string]: {
      [language: string]: (error: RequestError) => string
    }
  }
}

The request error interface is as follows:

interface RequestError {
  type: 'json' | 'form' | 'headers' | 'query' | 'xml' | string
  message: string /* Merged with i18n when available */
  keyword: string /* Keyword that failed validation */
  id?: string /* A unique identifier for the instance of this error */
  dataPath?: string /* Natural path to the error message (E.g. JSON Pointers when using JSON) */
  data?: any /* The data that failed validation */
  schema?: any /* The schema value that failed validation */
  detail?: string /* Additional details about this specific error instance */
  meta?: { [name: string]: string } /* Meta data from the error (XML validation provides a code, column, etc.) */
}

Want to format your own request errors? If you emit an error with a .status property of "client error" (400 - 499) and an array of requestErrors, it will automatically be rendered as the API response (using status as the response status code).

Security

// model is an instance of webapi-parser WebApiDocument
osprey.security(model, options)

Osprey accepts an options object that maps object keys to the security scheme name in the RAML definition.

OAuth 2.0

Provided by OAuth2orize and Passport.

securitySchemes:
  - oauth_2_0:
      type: OAuth 2.0
      settings:
        authorizationUri: https://example.com/oauth/authorize
        accessTokenUri: https://example.com/oauth/token
        authorizationGrants: [ code, token, owner, credentials ]
        scopes:
          - profile
          - history
          - history_lite
          - request
          - request_receipt

OAuth 2.0 can be fairly tricky to enforce on your own. With Osprey, any endpoint with securedBy will automatically be enforced.

Required Options (by grant type)

  • All

    • authenticateClient
    • exchange.refresh When refresh tokens are used
  • Code and Token

    • serializeClient
    • deserializeClient
    • authorizeClient
    • sessionKeys
    • ensureLoggedIn Has access to req.session
    • serveAuthorizationPage Has access to req.session
  • Code

    • grant.code
    • exchange.code
  • Token

    • grant.token
  • Credentials

    • exchange.credentials
  • Owner

    • exchange.owner

The authorization page must submit a POST request to the same URL with the transaction_id and scope properties set (from req.oauth2). If the dialog was denied, submit cancel=true with the POST body. If you wish to enable the ability to skip the authorization page (E.g. user already authorized or first-class client), use the immediateAuthorization option.

// model is an instance of webapi-parser WebApiDocument
osprey.security(model, {
  oauth_2_0: {
    // Optionally override `accessTokenUri` and `authorizationUri` when needed.
    // They need to match the suffix defined in the security scheme.
    accessTokenUri: '/oauth/token',
    authorizationUri: '/oauth/authorize',
    // Serialize the client object into the session.
    serializeClient: function (application, done) {
      return done(null, application.id)
    },
    // Deserialize client objects out of the session.
    deserializeClient: function (id, done) {
      Client.findById(id, function (err, client) {
        done(err, client)
      })
    },
    authorizeClient: function (clientId, redirectUri, scope, type, done) {
      Clients.findOne(clientId, function (err, client) {
        if (err) { return done(err) }
        if (!client) { return done(null, false) }
        if (!client.redirectUri != redirectUri) { return done(null, false) }
        return done(null, client, client.redirectUri)
      })
    },
    authenticateClient: function (clientId, clientSecret, done) {
      Clients.findOne({ clientId: clientId }, function (err, client) {
        if (err) { return done(err) }
        if (!client) { return done(null, false) }
        if (client.clientSecret != clientSecret) { return done(null, false) }
        return done(null, client)
      })
    },
    findUserByToken: function (token, done) {
      User.findOne({ token: token }, function (err, user) {
        if (err) { return done(err) }
        if (!user) { return done(null, false) }
        return done(null, user, { scope: 'all' })
      })
    },
    // An array of unique session keys to sign and verify cookies.
    sessionKeys: ['a', 'b', 'c', ...],
    ensureLoggedIn: function (req, res, next) {
      // For example: https://github.com/jaredhanson/connect-ensure-login
    },
    immediateAuthorization: function (client, user, scope, done) {
      return done(null, false)
    },
    serveAuthorizationPage: function (req, res) {
      res.render('dialog', {
        transactionId: req.oauth2.transactionID,
        user: req.user,
        client: req.oauth2.client
      })
    },
    grant: {
      code: function (client, redirectUri, user, ares, done) {
        AuthorizationCode.create(client.id, redirectUri, user.id, ares.scope, function (err, code) {
          if (err) { return done(err) }
          done(null, code)
        })
      },
      token: function (client, user, ares, done) {
        AccessToken.create(client, user, ares.scope, function (err, accessToken) {
          if (err) { return done(err) }
          done(null, accessToken /*, params */)
        })
      }
    },
    exchange: {
      code: function (client, code, redirectUri, done) {
        AccessToken.create(client, code, redirectUri, function (err, accessToken) {
          if (err) { return done(err) }
          done(null, accessToken /*, refreshToken, params */)
        })
      },
      credentials: function (client, scope, done) {
        AccessToken.create(client, scope, function (err, accessToken) {
          if (err) { return done(err) }
          done(null, accessToken /*, refreshToken, params */)
        })
      },
      owner: function (client, username, password, scope, done) {
        AccessToken.create(client, username, password, scope, function (err, accessToken) {
          if (err) { return done(err) }
          done(null, accessToken /*, refreshToken, params */)
        })
      },
      refresh: function (client, refreshToken, scope, done) {
        AccessToken.create(client, refreshToken, scope, function (err, accessToken) {
          if (err) { return done(err) }
          done(null, accessToken /*, refreshToken, params */)
        })
      }
    }
  }
})

Osprey will automatically block requests with invalid scopes, when defined in RAML using the inline option syntax.

/example:
  securedBy: [oauth_2_0: { scopes: [ ADMINISTRATOR ] } ]

To implement scope validation in your own application, without RAML, use osprey.security.scope('example') and users without the required scope will be rejected.

app.get('/foo/bar', osprey.security.scope('example'), function (req, res) {
  res.send('hello, world')
})

Please note: OAuth 2.0 does not (currently) take into account security scheme describedBy of specification.

OAuth 1.0

Coming soon...

Basic Authentication

Provided by Passport-HTTP.

securitySchemes:
  - basic_auth:
      type: Basic Authentication
// model is an instance of webapi-parser WebApiDocument
osprey.security(model, {
  basic_auth: {
    realm: 'Users', // Optional.
    passReqToCallback: false, // Optional. Default value: false. If true "req" is added as the first callback argument.
    validateUser: function (username, password, done) {
      User.findOne({ username: username }, function (err, user) {
        if (err) { return done(err) }
        if (!user) { return done(null, false) }
        if (!user.verifyPassword(password)) { return done(null, false) }
        return done(null, user)
      })
    }
  }
})

Digest Authentication

Provided by Passport-HTTP.

securitySchemes:
  - digest_auth:
      type: Digest Authentication
// model is an instance of webapi-parser WebApiDocument
osprey.security(model, {
  digest_auth: {
    realm: 'Users', // Optional.
    domain: 'example.com', // Optional.
    findUserByUsername: function (username, done) {
      User.findOne({ username: username }, function (err, user) {
        if (err) { return done(err) }
        if (!user) { return done(null, false) }
        return done(null, user, user.password)
      })
    }
  }
})

Custom Security Schemes

To register a custom security scheme, you can pass in your own function.

securitySchemes:
  - custom_auth:
      type: x-custom

The function must return an object with a handler and, optionally, a router. The router will be mounted immediately and the handler will be called on every secured route with the secured by options and the RAML path.

// model is an instance of webapi-parser WebApiDocument
osprey.security(model, {
  custom_auth: function (scheme, name) {
    return {
      handler: function (options, path) {
        return function (req, res, next) {
          return next()
        }
      },
      router: function (req, res, next) {
        return next()
      }
    }
  }
})

Proxy

osprey.proxy(middleware, addresses)

Pass in an Osprey middleware function with an array of addresses to proxy to and you have a fully-functioning validation and/or security proxy.

License

Apache 2.0