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sonrpc

Minimalistic library for creating JSON-RPC 2.0 API

Getting Started

//api/greet.js
module.exports = async ({
    name,
    city
}) => {
    return `Hi, ${name} from ${city}!`;
};
//index.js
const sonrpc = require('sonrpc');

const app = new sonrpc.Application();

app.launch();

Testing out, request to http://localhost:3000/api:

{
    "jsonrpc": "2.0",
    "method": "greet",
    "id": "1",
    "params": {
        "name": "John",
        "city": "London"
    }
}

Response:

{
    "jsonrpc": "2.0",
    "id": "1",
    "result": "Hi, John from London!"
}

See /example for more details

Modules

The Application class used in the example above is a built-in http server which accepts JSON-RPC requests in HTTP body. It also handles such cases as invalid JSON body in the request.

However, if you want to use JSON-RPC calls via any other transport (WebSockets, TCP) or platform (express, fastify), you can use just the Dispatcher class from sonrpc, which does all the handling of the RPC calls.

Configuration

Available sonrpc.Application options and their default values:

new sonrpc.Application({
    //HTTP URL where the requests will be processed 
    apiUrl: '/api',

    //HTTP port to start the server on
    httpPort: 3000,

    //Is 'application/json' content type required for incoming requests
    //If true and the header is not valid, a JSON-RPC error will be returned
    requireContentType: true,
});

Other options are automatically passed to Dispatcher and Loader objects.

Available sonrpc.Dispatcher options and their default values:

new sonrpc.Dispatcher({
    //Object with each property mapping to a method
    //<methodName, function>
    methods: {},

    //If true, batch requests are processed in parallel
    parallelBatches: true,

    //Error handler for non-RPC errors
    //signature: (error, request)
    //where 'error' is the error thrown 
    //'request' is JSON RPC 'Request' object
    //must return JSON-RPC 'Error' object

    //default error handler just
    //puts the error.message as JSON-RPC error message
    //and error.code as JSON-RPC error code (or null if omitted)
    errorHandler: defaultErrorHandler
});

Available sonrpc.Loader options and their default values:

new sonrpc.Loader({
    //If true, node.js 'require()' will be used for loading methods
    //Otherwise, node.js 'vm' module will be used
    //See below for more details
    useRequire: true,
    
    //Directory to search for RPC methods
    apiDir: './api',

    //Delimeter for method namespaces
    //If there is add.js file in math/ folder
    //The final method name will be 'math.add'
    namespaceDelimeter: '.'
});

Methods and method loading

In sonrpc, each method handler is just a simple async function. The parameters are passed either as an object, or as an array of arguments:

//As array
//params: [2,3]
async (a,b) => {
    return a + b;
};

//As object
//params: {a: 2, b: 3}
async ({
    a,b
}) => {
    return a + b;
};

The call is successfull if handler returns any value that can be serialized to JSON, then it is sent as result in JSON-RPC response object.

If error is thrown, the call is not successfull and JSON-RPC error object is sent back to client.

By default, sonrpc.Loader loades the method handlers via require(), so each method is just basically a module:

//api/method.js
module.exports = async (param1, param2) => {
    return ...;
};

But, you can disable this feature by providing useRequire: false option. In that case, node.js vm (and vm.Script to be specific) module capabilites will be used for loading and running method handlers. Also, the method definition changes a bit (module.exports is omitted):

async (param1, param2) => {
    return ...;
};

This is shorter and more convenient way. However, the script is run in separate scope, so such tools as require or module are not available. Therefore, a some sort of dependency injection must be added.

Author: Nikita Kogut (MrOnlineCoder)

License: MIT

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