sp-request-nocolors
v0.0.2
Published
Simplified SharePoint HTTP client
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sp-request-nocolors - simplified SharePoint HTTP client
IMPORTANT: This package is a clone from node-sp-auth, without colors dependency and other changes, all info below is from original creator.
Need help on SharePoint with Node.JS? Join our gitter chat and ask question!
If you are looking for a way to perform some REST queries against SharePoint, consider also PnPjs with node.js integration
IMPORTANT: This module doesn't work in browser. The only supported environment is nodejs. If you have a need to use it in browser, probably you're looking for sp-rest-proxy - a nodejs proxy, which redirects calls to real SharePoint.
sp-request
is based on got (human-friendly and powerful HTTP request library for Node.js) and node-sp-auth modules. node-sp-auth
implements different authentication options for unattended SharePoint authentication from nodejs. You can send REST queries to SharePoint (works with both on-prem and online) using got
syntax with the same params that got
supports, and sp-request
(with help of node-sp-auth
) takes care about authenticating you inside SharePoint.
Versions supported:
- SharePoint 2013 and onwards
- SharePoint Online
Upgrade from 2.x to 3.x
If you're upgrading to 3.x version, please read Upgrade guide
How to use:
Install:
npm install sp-request --save-dev
Create sprequest function:
import * as sprequest from 'sp-request';
let spr = sprequest.create(credentialOptions);
Get list by title:
spr.get('http://sp2013dev/sites/dev/_api/web/lists/GetByTitle(\'TestList\')')
.then(response => {
console.log('List Id: ' + response.body.d.Id);
})
.catch(err =>{
console.log('Ohhh, something went wrong...');
});
Update list title:
spr.requestDigest('http://sp2013dev/sites/dev')
.then(digest => {
return spr.post('http://sp2013dev/sites/dev/_api/web/lists/GetByTitle(\'TestList\')', {
body: {
'__metadata': { 'type': 'SP.List' },
'Title': 'TestList'
},
headers: {
'X-RequestDigest': digest,
'X-HTTP-Method': 'MERGE',
'IF-MATCH': '*'
}
});
})
.then(response => {
if (response.statusCode === 204) {
console.log('List title updated!');
}
}, err => {
if (err.statusCode === 404) {
console.log('List not found!');
} else {
console.log(err);
}
});
... as simple as that! A bit more samples you can find under integration tests
API:
[main sp-request export].create(credentialOptions):
- credentialOptions: optional, object containing credentials.
Since version 2.x
sp-request
relies onnode-sp-auth
module for authentication. You can find description forcredentialOptions
under node-sp-auth.
Call to sprequest.create(credentialOption)
returns sprequest function with predefined authentication. You can use this function later to send REST queries (like in samples above) without specifying credentials again.
sprequest(options):
- options: required, settings object for
got
module. For all available values refer to the original got docs
By default sp-request
sets following params for got
:
{
responseType: 'json',
resolveBodyOnly: false,
rejectUnauthorized: false,
throwHttpErrors: true,
retry: 0,
headers: {
'Accept': 'application/json;odata=verbose',
'Content-Type': 'application/json;odata=verbose'
}
}
as a result you can access body.d
property as an object. You can provide your own headers and override defaults if it's required.
sprequest.requestDigest(url):
- url - required, string site url
Returns request digest as string via promise.
Convenience methods:
sprequest(url, options):
- url - required, string
- options - optional,
got
options object
The same as sprequest(options)
but options.url
will be equal to the first param.
sprequest.get(url, options)
- url - required, string
- options - optional,
got
options object
The same as sprequest(options)
but options.url
will be equal to the first param and options.method: 'GET'
.
sprequest.post(url, options)
- url - required, string
- options - optional,
got
options object
The same as sprequest(options)
but options.url
will be equal to the first param and options.method: 'POST'
.
Supplying additional headers via environment variables
Sometimes you need to push additional headers for sp-request
without direct access to sp-request
object. For example from third party module, which uses sp-request
internally. For that purpose you can use environmental variables. Provide it in a below way:
process.env['_sp_request_headers'] = JSON.stringify({
'X-FORMS_BASED_AUTH_ACCEPTED': 'f'
});
Default options set by sp-request
{
responseType: 'json',
resolveBodyOnly: false,
rejectUnauthorized: false,
retry: 0
}
Development:
I recommend using VS Code for development. Repository already contains some settings for VS Code editor.
Before creating Pull Request you need to create an appropriate issue and reference it from PR.
git clone https://github.com/s-KaiNet/sp-request.git
npm run build
- restores dependencies and runs typescript compilationgulp live-dev
- setup watchers and automatically runs typescript compilation, tslint and tests when you save files
Tests:
npm test
. As a result/reports
folder will be created with test results in junit format and code coverage. Additionally test reports will be available in a console window.
Integration testing:
- Rename file
/test/integration/config.sample.ts
toconfig.ts
. - Update information in
config.ts
with appropriate values (urls, credentials, environment). - Run
gulp test-int
.