Reputation: 18846
Lets say I have multiple places where I call response.send(someData)
. Now I want to create a single global interceptor where I catch all .send
methods and make some changes to someData
. Is there any way in express.js? (hooks, listeners, interceptors, ...)?
Upvotes: 40
Views: 36976
Reputation: 451
for those finding on google, based off the top answer:
app.use((req, res, next) => {
const oldSend = res.send
res.send = function(data) {
console.log(data) // do something with the data
res.send = oldSend // set function back to avoid the 'double-send'
return res.send(data) // just call as normal with data
}
next()
})
Upvotes: 34
Reputation: 373
For my case, I had to use a middleware with typicode/json-server
and be able to get a different response object than just a blunt javascript array.
While the typicode/json-server
response was something like:
[
{
...
}
]
After applying the middleware:
module.exports = (req, res, next) => {
const oldSend = res.send;
res.send = (data) => {
const oldData = JSON.parse(data);
// we want to change the response only if a blunt array is sent
// also, we do this for the old sake of not sending json arrays
if(Object.prototype.toString.call(oldData) === '[object Array]') {
data = {
data: oldData
};
}
res.send = oldSend;
return res.send(data);
};
next();
}
The response looks as follows:
{
data: [
{
...
}
]
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2425
Just want to provide a practical usage example with intercepting res.json
.
When we're writing express server, we might send the status
and message
in every response according to the situation like below.
app.post('/test', (req, res) => {
res.json({status: 1, message: "some_error", otherData: "nothing"})
})
But, what if I don't want to write the status and message in every time? I could add new function to build a template response body to send the data when using res.json
.
const messageMap = {
0: "success",
1: "some_error"
}
app.use((req, res, next) => {
const originJson = res.json
res.json = (status, jsonData) => {
const fixedResponse = {
status,
message: messageMap[status]
}
originJson.call(res, {...jsonData, ...fixedResponse})
}
next()
})
Then I just need to use below function.
app.get("/test", (req, res) => {
res.json(1, {otherData: 1})
})
You can even use builder pattern to do this.
app.use((req, res) => {
res.buildFixedResponse = function (status) {
const fixedResponse = {
status,
message: messageMap[status]
}
res.json = function (jsonData) {
originJson.call(this, {...jsonData, ...fixedResponse})
}
return this
}
})
Then trigger function like below.
app.get("/test", (req, res) => {
res.buildFixedResponse(1).json({otherData: 1})
})
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 335
You can simply do it using NODEJS and Express, say you are calling an API and want to send modify the data before sending response back.
router.get('/id', (req,res) => {
... //your code here filling DATA
let testData = {
"C1": "Data1",
"C2": "Data2",
"yourdata": DATA
};
res.send(testData);
});
Upvotes: -3
Reputation: 4006
You can define a middleware as below (taken and modified from this answer)
function modifyResponseBody(req, res, next) {
var oldSend = res.send;
res.send = function(data){
// arguments[0] (or `data`) contains the response body
arguments[0] = "modified : " + arguments[0];
oldSend.apply(res, arguments);
}
next();
}
app.use(modifyResponseBody);
Upvotes: 73
Reputation: 6872
Yes this is possible. There are two ways to do this, one is to use a library that provides the interception, with the ability to run it based on a specific condition: https://www.npmjs.com/package/express-interceptor
The other option is to just create your own middleware (for express) as follows:
function modify(req, res, next){
res.body = "this is the modified/new response";
next();
}
express.use(modify);
Upvotes: 10