Promised HAL

This project provides means of creating and manipulating documents in Hypertext Application Language or simply HAL. Moreover it has a number of convenient methods to communicate with HAL enabled servers in an asynchronous manner using Promises.

Quick start

const HAL = require('promised-hal')

// Fetch a user
let user = new HAL('https://my.api/user/1').auth('basic:auth')
user.GET()
  .then(result => console.log(result))
  .catch(err => console.error(err))

// Update that user
user.body({name: 'Yan Foto'})
  .PUT()
  .then(updated => console.log(updated))
  .catch(err => console.error(err))

Where to use it?

HAL is not a protocol and so the business logic programmed in this module does not apply to all servers talking HAL. This module was born to ease the pain of communicating with Spring Data REST framework. If you are using any other framework on your backend that follows a similar logic, you are probably good to go!

API

constructor(url)

Creates an empty instance of HAL class with url pointing to resource location. See quick start for an example.

atuh(credentials)

Saves basic HTTP auth for all following requests. credentials is a string in user:pass format. Currently only basic authentication is supported. See quick start for an example.

body(body)

Attaches a body to the instance, which is passed along PUT, POST, and PATCH requests. For example, the following can be used to create a comment:

let comment = new HAL('https://my.api/comments').body({content: '6 afraid of 8?'})
comment.POST()
  .then(result => console.log('Created resource', result))
  .catch(err => console.error(err))

GET(depth)

Fetches a resources using an HTTP GET request. If depth is given, the module tries to recursively fetch all resources listed under _links and add them under _embedded. Default value for depth if 0, where no linked resources are fetched.

This method returns a promise which is resolved with the same instance with its contents updated to the fetched object after the request succeeds. See quick start for an example.

POST(headers)

Creates a resource using an HTTP POST request and the content provided by body() method. Additional headers can be provided.

This method returns a promise which is resolved with the same instance with its contents updated to the server response after the request succeeds. See quick start for an example.

PUT(headers)

Updates a resource using an HTTP PUT request and the content provided by body(). See POST(headers).

PATCH(headers)

Updates a resource using an HTTP PATCH request and the content provided by body(). See POST(headers).

DELETE(headers)

Sends an HTTP DELETE request to resources URL and returns a promise which is resolved to the same instance. Optional request headers can also be provided.

let badComment = new HAL('https://my.api/comment/13')
badComment.DELETE()
  .then(result => console.log(result))
  .catch(err => console.error(err))