As of Feb 11th 2020, request
is fully deprecated. No new changes are expected to land. In fact, none have landed for some time. This package is also deprecated because it depends on request
.
Fyi, here is the reasoning of request
's deprecation and a list of alternative libraries.
This package is similar to request-promise
but uses any-promise
to let the user choose which Promise library to use.
Please refer to the request-promise
documentation. Everything applies to request-promise-any
except the following:
- Instead of using Bluebird promises this library uses the Promise library chosen by the user.
- This library has to work with the API that all supported Promise libraries have in common. And that is the API of native ES6 promises. Mind that they have less features than Bluebird promises. In particular, the
.finally(...)
method is not available.
This module is installed via npm:
npm install --save request
npm install --save request-promise-any
request
is defined as a peer-dependency and thus has to be installed separately.
First, install your preferred Promise library. E.g. Q:
npm install --save q
Then, register the Promise library before you require request-promise-any
for the first time:
require('any-promise/register/q')
var rp = require('request-promise-any')
For a list of supported Promise libraries and advanced registration features read the documentation of any-promise
.
- Go through the migration instructions to upgrade to
request-promise
v4. - Ensure that you don't use Bluebird-specific features on the promise returned by your request calls. In particular, you can't use
.finally(...)
anymore. - Follow the registration instructions above.
- You are done.
To set up your development environment:
- clone the repo to your desktop,
- in the shell
cd
to the main folder, - hit
npm install
, - hit
npm install gulp -g
if you haven't installed gulp globally yet, and - run
gulp dev
. (Or runnode ./node_modules/.bin/gulp dev
if you don't want to install gulp globally.)
gulp dev
watches all source files and if you save some changes it will lint the code and execute all tests. The test coverage report can be viewed from ./coverage/lcov-report/index.html
.
If you want to debug a test you should use gulp test-without-coverage
to run all tests without obscuring the code by the test coverage instrumentation.
- v1.0.9 (2020-07-21)
- Security fix: bumped
request-promise-core
which bumpslodash
to^4.17.19
following this advisory.
- Security fix: bumped
- v1.0.8 (2019-11-03)
- Security fix: bumped
request-promise-core
which bumpslodash
to^4.17.15
. See vulnerabilty reports. (Thanks to @aw-davidson for reporting this in issue #49.)
- Security fix: bumped
- v1.0.7 (2019-02-14)
- Corrected mistakenly set
tough-cookie
version, now^2.3.3
(Thanks to @evocateur for pointing this out.) - If you installed
[email protected]
please make sure after the upgrade thatrequest
andrequest-promise-any
use the same physical copy oftough-cookie
.
- Corrected mistakenly set
- v1.0.6 (2019-02-14)
- Using stricter
tough-cookie@~2.3.3
to avoid installingtough-cookie@3
which introduces breaking changes - Security fix: bumped
lodash
to^4.17.11
, see vulnerabilty reports
- Using stricter
- v1.0.5 (2017-09-22)
- Upgraded
tough-cookie
to a version without regex DoS vulnerability (Thanks to @rouanw and @sophieklm for their pull requests request-promise#226 and request-promise-native#13)
- Upgraded
- v1.0.4 (2017-05-07)
- Fix that allows to use
tough-cookie
for cookie creation
- Fix that allows to use
- v1.0.3 (2016-08-08)
- v1.0.2 (2016-07-18)
- Fix for using with module bundlers like Webpack and Browserify
- v1.0.1 (2016-07-17)
- Fixed
@request/promise-core
version for safer versioning
- Fixed
- v1.0.0 (2016-07-15)
- Initial version similar to
request-promise
v4
- Initial version similar to
In case you never heard about the ISC license it is functionally equivalent to the MIT license.
See the LICENSE file for details.