I want caching into the "localstorage" the HttpRequest and HttpResponse classes from @angular/common/http
.
The localstorage
only accept string
, therefore i want serialize/unserialize both objects (HttpRequest and HttpResponse) with JSON.stringfy()
and JSON.parse()
.
The problem is HttpRequest
and HttpResponse
are both complex class with some ES6 Map (eg. HttpHeaders) and some getter/setter function, with JSON.stringfy()
and JSON.parse()
the serialization/unserialization don't return the same object and some information are lost.
There is a way for serialize/unserialize HttpRequest
and HttpResponse
class?
I'm searching for a complete serialization/unserialization (headers, params, body, etc)
In this example there is two method for serialize and unserialize HttpRequest, eg.:
function serializeRequest(angularRequest: HttpRequest): string {
return null; // to implement
}
function unserializeRequest(jsonRequest: string): HttpRequest {
return null; // to implement
}
// this is an example of request
const originalRequest = new HttpRequest('POST', 'https://angular.io/docs?foo=bar', {foo: true}, {
params: new HttpParams().set('verbose', 'true'),
headers: new HttpHeaders({
BAR: 'baz',
}),
reportProgress: true,
responseType: 'json',
withCredentials: true
});
// serializeRequest trasform HttpRequest in json format
const jsonRequest: string = serializeRequest(originalRequest);
// unserializeRequest trasform json format to HttpRequest
const unserializedRequest : HttpRequest = unserializeRequest(jsonRequest);
// unserializedRequest as same object of originalRequest
expect(originalRequest).toEqual(unserializedRequest);
the same serialization/unserialization for the response
function serializeResponse(angularResponse: HttpResponse): string {
return null; // to implement
}
function unserializeResponse(jsonResponse: string): HttpResponse {
return null; // to implement
}
// this is an example of response
const originalResponse = new HttpResponse({
headers: new HttpHeaders({
BAR: 'baz',
}),
status: 200,
statusText: 'OK',
url: 'https://angular.io/docs',
body: {foo: true}}
);
// serializeResponse trasform HttpResponse in json format
const jsonResponse: string = serializeResponse(originalRequest);
// unserializeResponse trasform json format to HttpResponse
const unserializedResponse: HttpResponse = unserializeResponse(jsonResponse);
// unserializedResponse as same object of originalResponse
expect(originalResponse).toEqual(unserializedResponse);
Although I would recommend a Service Worker for Caching, the easiest way that I know is to clone the request/response and then get their information:
function serializeRequest(req: HttpRequest<any>): string {
const request = req.clone(); // Make a clone, useful for doing destructive things
return JSON.stringify({
headers: Object.fromEntries( // Just a helper to make this into an object, not really required but makes the output nicer
request.headers.keys.map( // Get all of the headers
(key: string) => [key, request.headers.getAll(key)] // Get all of the corresponding values for the headers
)
),
method: request.method, // The Request Method, e.g. GET, POST, DELETE
url: request.url, // The URL
params: Object.fromEntries( // Just a helper to make this into an object, not really required but makes the output nicer
request.headers.keys.map( // Get all of the headers
(key: string) => [key, request.headers.getAll(key)] // Get all of the corresponding values for the headers
)
), // The request parameters
withCredentials: request.withCredentials, // Whether credentials are being sent
respnseType: request.responseType, // The response type
body: request.serializeBody() // Serialize the body, all well and good since we are working on a clone
})
}
In a similar fashion we can serialize the response as well (assuming T
is JSON compatible, a fair assumption in an HTTP Request):
function serializeResponse(res: HttpResponse<any>): string {
const response = res.clone();
return JSON.stringify({
headers: Object.fromEntries( // Just a helper to make this into an object, not really required but makes the output nicer
response.headers.keys.map( // Get all of the headers
(key: string) => [key, response.headers.getAll(key)] // Get all of the corresponding values for the headers
)
),
status: response.status,
statusText: response.statusText,
url: response.url,
body: response // Serialize the body, all well and good since we are working on a clone
})
}
And then, since we saved all required information, deserialization is a walk in the park:
function deserializeRequest<T = any>(req: string): HttpRequest<T> {
const request = JSON.parse(req);
const headers = new HttpHeaders(request.headers);
const params = new HttpParams(); // Probably some way to make this a one-liner, but alas, there are no good docs
for(let parameter in request.params){
request.params[parameter].forEach((paramValue: string) => params.append(parameter, paramValue));
}
return new HttpRequest(request.method, request.url, request.body, {
headers,
params,
respnseType: request.respnseType,
withCredentials: request.withCredentials
});
}
function deserializeResponse<T = any>(res: string): HttpResponse<T> {
const response = JSON.parse(res);
const headers = new HttpHeaders(response.headers);
return new HttpRequest({
headers,
body: response.body,
status: response.status,
statusText: response.statusText,
url: response.url,
});
}
Playground of the whole thing (although, regrettably the angular types do not load correctly)
Note that I have not tested this in any environment, so this is provided AS-IS, and I am not sure how
expect
would handle twoHttpHeaders
/HttpParams
, especially since they may not have the exact same order.
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