Trying to learn more about node.js by making a simple http proxy server. The use scenario is simple: user -> proxy -> server -> proxy -> user
The following code works until the last step. Couldn't find way to pipe connector's output back to the user.
#!/usr/bin/env node
var
url = require('url'),
http = require('http'),
acceptor = http.createServer().listen(3128);
acceptor.on('request', function(request, response) {
console.log('request ' + request.url);
request.pause();
var options = url.parse(request.url);
options.headers = request.headers;
options.method = request.method;
options.agent = false;
var connector = http.request(options);
request.pipe(connector);
request.resume();
// connector.pipe(response); // doesn't work
// connector.pipe(request); // doesn't work either
});
Using tcpflow I see the incoming request from the browser, then the outgoing proxy request, then the server response back to the proxy. Somehow i couldn't manage to retransmit the response back to the browser.
What is the proper way to implement this logic with pipes?
you dont have to 'pause', just 'pipe' is ok
var connector = http.request(options, function(res) {
res.pipe(response, {end:true});//tell 'response' end=true
});
request.pipe(connector, {end:true});
http request will not finish until you tell it is 'end';
OK. Got it.
UPDATE: NB! As reported in the comments, this example doesn't work anymore. Most probably due to the Streams2 API change (node 0.9+)
Piping back to the client has to happen inside connector's callback as follows:
#!/usr/bin/env node
var
url = require('url'),
http = require('http'),
acceptor = http.createServer().listen(3128);
acceptor.on('request', function(request, response) {
console.log('request ' + request.url);
request.pause();
var options = url.parse(request.url);
options.headers = request.headers;
options.method = request.method;
options.agent = false;
var connector = http.request(options, function(serverResponse) {
serverResponse.pause();
response.writeHeader(serverResponse.statusCode, serverResponse.headers);
serverResponse.pipe(response);
serverResponse.resume();
});
request.pipe(connector);
request.resume();
});
I used the examples from this post to proxy http/s requests. Faced with the problem that cookies were lost somewhere.
So to fix that you need to handle headers from the proxy response.
Below the working example:
req = service.request(options, function(res) {
response.writeHead(res.statusCode, res.headers);
return res.pipe(response, {end: true});
});
request.pipe(req, {end: true});