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Server

The server object is the main application container. The server manages all incoming requests along with all the facilities provided by the framework. Each server supports a single connection (e.g. listen to port 80).

Creates a new server object where:

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

const server = Hapi.server({ load: { sampleInterval: 1000 } });

The server options control the behavior of the server object. Note that the options object is deeply cloned (with the exception of listener which is shallowly copied) and should not contain any values that are unsafe to perform deep copy on.

All options are optionals.

Default value: '::' if IPv6 is available, otherwise '0.0.0.0' (i.e. all available network interfaces).

Sets the hostname or IP address the server will listen on. If not configured, defaults to host if present, otherwise to all available network interfaces. Set to '127.0.0.1', '::1', or 'localhost' to restrict the server to only those coming from the same host.

Default value: {}.

Provides application-specific configuration which can later be accessed via server.settings.app. The framework does not interact with this object. It is simply a reference made available anywhere a server reference is provided.

Note the difference between server.settings.app which is used to store static configuration values and server.app which is meant for storing run-time state.

Default value: true.

Used to disable the automatic initialization of the listener. When false, indicates that the listener will be started manually outside the framework.

Cannot be set to false along with a port value.

Default value: { provider: { constructor: require('@hapi/catbox-memory'), options: { partition: 'hapi-cache' } } }.

Sets up server-side caching providers. Every server includes a default cache for storing application state. By default, a simple memory-based cache is created which has limited capacity and capabilities.

hapi uses catbox for its cache implementation which includes support for common storage solutions (e.g. Redis, MongoDB, Memcached, Riak, among others). Caching is only utilized if methods and plugins explicitly store their state in the cache.

The server cache configuration only defines the storage container itself. The configuration can be assigned one or more (array):

  • a class or prototype function (usually obtained by calling require() on a catbox strategy such as require('@hapi/catbox-redis')). A new catbox client will be created internally using this constructor.

  • a configuration object with the following:

    • engine - a catbox engine object instance.

    • name - an identifier used later when provisioning or configuring caching for server methods or plugins. Each cache name must be unique. A single item may omit the name option which defines the default cache. If every cache includes a name, a default memory cache is provisioned as well.

    • provider - a class, a constructor function, or an object with the following:

      • constructor - a class or a prototype function.

      • options - (optional) a settings object passed as-is to the constructor with the following:

        • partition - (optional) string used to isolate cached data. Defaults to 'hapi-cache'.
        • other constructor-specific options passed to the constructor on instantiation.
    • shared - if true, allows multiple cache users to share the same segment (e.g. multiple methods using the same cache storage container). Default to false.

    • One (and only one) of engine or provider is required per configuration object.

Default value: { minBytes: 1024 }.

Defines server handling of content encoding requests. If false, response content encoding is disabled and no compression is performed by the server.

Default value: '1024'.

Sets the minimum response payload size in bytes that is required for content encoding compression. If the payload size is under the limit, no compression is performed.

Default value: { request: ['implementation'] }.

Determines which logged events are sent to the console. This should only be used for development and does not affect which events are actually logged internally and recorded. Set to false to disable all console logging, or to an object with:

  • log - a string array of server log tags to be displayed via console.error() when the events are logged via server.log() as well as internally generated server logs. Defaults to no output.

  • request - a string array of request log tags to be displayed via console.error() when the events are logged via request.log() as well as internally generated request logs. For example, to display all errors, set the option to ['error']. To turn off all console debug messages set it to false. To display all request logs, set it to '*'. Defaults to uncaught errors thrown in external code (these errors are handled automatically and result in an Internal Server Error response) or runtime errors due to developer error.

For example, to display all errors, set the log or request to ['error']. To turn off all output set the log or request to false. To display all server logs, set the log or request to '*'. To disable all debug information, set debug to false.

Default value: the operating system hostname and if not available, to 'localhost'.

The public hostname or IP address. Used to set server.info.host and server.info.uri and as address if none is provided.

Default value: false.

If true, the request.info.remoteAddress and request.info.remotePort are populated when the request is received which can consume more resource (but is ok if the information is needed, especially for aborted requests). When false, the fields are only populated upon demand (but will be undefined if accessed after the request is aborted).

Default value: none.

An optional node HTTP (or HTTPS) http.Server object (or an object with a compatible interface).

If the listener needs to be manually started, set autoListen to false.

If the listener uses TLS, set tls to true.

Default value: { sampleInterval: 0, maxHeapUsedBytes: 0, maxRssBytes: 0, maxEventLoopDelay: 0, maxEventLoopUtilization: 0 }.

Server excessive load handling limits where:

  • sampleInterval - the frequency of sampling in milliseconds. When set to 0, the other load options are ignored. Defaults to 0 (no sampling).

  • maxHeapUsedBytes - maximum V8 heap size over which incoming requests are rejected with an HTTP Server Timeout (503) response. Defaults to 0 (no limit).

  • maxRssBytes - maximum process RSS size over which incoming requests are rejected with an HTTP Server Timeout (503) response. Defaults to 0 (no limit).

  • maxEventLoopDelay - maximum event loop delay duration in milliseconds over which incoming requests are rejected with an HTTP Server Timeout (503) response. Defaults to 0 (no limit).

  • maxEventLoopUtilization - maximum event loop utilization value over which incoming requests are rejected with an HTTP Server Timeout (503) response. Defaults to 0 (no limit).

Default value: none.

Options passed to the mimos module when generating the mime database used by the server (and accessed via server.mime):

  • override - an object hash that is merged into the built in mime information specified here. Each key value pair represents a single mime object. Each override value must contain:

    • key - the lower-cased mime-type string (e.g. 'application/javascript').

    • value - an object following the specifications outlined here. Additional values include:

      • type - specify the type value of result objects, defaults to key.

      • predicate - method with signature function(mime) when this mime type is found in the database, this function will execute to allows customizations.

const options = {
    mime: {
        override: {
            'node/module': {
                source: 'iana',
                compressible: true,
                extensions: ['node', 'module', 'npm'],
                type: 'node/module'
            },
            'application/javascript': {
                source: 'iana',
                charset: 'UTF-8',
                compressible: true,
                extensions: ['js', 'javascript'],
                type: 'text/javascript'
            },
            'text/html': {
                predicate: function(mime) {
                    if (someCondition) {
                        mime.foo = 'test';
                    }
                    else {
                        mime.foo = 'bar';
                    }
                    return mime;
                }
            }
        }
    }
};

Default value: { cleanStop: true }.

Defines server handling of server operations:

  • cleanStop - if true, the server keeps track of open connections and properly closes them when the server is stopped. Under normal load, this should not interfere with server performance. However, under severe load connection monitoring can consume additional resources and aggravate the situation. If the server is never stopped, or if it is forced to stop without waiting for open connection to close, setting this to false can save resources that are not being utilized anyway. Defaults to true.

Default value: {}.

Plugin-specific configuration which can later be accessed via server.settings.plugins. plugins is an object where each key is a plugin name and the value is the configuration. Note the difference between server.settings.plugins which is used to store static configuration values and server.plugins which is meant for storing run-time state.

Default value: 0 (an ephemeral port).

The TCP port the server will listen to. Defaults the next available port when the server is started (and assigned to server.info.port).

If port is a string containing a '/' character, it is used as a UNIX domain socket path. If it starts with '\.\pipe', it is used as a Windows named pipe.

Default value: {}.

Defines server handling of the request path query component.

Default value: none.

Sets a query parameters parser method using the signature function(query) where:

  • query - an object containing the incoming request.query parameters.
  • the method must return an object where each key is a parameter and matching value is the parameter value. If the method throws, the error is used as the response or returned when request.setUrl() is called.
const Qs = require('qs');

const options = {
    query: {
        parser: (query) => Qs.parse(query)
    }
};

Default value: { isCaseSensitive: true, stripTrailingSlash: false }.

Controls how incoming request URIs are matched against the routing table:

  • isCaseSensitive - determines whether the paths '/example' and '/EXAMPLE' are considered different resources. Defaults to true.

  • stripTrailingSlash - removes trailing slashes on incoming paths. Defaults to false.

Default value: none.

A route options object used as the default configuration for every route.

Default value:

{
    strictHeader: true,
    ignoreErrors: false,
    isSecure: true,
    isHttpOnly: true,
    isSameSite: 'Strict',
    encoding: 'none'
}

Sets the default configuration for every state (cookie) set explicitly via server.state() or implicitly (without definition) using the state configuration object.

Default value: none.

Used to create an HTTPS connection. The tls object is passed unchanged to the node HTTPS server as described in the node HTTPS documentation.

Set to true when passing a listener object that has been configured to use TLS directly.

Default value: constructed from runtime server information.

The full public URI without the path (e.g. 'http://example.com:8080'). If present, used as the server server.info.uri, otherwise constructed from the server settings.

Server properties

Access: read / write.

Provides a safe place to store server-specific run-time application data without potential conflicts with the framework internals. The data can be accessed whenever the server is accessible. Initialized with an empty object.

const server = Hapi.server();

server.app.key = 'value';

const handler = function (request, h) {

    return request.server.app.key;        // 'value'
};

Access: authentication strategy specific.

An object where each key is an authentication strategy name and the value is the exposed strategy API. Available only when the authentication scheme exposes an API by returning an api key in the object returned from its implementation function.

const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const scheme = function (server, options) {

    return {
        api: {
            settings: {
                x: 5
            }
        },
        authenticate: function (request, h) {

            const authorization = request.headers.authorization;
            if (!authorization) {
                throw Boom.unauthorized(null, 'Custom');
            }

            return h.authenticated({ credentials: { user: 'john' } });
        }
    };
};

server.auth.scheme('custom', scheme);
server.auth.strategy('default', 'custom');

console.log(server.auth.api.default.settings.x);    // 5

Access: read only.

Contains the default authentication configuration if a default strategy was set via server.auth.default().

Access: read only.

Provides access to the decorations already applied to various framework interfaces. The object must not be modified directly, but only through server.decorate. Contains:

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const success = function () {

    return this.response({ status: 'ok' });
};

server.decorate('toolkit', 'success', success);
console.log(server.decorations.toolkit);            // ['success']

Access: podium public interface.

The server events emitter. Utilizes the podium with support for event criteria validation, channels, and filters.

Use the following methods to interact with server.events:

Other methods include: server.events.removeListener(name, listener), server.events.removeAllListeners(name), and server.events.hasListeners(name).

The 'log' event type emits internal server events generated by the framework as well as application events logged with server.log().

The 'log' event handler uses the function signature function(event, tags) where:

  • event - an object with the following properties:

    • timestamp - the event timestamp.
    • tags - an array of tags identifying the event (e.g. ['error', 'http']).
    • channel - set to 'internal' for internally generated events, otherwise 'app' for events generated by server.log().
    • data - event-specific information. Available when event data was provided and is not an error. Errors are passed via error.
    • error - the error object related to the event if applicable. Cannot appear together with data.
  • tags - an object where each event.tag is a key and the value is true. Useful for quick identification of events.

server.events.on('log', (event, tags) => {

    if (tags.error) {
        console.log(`Server error: ${event.error ? event.error.message : 'unknown'}`);
    }
});

The internally generated events are (identified by their tags):

  • load - logs the current server load measurements when the server rejects a request due to high load. The event data contains the process load metrics.

  • connection client error - a clientError event was received from the HTTP or HTTPS listener. The event data is the error object received.

The 'cachePolicy' event type is emitted when a server cache policy is created via server.cache() or a server.method() with caching enabled is registered. The 'cachePolicy' event handler uses the function signature function(cachePolicy, cache, segment) where:

  • cachePolicy - the catbox cache policy.
  • cache - the cache provision name used when the policy was created or undefined if the default cache was used.
  • segment - the segment name used when the policy was created.
server.events.on('cachePolicy', (cachePolicy, cache, segment) => {

    console.log(`New cache policy created using cache: ${cache === undefined ? 'default' : cache} and segment: ${segment}`);
});

The 'request' event type emits internal request events generated by the framework as well as application events logged with request.log().

The 'request' event handler uses the function signature function(request, event, tags) where:

  • request - the request object.

  • event - an object with the following properties:

    • timestamp - the event timestamp.
    • tags - an array of tags identifying the event (e.g. ['error', 'http']).
    • channel - one of
      • 'app' - events generated by request.log().
      • 'error' - emitted once per request if the response had a 500 status code.
      • 'internal' - internally generated events.
    • request - the request identifier.
    • data - event-specific information. Available when event data was provided and is not an error. Errors are passed via error.
    • error - the error object related to the event if applicable. Cannot appear together with data.
  • tags - an object where each event.tag is a key and the value is true. Useful for quick identification of events.

server.events.on('request', (request, event, tags) => {

    if (tags.error) {
        console.log(`Request ${event.request} error: ${event.error ? event.error.message : 'unknown'}`);
    }
});

To listen to only one of the channels, use the event criteria object:

server.events.on({ name: 'request', channels: 'error' }, (request, event, tags) => {

    console.log(`Request ${event.request} failed`);
});

The internally generated events are (identified by their tags):

  • accept-encoding error - a request received contains an invalid Accept-Encoding header.
  • auth unauthenticated - no authentication scheme included with the request.
  • auth unauthenticated response {strategy} - the authentication strategy listed returned a non-error response (e.g. a redirect to a login page).
  • auth unauthenticated error {strategy} - the request failed to pass the listed authentication strategy (invalid credentials).
  • auth unauthenticated missing {strategy} - the request failed to pass the listed authentication strategy (no credentials found).
  • auth unauthenticated try {strategy} - the request failed to pass the listed authentication strategy in 'try' mode and will continue.
  • auth scope error - the request authenticated but failed to meet the scope requirements.
  • auth entity user error - the request authenticated but included an application entity when a user entity was required.
  • auth entity app error - the request authenticated but included a user entity when an application entity was required.
  • ext error - an onPostResponse extension handler errored.
  • handler error - the route handler returned an error. Includes the execution duration and the error message.
  • pre error - a pre method was executed and returned an error. Includes the execution duration, assignment key, and error.
  • internal error - an HTTP 500 error response was assigned to the request.
  • internal implementation error - an incorrectly implemented lifecycle method.
  • request abort error - the request aborted.
  • request closed error - the request closed prematurely.
  • request error - the request stream emitted an error. Includes the error.
  • request server timeout error - the request took too long to process by the server. Includes the timeout configuration value and the duration.
  • state error - the request included an invalid cookie or cookies. Includes the cookies and error details.
  • state response error - the response included an invalid cookie which prevented generating a valid header. Includes the error.
  • payload error - failed processing the request payload. Includes the error.
  • response error - failed writing the response to the client. Includes the error.
  • response error close - failed writing the response to the client due to prematurely closed connection.
  • response error aborted - failed writing the response to the client due to prematurely aborted connection.
  • response error cleanup - failed freeing response resources.
  • validation error {input} - input (i.e. payload, query, params, headers) validation failed. Includes the error. Only emitted when failAction is set to 'log'.
  • validation response error - response validation failed. Includes the error message. Only emitted when failAction is set to 'log'.

The 'response' event type is emitted after the response is sent back to the client (or when the client connection closed and no response sent, in which case request.response is null). A single event is emitted per request. The 'response' event handler uses the function signature function(request) where:

server.events.on('response', (request) => {

    console.log(`Response sent for request: ${request.info.id}`);
});

The 'route' event type is emitted when a route is added via server.route(). The 'route' event handler uses the function signature function(route) where:

server.events.on('route', (route) => {

    console.log(`New route added: ${route.path}`);
});

The 'start' event type is emitted when the server is started using server.start(). The 'start' event handler uses the function signature function().

server.events.on('start', () => {

    console.log('Server started');
});

The 'closing' event type is emitted when the server is stopped using server.stop(). It is triggered when incoming requests are no longer accepted but before all underlying active connections have been closed, and thus before the 'stop' event is triggered. The 'closing' event handler uses the function signature function().

server.events.on('closing', () => {

    console.log('Server is closing');
});

The 'stop' event type is emitted when the server is stopped using server.stop(). The 'stop' event handler uses the function signature function().

server.events.on('stop', () => {

    console.log('Server stopped');
});

Access: read only.

An object containing information about the server where:

  • id - a unique server identifier (using the format '{hostname}:{pid}:{now base36}').

  • created - server creation timestamp.

  • started - server start timestamp (0 when stopped).

  • port - the connection port based on the following rules:

    • before the server has been started: the configured port value.
    • after the server has been started: the actual port assigned when no port is configured or was set to 0.
  • host - The host configuration value.

  • address - the active IP address the connection was bound to after starting. Set to undefined until the server has been started or when using a non TCP port (e.g. UNIX domain socket).

  • protocol - the protocol used:

    • 'http' - HTTP.
    • 'https' - HTTPS.
    • 'socket' - UNIX domain socket or Windows named pipe.
  • uri - a string representing the connection (e.g. 'http://example.com:8080' or 'socket:/unix/domain/socket/path'). Contains the uri value if set, otherwise constructed from the available settings. If no port is configured or is set to 0, the uri will not include a port component until the server is started.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

console.log(server.info.port);            // 80

Access: read only and listener public interface.

The node HTTP server object.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const SocketIO = require('socket.io');

const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const io = SocketIO.listen(server.listener);
io.sockets.on('connection', (socket) => {

    socket.emit({ msg: 'welcome' });
});

Access: read only.

An object containing the process load metrics (when load.sampleInterval is enabled):

  • eventLoopDelay - event loop delay milliseconds.
  • eventLoopUtilization - current event loop utilization value.
  • heapUsed - V8 heap usage.
  • rss - RSS memory usage.
const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ load: { sampleInterval: 1000 } });

console.log(server.load.rss);

Access: read only.

Server methods are functions registered with the server and used throughout the application as a common utility. Their advantage is in the ability to configure them to use the built-in cache and share across multiple request handlers without having to create a common module.

sever.methods is an object which provides access to the methods registered via server.method() where each server method name is an object property.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server();

server.method('add', (a, b) => (a + b));
const result = server.methods.add(1, 2);    // 3

Access: read only and mimos public interface.

Provides access to the server MIME database used for setting content-type information. The object must not be modified directly but only through the mime server setting.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

const options = {
    mime: {
        override: {
            'node/module': {
                source: 'steve',
                compressible: false,
                extensions: ['node', 'module', 'npm'],
                type: 'node/module'
            }
        }
    }
};

const server = Hapi.server(options);
console.log(server.mime.path('code.js').type)        // 'application/javascript'
console.log(server.mime.path('file.npm').type)        // 'node/module'

Access: read / write.

An object containing the values exposed by each registered plugin where each key is a plugin name and the values are the exposed properties by each plugin using server.expose(). Plugins may set the value of the server.plugins[name] object directly or via the server.expose() method.

exports.plugin = {
    name: 'example',
    register: function (server, options) {

        server.expose('key', 'value');
        server.plugins.example.other = 'other';

        console.log(server.plugins.example.key);      // 'value'
        console.log(server.plugins.example.other);    // 'other'
    }
};

Access: read only.

The realm object contains sandboxed server settings specific to each plugin or authentication strategy. When registering a plugin or an authentication scheme, a server object reference is provided with a new server.realm container specific to that registration. It allows each plugin to maintain its own settings without leaking and affecting other plugins.

For example, a plugin can set a default file path for local resources without breaking other plugins' configured paths. When calling server.bind(), the active realm's settings.bind property is set which is then used by routes and extensions added at the same level (server root or plugin).

The server.realm object contains:

  • modifiers - when the server object is provided as an argument to the plugin register() method, modifiers provides the registration preferences passed the server.register() method and includes:

    • route - routes preferences:

      • prefix - the route path prefix used by any calls to server.route() from the server. Note that if a prefix is used and the route path is set to '/', the resulting path will not include the trailing slash.
      • vhost - the route virtual host settings used by any calls to server.route() from the server.
  • parent - the realm of the parent server object, or null for the root server.

  • plugin - the active plugin name (empty string if at the server root).

  • pluginOptions - the plugin options passed at registration.

  • plugins - plugin-specific state to be shared only among activities sharing the same active state. plugins is an object where each key is a plugin name and the value is the plugin state.

  • settings - settings overrides:

    • files.relativeTo
    • bind

The server.realm object should be considered read-only and must not be changed directly except for the plugins property which can be directly manipulated by each plugin, setting its properties inside plugins[name].

exports.register = function (server, options) {

    console.log(server.realm.modifiers.route.prefix);
};

Access: read only.

An object of the currently registered plugins where each key is a registered plugin name and the value is an object containing:

  • version - the plugin version.
  • name - the plugin name.
  • options - (optional) options passed to the plugin during registration.

Access: read only.

The server configuration object after defaults applied.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({
    app: {
        key: 'value'
    }
});

console.log(server.settings.app);   // { key: 'value' }

Access: read only and statehood public interface.

The server cookies manager.

Access: read only.

The server cookies manager settings. The settings are based on the values configured in server.options.state.

Access: read only.

An object containing the configuration of each cookie added via server.state() where each key is the cookie name and value is the configuration object.

Access: read only.

An array containing the names of all configured cookies.

Access: read only.

A string indicating the listener type where:

  • 'socket' - UNIX domain socket or Windows named pipe.
  • 'tcp' - an HTTP listener.

Access: read only.

The hapi module version number.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server();

console.log(server.version);        // '17.0.0'

Sets a default strategy which is applied to every route where:

  • options - one of:

    • a string with the default strategy name
    • an authentication configuration object using the same format as the route auth handler options.

Return value: none.

The default does not apply when a route config specifies auth as false, or has an authentication strategy configured (contains the strategy or strategies authentication settings). Otherwise, the route authentication config is applied to the defaults.

Note that if the route has authentication configured, the default only applies at the time of adding the route, not at runtime. This means that calling server.auth.default() after adding a route with some authentication config will have no impact on the routes added prior. However, the default will apply to routes added before server.auth.default() is called if those routes lack any authentication config.

The default auth strategy configuration can be accessed via server.auth.settings.default. To obtain the active authentication configuration of a route, use server.auth.lookup(request.route).

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

server.auth.scheme('custom', scheme);
server.auth.strategy('default', 'custom');
server.auth.default('default');

server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/',
    handler: function (request, h) {

        return request.auth.credentials.user;
    }
});

Registers an authentication scheme where:

  • name - the scheme name.
  • scheme - the method implementing the scheme with signature function(server, options) where:
    • server - a reference to the server object the scheme is added to. Each auth strategy is given its own server.realm whose parent is the realm of the server in the call to server.auth.strategy().
    • options - (optional) the scheme options argument passed to server.auth.strategy() when instantiation a strategy.

Return value: none.

The scheme function must return an authentication scheme object when invoked.

Authentication scheme

An authentication scheme is an object with the following properties:

  • api - (optional) object which is exposed via the server.auth.api object.

  • async authenticate(request, h) - (required) a lifecycle method function called for each incoming request configured with the authentication scheme. The method is provided with two special toolkit methods for returning an authenticated or an unauthenticate result:

  • async payload(request, h) - (optional) a lifecycle method to authenticate the request payload.

  • async response(request, h) - (optional) a lifecycle method to decorate the response with authentication headers before the response headers or payload is written.

  • async verify(auth) - (optional) a method used to verify the authentication credentials provided are still valid (e.g. not expired or revoked after the initial authentication) where:

    • auth - the request.auth object containing the credentials and artifacts objects returned by the scheme's authenticate() method.
    • the method throws an Error when the credentials passed are no longer valid (e.g. expired or revoked). Note that the method does not have access to the original request, only to the credentials and artifacts produced by the authenticate() method.
  • options - (optional) an object with the following keys:

    • payload - if true, requires payload validation as part of the scheme and forbids routes from disabling payload auth validation. Defaults to false.

When the scheme authenticate() method implementation throws an error or calls h.unauthenticated(), the specifics of the error affect whether additional authentication strategies will be attempted (if configured for the route). If the error includes a message, no additional strategies will be attempted. If the err does not include a message but does include the scheme name (e.g. Boom.unauthorized(null, 'Custom')), additional strategies will be attempted in the order of preference (defined in the route configuration). If authentication fails, the scheme names will be present in the 'WWW-Authenticate' header.

When the scheme payload() method throws an error with a message, it means payload validation failed due to bad payload. If the error has no message but includes a scheme name (e.g. Boom.unauthorized(null, 'Custom')), authentication may still be successful if the route auth.payload configuration is set to 'optional'.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const scheme = function (server, options) {

    return {
        authenticate: function (request, h) {

            const req = request.raw.req;
            const authorization = req.headers.authorization;
            if (!authorization) {
                throw Boom.unauthorized(null, 'Custom');
            }

            return h.authenticated({ credentials: { user: 'john' } });
        }
    };
};

server.auth.scheme('custom', scheme);

Registers an authentication strategy where:

  • name - the strategy name.
  • scheme - the scheme name (must be previously registered using server.auth.scheme()).
  • options - scheme options based on the scheme requirements.

Return value: none.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

server.auth.scheme('custom', scheme);
server.auth.strategy('default', 'custom');

server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/',
    options: {
        auth: 'default',
        handler: function (request, h) {

            return request.auth.credentials.user;
        }
    }
});

Tests a request against an authentication strategy where:

Return value: an object containing the authentication credentials and artifacts if authentication was successful, otherwise throws an error.

Note that the test() method does not take into account the route authentication configuration. It also does not perform payload authentication. It is limited to the basic strategy authentication execution. It does not include verifying scope, entity, or other route properties.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

server.auth.scheme('custom', scheme);
server.auth.strategy('default', 'custom');

server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/',
    handler: async function (request, h) {

        try {
            const { credentials, artifacts } = await request.server.auth.test('default', request);
            return { status: true, user: credentials.name };
        }
        catch (err) {
            return { status: false };
        }
    }
});

Verify a request's authentication credentials against an authentication strategy where:

Return value: nothing if verification was successful, otherwise throws an error.

Note that the verify() method does not take into account the route authentication configuration or any other information from the request other than the request.auth object. It also does not perform payload authentication. It is limited to verifying that the previously valid credentials are still valid (e.g. have not been revoked or expired). It does not include verifying scope, entity, or other route properties.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

server.auth.scheme('custom', scheme);
server.auth.strategy('default', 'custom');

server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/',
    handler: async function (request, h) {

        try {
            const credentials = await request.server.auth.verify(request);
            return { status: true, user: credentials.name };
        }
        catch (err) {
            return { status: false };
        }
    }
});

Sets a global context used as the default bind object when adding a route or an extension where:

Return value: none.

When setting a context inside a plugin, the context is applied only to methods set up by the plugin. Note that the context applies only to routes and extensions added after it has been set. Ignored if the method being bound is an arrow function.

const handler = function (request, h) {

    return this.message;    // Or h.context.message
};

exports.plugin = {
    name: 'example',
    register: function (server, options) {

        const bind = {
            message: 'hello'
        };

        server.bind(bind);
        server.route({ method: 'GET', path: '/', handler });
    }
};

Provisions a cache segment within the server cache facility where:

  • options - catbox policy configuration where:

    • expiresIn - relative expiration expressed in the number of milliseconds since the item was saved in the cache. Cannot be used together with expiresAt.

    • expiresAt - time of day expressed in 24h notation using the 'HH:MM' format, at which point all cache records expire. Uses local time. Cannot be used together with expiresIn.

    • generateFunc - a function used to generate a new cache item if one is not found in the cache when calling get(). The method's signature is async function(id, flags) where:

      - `id` - the `id` string or object provided to the `get()` method.
      - `flags` - an object used to pass back additional flags to the cache where:
          - `ttl` - the cache ttl value in milliseconds. Set to `0` to skip storing in the
            cache. Defaults to the cache global policy.
      
    • staleIn - number of milliseconds to mark an item stored in cache as stale and attempt to regenerate it when generateFunc is provided. Must be less than expiresIn.

    • staleTimeout - number of milliseconds to wait before checking if an item is stale.

    • generateTimeout - number of milliseconds to wait before returning a timeout error when the generateFunc function takes too long to return a value. When the value is eventually returned, it is stored in the cache for future requests. Required if generateFunc is present. Set to false to disable timeouts which may cause all get() requests to get stuck forever.

    • generateOnReadError - if false, an upstream cache read error will stop the cache.get() method from calling the generate function and will instead pass back the cache error. Defaults to true.

    • generateIgnoreWriteError - if false, an upstream cache write error when calling cache.get() will be passed back with the generated value when calling. Defaults to true.

    • dropOnError - if true, an error or timeout in the generateFunc causes the stale value to be evicted from the cache. Defaults to true.

    • pendingGenerateTimeout - number of milliseconds while generateFunc call is in progress for a given id, before a subsequent generateFunc call is allowed. Defaults to 0 (no blocking of concurrent generateFunc calls beyond staleTimeout).

    • cache - the cache name configured in server.cache. Defaults to the default cache.

    • segment - string segment name, used to isolate cached items within the cache partition. When called within a plugin, defaults to '!name' where 'name' is the plugin name. When called within a server method, defaults to '#name' where 'name' is the server method name. Required when called outside of a plugin.

    • shared - if true, allows multiple cache provisions to share the same segment. Default to false.

Return value: a catbox policy object.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    const cache = server.cache({ segment: 'countries', expiresIn: 60 * 60 * 1000 });
    await cache.set('norway', { capital: 'oslo' });
    const value = await cache.get('norway');
}

Provisions a server cache as described in server.cache where:

  • options - same as the server cache configuration options.

Return value: none.

Note that if the server has been initialized or started, the cache will be automatically started to match the state of any other provisioned server cache.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    await server.initialize();
    await server.cache.provision({ provider: require('@hapi/catbox-memory'), name: 'countries' });

    const cache = server.cache({ cache: 'countries', expiresIn: 60 * 60 * 1000 });
    await cache.set('norway', { capital: 'oslo' });
    const value = await cache.get('norway');
}

Links another server to the initialize/start/stop state of the current server by calling the controlled server initialize()/start()/stop() methods whenever the current server methods are called, where:

  • server - the hapi server object to be controlled.

Registers a custom content decoding compressor to extend the built-in support for 'gzip' and 'deflate' where:

  • encoding - the decoder name string.

  • decoder - a function using the signature function(options) where options are the encoding specific options configured in the route payload.compression configuration option, and the return value is an object compatible with the output of node's zlib.createGunzip().

Return value: none.

const Zlib = require('zlib');
const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80, routes: { payload: { compression: { special: { chunkSize: 16 * 1024 } } } } });

server.decoder('special', (options) => Zlib.createGunzip(options));

Extends various framework interfaces with custom methods where:

  • type - the interface being decorated. Supported types:

  • property - the object decoration key name or symbol.

  • method - the extension function or other value.

  • options - (optional) supports the following optional settings:

    • apply - when the type is 'request', if true, the method function is invoked using the signature function(request) where request is the current request object and the returned value is assigned as the decoration.
    • extend - if true, overrides an existing decoration. The method must be a function with the signature function(existing) where:
      • existing - is the previously set decoration method value.
      • must return the new decoration function or value.
      • cannot be used to extend handler decorations.

Return value: none.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const success = function () {

    return this.response({ status: 'ok' });
};

server.decorate('toolkit', 'success', success);

server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/',
    handler: function (request, h) {

        return h.success();
    }
});

When registering a handler decoration, the method must be a function using the signature function(route, options) where:

  • route - the route information.
  • options - the configuration object provided in the handler config.
const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ host: 'localhost', port: 8000 });

    // Defines new handler for routes on this server

    const handler = function (route, options) {

        return function (request, h) {

            return 'new handler: ' + options.msg;
        }
    };

    server.decorate('handler', 'test', handler);

    server.route({
        method: 'GET',
        path: '/',
        handler: { test: { msg: 'test' } }
    });

    await server.start();
}

The method function can have a defaults object or function property. If the property is set to an object, that object is used as the default route config for routes using this handler. If the property is set to a function, the function uses the signature function(method) and returns the route default configuration.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ host: 'localhost', port: 8000 });

const handler = function (route, options) {

    return function (request, h) {

        return 'new handler: ' + options.msg;
    }
};

// Change the default payload processing for this handler

handler.defaults = {
    payload: {
        output: 'stream',
        parse: false
    }
};

server.decorate('handler', 'test', handler);

Used within a plugin to declare a required dependency on other plugins required for the current plugin to operate (plugins listed must be registered before the server is initialized or started) where:

  • dependencies - one of:

    • a single plugin name string.
    • an array of plugin name strings.
    • an object where each key is a plugin name and each matching value is a version range string which must match the registered plugin version.
  • after - (optional) a function that is called after all the specified dependencies have been registered and before the server starts. The function is only called if the server is initialized or started. The function signature is async function(server) where:

    • server - the server the dependency() method was called on.

Return value: none.

The after method is identical to setting a server extension point on 'onPreStart'.

If a circular dependency is detected, an exception is thrown (e.g. two plugins each has an after function to be called after the other).

const after = function (server) {

    // Additional plugin registration logic
};

exports.plugin = {
    name: 'example',
    register: function (server, options) {

        server.dependency('yar', after);
    }
};

Dependencies can also be set via the plugin dependencies property (does not support setting after):

exports.plugin = {
    name: 'test',
    version: '1.0.0',
    dependencies: {
        yar: '1.x.x'
    },
    register: function (server, options) { }
};

The dependencies configuration accepts one of:

  • a single plugin name string.
  • an array of plugin name strings.
  • an object where each key is a plugin name and each matching value is a version range string which must match the registered plugin version.

Registers a custom content encoding compressor to extend the built-in support for 'gzip' and 'deflate' where:

  • encoding - the encoder name string.

  • encoder - a function using the signature function(options) where options are the encoding specific options configured in the route compression option, and the return value is an object compatible with the output of node's zlib.createGzip().

Return value: none.

const Zlib = require('zlib');
const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80, routes: { compression: { special: { chunkSize: 16 * 1024 } } } });

server.encoder('special', (options) => Zlib.createGzip(options));

Register custom application events where:

  • events - must be one of:

    • an event name string.

    • an event options object with the following optional keys (unless noted otherwise):

      • name - the event name string (required).

      • channels - a string or array of strings specifying the event channels available. Defaults to no channel restrictions (event updates can specify a channel or not).

      • clone - if true, the data object passed to server.events.emit() is cloned before it is passed to the listeners (unless an override specified by each listener). Defaults to false (data is passed as-is).

      • spread - if true, the data object passed to server.event.emit() must be an array and the listener method is called with each array element passed as a separate argument (unless an override specified by each listener). This should only be used when the emitted data structure is known and predictable. Defaults to false (data is emitted as a single argument regardless of its type).

      • tags - if true and the criteria object passed to server.event.emit() includes tags, the tags are mapped to an object (where each tag string is the key and the value is true) which is appended to the arguments list at the end. A configuration override can be set by each listener. Defaults to false.

      • shared - if true, the same event name can be registered multiple times where the second registration is ignored. Note that if the registration config is changed between registrations, only the first configuration is used. Defaults to false (a duplicate registration will throw an error).

    • an array containing any of the above.

Return value: none.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    server.event('test');
    server.events.on('test', (update) => console.log(update));
    await server.events.gauge('test', 'hello');
}

Emits a custom application event to all the subscribed listeners where:

  • criteria - the event update criteria which must be one of:

    • the event name string.
    • an object with the following optional keys (unless noted otherwise):
      • name - the event name string (required).
      • channel - the channel name string.
      • tags - a tag string or array of tag strings.
  • data - the value emitted to the subscribers. If data is a function, the function signature is function() and it called once to generate (return value) the actual data emitted to the listeners. If no listeners match the event, the data function is not invoked.

Return value: none.

Note that events must be registered before they can be emitted or subscribed to by calling server.event(events). This is done to detect event name misspelling and invalid event activities.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    server.event('test');
    server.events.on('test', (update) => console.log(update));
    server.events.emit('test', 'hello');
}

Subscribe to an event where:

  • criteria - the subscription criteria which must be one of:

    • event name string which can be any of the built-in server events or a custom application event registered with server.event().

    • a criteria object with the following optional keys (unless noted otherwise):

      • name - (required) the event name string.

      • channels - a string or array of strings specifying the event channels to subscribe to. If the event registration specified a list of allowed channels, the channels array must match the allowed channels. If channels are specified, event updates without any channel designation will not be included in the subscription. Defaults to no channels filter.

      • clone - if true, the data object passed to server.event.emit() is cloned before it is passed to the listener method. Defaults to the event registration option (which defaults to false).

      • count - a positive integer indicating the number of times the listener can be called after which the subscription is automatically removed. A count of 1 is the same as calling server.events.once(). Defaults to no limit.

      • filter - the event tags (if present) to subscribe to which can be one of:

        • a tag string.

        • an array of tag strings.

        • an object with the following:

          • tags - a tag string or array of tag strings.
          • all - if true, all tags must be present for the event update to match the subscription. Defaults to false (at least one matching tag).
      • spread - if true, and the data object passed to server.event.emit() is an array, the listener method is called with each array element passed as a separate argument. This should only be used when the emitted data structure is known and predictable. Defaults to the event registration option (which defaults to false).

      • tags - if true and the criteria object passed to server.event.emit() includes tags, the tags are mapped to an object (where each tag string is the key and the value is true) which is appended to the arguments list at the end. Defaults to the event registration option (which defaults to false).

  • listener - the handler method set to receive event updates. The function signature depends on the event argument, and the spread and tags options.

  • context - an object that binds to the listener handler.

Return value: none.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    server.event('test');
    server.events.on('test', (update) => console.log(update));
    server.events.emit('test', 'hello');
}

Same as calling server.events.on() with the count option set to 1.

Return value: none.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    server.event('test');
    server.events.once('test', (update) => console.log(update));
    server.events.emit('test', 'hello');
    server.events.emit('test', 'hello');       // Ignored
}

Same as calling server.events.on() with the count option set to 1.

Return value: a promise that resolves when the event is emitted.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    server.event('test');
    const pending = server.events.once('test');
    server.events.emit('test', 'hello');
    const update = await pending;
}

Behaves identically to server.events.emit(), but also returns an array of the results of all the event listeners that run. The return value is that of Promise.allSettled(), where each item in the resulting array is { status: 'fulfilled', value } in the case of a successful handler, or { status: 'rejected', reason } in the case of a handler that throws.

Please note that system errors such as a TypeError are not handled specially, and it's recommended to scrutinize any rejections using something like bounce.

Used within a plugin to expose a property via server.plugins[name] where:

  • key - the key assigned (server.plugins[name][key]).
  • value - the value assigned.
  • options - optional settings:
    • scope - controls how to handle the presence of a plugin scope in the name (e.g. @hapi/test):
      • false - the scope is removed (e.g. @hapi/test is changed to test under server.plugins). This is the default.
      • true - the scope is retained as-is (e.g. @hapi/test is used as server.plugins['@hapi/test']).
      • 'underscore' - the scope is rewritten (e.g. @hapi/test is used as server.plugins.hapi__test).

Return value: none.

exports.plugin =
    name: 'example',
    register: function (server, options) {

        server.expose('util', () => console.log('something'));
    }
};

Merges an object into to the existing content of server.plugins[name] where:

  • obj - the object merged into the exposed properties container.

Return value: none.

exports.plugin = {
    name: 'example',
    register: function (server, options) {

        server.expose({ util: () => console.log('something') });
    }
};

Note that all the properties of obj are deeply cloned into server.plugins[name], so avoid using this method for exposing large objects that may be expensive to clone or singleton objects such as database client objects. Instead favor server.expose(key, value), which only copies a reference to value.

Registers an extension function in one of the request lifecycle extension points where:

  • events - an object or array of objects with the following:

    • type - (required) the extension point event name. The available extension points include the request extension points as well as the following server extension points:

      • 'onPreStart' - called before the connection listeners are started.
      • 'onPostStart' - called after the connection listeners are started.
      • 'onPreStop' - called before the connection listeners are stopped.
      • 'onPostStop' - called after the connection listeners are stopped.
    • method - (required) a function or an array of functions to be executed at a specified point during request processing. The required extension function signature is:

      • server extension points: async function(server) where:

        • server - the server object.
        • this - the object provided via options.bind or the current active context set with server.bind().
      • request extension points: a lifecycle method.

    • options - (optional) an object with the following:

      • before - a string or array of strings of plugin names this method must execute before (on the same event). Otherwise, extension methods are executed in the order added.

      • after - a string or array of strings of plugin names this method must execute after (on the same event). Otherwise, extension methods are executed in the order added.

      • bind - a context object passed back to the provided method (via this) when called. Ignored if the method is an arrow function.

      • sandbox - if set to 'plugin' when adding a request extension points the extension is only added to routes defined by the current plugin. Not allowed when configuring route-level extensions, or when adding server extensions. Defaults to 'server' which applies to any route added to the server the extension is added to.

      • timeout - number of milliseconds to wait for the method to complete before returning a timeout error. Defaults to no timeout.

Return value: none.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

    server.ext({
        type: 'onRequest',
        method: function (request, h) {

            // Change all requests to '/test'

            request.setUrl('/test');
            return h.continue;
        }
    });

    server.route({ method: 'GET', path: '/test', handler: () => 'ok' });
    await server.start();

    // All requests will get routed to '/test'
}

Registers a single extension event using the same properties as used in server.ext(events), but passed as arguments.

The method may be omitted (if options isn't present) or passed null which will cause the function to return a promise. The promise is resolved with the request object on the first invocation of the extension point. This is primarily used for writing tests without having to write custom handlers just to handle a single event.

Return value: a promise if method is omitted, otherwise undefined.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

    server.ext('onRequest', function (request, h) {

        // Change all requests to '/test'

        request.setUrl('/test');
        return h.continue;
    });

    server.route({ method: 'GET', path: '/test', handler: () => 'ok' });
    await server.start();

    // All requests will get routed to '/test'
}

Initializes the server (starts the caches, finalizes plugin registration) but does not start listening on the connection port.

Return value: none.

Note that if the method fails and throws an error, the server is considered to be in an undefined state and should be shut down. In most cases it would be impossible to fully recover as the various plugins, caches, and other event listeners will get confused by repeated attempts to start the server or make assumptions about the healthy state of the environment. It is recommended to abort the process when the server fails to start properly. If you must try to resume after an error, call server.stop() first to reset the server state.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const Hoek = require('@hapi/hoek');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    await server.initialize();
}

Injects a request into the server simulating an incoming HTTP request without making an actual socket connection. Injection is useful for testing purposes as well as for invoking routing logic internally without the overhead and limitations of the network stack.

The method utilizes the shot module for performing injections, with some additional options and response properties:

  • options - can be assigned a string with the requested URI, or an object with:

    • method - (optional) the request HTTP method (e.g. 'POST'). Defaults to 'GET'.

    • url - (required) the request URL. If the URI includes an authority (e.g. 'example.com:8080'), it is used to automatically set an HTTP 'Host' header, unless one was specified in headers.

    • authority - (optional) a string specifying the HTTP 'Host' header value. Only used if 'Host' is not specified in headers and the url does not include an authority component. Default is inferred from runtime server information.

    • headers - (optional) an object with optional request headers where each key is the header name and the value is the header content. Defaults to no additions to the default shot headers.

    • payload - (optional) an string, buffer or object containing the request payload. In case of an object it will be converted to a string for you. Defaults to no payload. Note that payload processing defaults to 'application/json' if no 'Content-Type' header provided.

    • auth - (optional) an object containing parsed authentication credentials where:

      • strategy - (required) the authentication strategy name matching the provided credentials.

      • credentials - (required) a credentials object containing authentication information. The credentials are used to bypass the default authentication strategies, and are validated directly as if they were received via an authentication scheme.

      • artifacts - (optional) an artifacts object containing authentication artifact information. The artifacts are used to bypass the default authentication strategies, and are validated directly as if they were received via an authentication scheme. Defaults to no artifacts.

      • payload - (optional) disables payload authentication when set to false. Only required when an authentication strategy requires payload authentication. Defaults to true.

    • app - (optional) sets the initial value of request.app, defaults to {}.

    • plugins - (optional) sets the initial value of request.plugins, defaults to {}.

    • allowInternals - (optional) allows access to routes with options.isInternal set to true. Defaults to false.

    • remoteAddress - (optional) sets the remote address for the incoming connection.

    • simulate - (optional) an object with options used to simulate client request stream conditions for testing:

      • error - if true, emits an 'error' event after payload transmission (if any). Defaults to false.

      • close - if true, emits a 'close' event after payload transmission (if any). Defaults to false.

      • end - if false, does not end the stream. Defaults to true.

      • split - indicates whether the request payload will be split into chunks. Defaults to undefined, meaning payload will not be chunked.

    • validate - (optional) if false, the options inputs are not validated. This is recommended for run-time usage of inject() to make it perform faster where input validation can be tested separately.

Return value: a response object with the following properties:

  • statusCode - the HTTP status code.

  • headers - an object containing the headers set.

  • payload - the response payload string.

  • rawPayload - the raw response payload buffer.

  • raw - an object with the injection request and response objects:

    • req - the simulated node request object.
    • res - the simulated node response object.
  • result - the raw handler response (e.g. when not a stream or a view) before it is serialized for transmission. If not available, the value is set to payload. Useful for inspection and reuse of the internal objects returned (instead of parsing the response string).

  • request - the request object.

Throws a Boom error if the request processing fails. The partial response object is exposed on the data property.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    server.route({ method: 'GET', path: '/', handler: () => 'Success!' });

    const res = await server.inject('/');
    console.log(res.result);                // 'Success!'
}

Logs server events that cannot be associated with a specific request. When called the server emits a 'log' event which can be used by other listeners or plugins to record the information or output to the console. The arguments are:

  • tags - (required) a string or an array of strings (e.g. ['error', 'database', 'read']) used to identify the event. Tags are used instead of log levels and provide a much more expressive mechanism for describing and filtering events. Any logs generated by the server internally include the 'hapi' tag along with event-specific information.

  • data - (optional) an message string or object with the application data being logged. If data is a function, the function signature is function() and it called once to generate (return value) the actual data emitted to the listeners. If no listeners match the event, the data function is not invoked.

  • timestamp - (optional) an timestamp expressed in milliseconds. Defaults to Date.now() (now).

Return value: none.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

server.events.on('log', (event, tags) => {

    if (tags.error) {
        console.log(event);
    }
});

server.log(['test', 'error'], 'Test event');

Looks up a route configuration where:

Return value: the route information if found, otherwise null.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server();
server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/',
    options: {
        id: 'root',
        handler: () => 'ok'
    }
});

const route = server.lookup('root');

Looks up a route configuration where:

  • method - the HTTP method (e.g. 'GET', 'POST').
  • path - the requested path (must begin with '/').
  • host - (optional) hostname (to match against routes with vhost).

Return value: the route information if found, otherwise null.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server();
server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/',
    options: {
        id: 'root',
        handler: () => 'ok'
    }
});

const route = server.match('get', '/');

Registers a server method where:

  • name - a unique method name used to invoke the method via server.methods[name].

  • method - the method function with a signature async function(...args, [flags]) where:

    • ...args - the method function arguments (can be any number of arguments or none).
    • flags - when caching is enabled, an object used to set optional method result flags. This parameter is provided automatically and can only be accessed/modified within the method function. It cannot be passed as an argument.
      • ttl - 0 if result is valid but cannot be cached. Defaults to cache policy.
  • options - (optional) configuration object:

    • bind - a context object passed back to the method function (via this) when called. Defaults to active context (set via server.bind() when the method is registered. Ignored if the method is an arrow function.

    • cache - the same cache configuration used in server.cache(). The generateTimeout option is required, and the generateFunc options is not allowed.

    • generateKey - a function used to generate a unique key (for caching) from the arguments passed to the method function (the flags argument is not passed as input). The server will automatically generate a unique key if the function's arguments are all of types 'string', 'number', or 'boolean'. However if the method uses other types of arguments, a key generation function must be provided which takes the same arguments as the function and returns a unique string (or null if no key can be generated).

Return value: none.

Method names can be nested (e.g. utils.users.get) which will automatically create the full path under server.methods (e.g. accessed via server.methods.utils.users.get).

When configured with caching enabled, server.methods[name].cache is assigned an object with the following properties and methods: - await drop(...args) - a function that can be used to clear the cache for a given key. - stats - an object with cache statistics, see catbox for stats documentation.

Simple arguments example:

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

    const add = (a, b) => (a + b);
    server.method('sum', add, { cache: { expiresIn: 2000, generateTimeout: 100 } });

    console.log(await server.methods.sum(4, 5));          // 9
}

Object argument example:

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

    const addArray = function (array) {

        let sum = 0;
        array.forEach((item) => {

            sum += item;
        });

        return sum;
    };

    const options = {
        cache: { expiresIn: 2000, generateTimeout: 100 },
        generateKey: (array) => array.join(',')
    };

    server.method('sumObj', addArray, options);

    console.log(await server.methods.sumObj([5, 6]));     // 11
}

Registers a server method function as described in server.method() using a configuration object where:

  • methods - an object or an array of objects where each one contains:

    • name - the method name.
    • method - the method function.
    • options - (optional) settings.

Return value: none.

const add = function (a, b) {

    return a + b;
};

server.method({
    name: 'sum',
    method: add,
    options: {
        cache: {
            expiresIn: 2000,
            generateTimeout: 100
        }
    }
});

Sets the path prefix used to locate static resources (files and view templates) when relative paths are used where:

  • relativeTo - the path prefix added to any relative file path starting with '.'.

Return value: none.

Note that setting a path within a plugin only applies to resources accessed by plugin methods. If no path is set, the server default route configuration files.relativeTo settings is used. The path only applies to routes added after it has been set.

exports.plugin = {
    name: 'example',
    register: function (server, options) {

        // Assuming the Inert plugin was registered previously

        server.path(__dirname + '../static');
        server.route({ path: '/file', method: 'GET', handler: { file: './test.html' } });
    }
};

Registers a plugin where:

  • plugins - one or an array of:

    • a plugin object.

    • an object with the following:

      • plugin - a plugin object.
      • options - (optional) options passed to the plugin during registration.
      • once, routes - (optional) plugin-specific registration options as defined below.
  • options - (optional) registration options (different from the options passed to the registration function):

    • once - if true, subsequent registrations of the same plugin are skipped without error. Cannot be used with plugin options. Defaults to false. If not set to true, an error will be thrown the second time a plugin is registered on the server.

    • routes - modifiers applied to each route added by the plugin:

      • prefix - string added as prefix to any route path (must begin with '/'). If a plugin registers a child plugin the prefix is passed on to the child or is added in front of the child-specific prefix.
      • vhost - virtual host string (or array of strings) applied to every route. The outer-most vhost overrides the any nested configuration.

Return value: a reference to the server.

async function example() {

    await server.register({ plugin: require('plugin_name'), options: { message: 'hello' } });
}

Adds a route where:

  • route - a route configuration object or an array of configuration objects where each object contains:

    • path - (required) the absolute path used to match incoming requests (must begin with '/'). Incoming requests are compared to the configured paths based on the server's router configuration. The path can include named parameters enclosed in {} which will be matched against literal values in the request as described in Path parameters.

    • method - (required) the HTTP method. Typically one of 'GET', 'POST', 'PUT', 'PATCH', 'DELETE', or 'OPTIONS'. Any HTTP method is allowed, except for 'HEAD'. Use '*' to match against any HTTP method (only when an exact match was not found, and any match with a specific method will be given a higher priority over a wildcard match). Can be assigned an array of methods which has the same result as adding the same route with different methods manually.

    • vhost - (optional) a domain string or an array of domain strings for limiting the route to only requests with a matching host header field. Matching is done against the hostname part of the header only (excluding the port). Defaults to all hosts.

    • handler - (required when handler is not set) the route handler function called to generate the response after successful authentication and validation.

    • options - additional route options. The options value can be an object or a function that returns an object using the signature function(server) where server is the server the route is being added to and this is bound to the current realm's bind option.

    • rules - route custom rules object. The object is passed to each rules processor registered with server.rules(). Cannot be used if route.options.rules is defined.

Return value: none.

Note that the options object is deeply cloned (with the exception of bind which is shallowly copied) and cannot contain any values that are unsafe to perform deep copy on.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

// Handler in top level

server.route({ method: 'GET', path: '/status', handler: () => 'ok' });

// Handler in config

const user = {
    cache: { expiresIn: 5000 },
    handler: function (request, h) {

        return { name: 'John' };
    }
};

server.route({ method: 'GET', path: '/user', options: user });

// An array of routes

server.route([
    { method: 'GET', path: '/1', handler: function (request, h) { return 'ok'; } },
    { method: 'GET', path: '/2', handler: function (request, h) { return 'ok'; } }
]);

Path parameters

Parameterized paths are processed by matching the named parameters to the content of the incoming request path at that path segment. For example, '/book/{id}/cover' will match '/book/123/cover' and request.params.id will be set to '123'. Each path segment (everything between the opening '/' and the closing '/' unless it is the end of the path) can only include one named parameter. A parameter can cover the entire segment ('/{param}') or part of the segment ('/file.{ext}'). A path parameter may only contain letters, numbers and underscores, e.g. '/{file-name}' is invalid and '/{file_name}' is valid.

An optional '?' suffix following the parameter name indicates an optional parameter (only allowed if the parameter is at the ends of the path or only covers part of the segment as in '/a{param?}/b'). For example, the route '/book/{id?}' matches '/book/' with the value of request.params.id set to an empty string ''.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const getAlbum = function (request, h) {

    return 'You asked for ' +
        (request.params.song ? request.params.song + ' from ' : '') +
        request.params.album;
};

server.route({
    path: '/{album}/{song?}',
    method: 'GET',
    handler: getAlbum
});

In addition to the optional ? suffix, a parameter name can also specify the number of matching segments using the * suffix, followed by a number greater than 1. If the number of expected parts can be anything, then use * without a number (matching any number of segments can only be used in the last path segment).

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const getPerson = function (request, h) {

    const nameParts = request.params.name.split('/');
    return { first: nameParts[0], last: nameParts[1] };
};

server.route({
    path: '/person/{name*2}',   // Matches '/person/john/doe'
    method: 'GET',
    handler: getPerson
});

Path matching order

The router iterates through the routing table on each incoming request and executes the first (and only the first) matching route. Route matching is done based on the combination of the request path and the HTTP verb (e.g. 'GET, 'POST'). The query is excluded from the routing logic. Requests are matched in a deterministic order where the order in which routes are added does not matter.

Routes are matched based on the specificity of the route which is evaluated at each segment of the incoming request path. Each request path is split into its segment (the parts separated by '/'). The segments are compared to the routing table one at a time and are matched against the most specific path until a match is found. If no match is found, the next match is tried.

When matching routes, string literals (no path parameter) have the highest priority, followed by mixed parameters ('/a{p}b'), parameters ('/{p}'), and then wildcard (/{p*}).

Note that mixed parameters are slower to compare as they cannot be hashed and require an array iteration over all the regular expressions representing the various mixed parameter at each routing table node.

Catch all route

If the application needs to override the default Not Found (404) error response, it can add a catch-all route for a specific method or all methods. Only one catch-all route can be defined.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const handler = function (request, h) {

    return h.response('The page was not found').code(404);
};

server.route({ method: '*', path: '/{p*}', handler });

Defines a route rules processor for converting route rules object into route configuration where:

  • processor - a function using the signature function(rules, info) where:

    • rules - the custom object defined in your routes configuration for you to use its values.
    • info - an object with the following properties:
      • method - the route method.
      • path - the route path.
      • vhost - the route virtual host (if any defined).
    • returns a route config object.
  • options - optional settings:

    • validate - rules object validation:
      • schema - joi schema.
      • options - optional joi validation options. Defaults to { allowUnknown: true }.

Note that the root server and each plugin server instance can only register one rules processor. If a route is added after the rules are configured, it will not include the rules config. Routes added by plugins apply the rules to each of the parent realms' rules from the root to the route's realm. This means the processor defined by the plugin overrides the config generated by the root processor if they overlap. Similarly, the route's own config overrides the config produced by the rules processors.

const validateSchema = {
    auth: Joi.string(),
    myCustomPre: Joi.array().min(2).items(Joi.string()),
    payload: Joi.object()
};

const myPreHelper = (name) => {

    return {
        method: (request, h) => {

            return `hello ${name || 'world'}!`;
        },
        assign: 'myPreHelper'
    };
};

const processor = (rules, info) => {

    if (!rules) {
        return null;
    }

    const options = {};

    if (rules.auth) {
        options.auth = {
            strategy: rules.auth,
            validate: {
                entity: 'user'
            }
        };
    }

    if (rules.myCustomPre) {
        options.pre = [
            myPreHelper(...rules.myCustomPre)
        ];
    }

    if (rules.payload) {
        options.validate = { payload: Joi.object(rules.payload) };
    }

    return options;
};

server.rules(processor, {
    validate: { schema: validateSchema }
});

server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/',
    rules: {
        auth: 'jwt',
        myCustomPre: ['arg1', 'arg2'],
        payload: { a: Joi.boolean(), b: Joi.string() }
    },
    options: {
        id: 'my-route'
    }
});

Starts the server by listening for incoming requests on the configured port (unless the connection was configured with autoListen set to false).

Return value: none.

Note that if the method fails and throws an error, the server is considered to be in an undefined state and should be shut down. In most cases it would be impossible to fully recover as the various plugins, caches, and other event listeners will get confused by repeated attempts to start the server or make assumptions about the healthy state of the environment. It is recommended to abort the process when the server fails to start properly. If you must try to resume after an error, call server.stop() first to reset the server state.

If a started server is started again, the second call to server.start() is ignored. No events will be emitted and no extension points invoked.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    await server.start();
    console.log('Server started at: ' + server.info.uri);
}

HTTP state management uses client cookies to persist a state across multiple requests. Registers a cookie definitions where:

  • name - the cookie name string.

  • options - are the optional cookie settings:

    • ttl - time-to-live in milliseconds. Defaults to null (session time-life - cookies are deleted when the browser is closed).

    • isSecure - sets the 'Secure' flag. Defaults to true.

    • isHttpOnly - sets the 'HttpOnly' flag. Defaults to true.

    • isSameSite - sets the 'SameSite' flag. The value must be one of:

      • false - no flag.
      • 'Strict' - sets the value to 'Strict' (this is the default value).
      • 'Lax' - sets the value to 'Lax'.
      • 'None' - sets the value to 'None'.
    • path - the path scope. Defaults to null (no path).

    • domain - the domain scope. Defaults to null (no domain).

    • autoValue - if present and the cookie was not received from the client or explicitly set by the route handler, the cookie is automatically added to the response with the provided value. The value can be a function with signature async function(request) where:

    • encoding - encoding performs on the provided value before serialization. Options are:

      • 'none' - no encoding. When used, the cookie value must be a string. This is the default value.
      • 'base64' - string value is encoded using Base64.
      • 'base64json' - object value is JSON-stringified then encoded using Base64.
      • 'form' - object value is encoded using the x-www-form-urlencoded method.
      • 'iron' - Encrypts and sign the value using iron.
    • sign - an object used to calculate an HMAC for cookie integrity validation. This does not provide privacy, only a mean to verify that the cookie value was generated by the server. Redundant when 'iron' encoding is used. Options are:

    • password - password used for 'iron' encoding (must be at least 32 characters long).

    • iron - options for 'iron' encoding. Defaults to require('iron').defaults.

    • ignoreErrors - if true, errors are ignored and treated as missing cookies.

    • clearInvalid - if true, automatically instruct the client to remove invalid cookies. Defaults to false.

    • strictHeader - if false, allows any cookie value including values in violation of RFC 6265. Defaults to true.

    • passThrough - used by proxy plugins (e.g. h2o2).

    • contextualize - a function using the signature async function(definition, request) used to override a request-specific cookie settings where:

      • definition - a copy of the options to be used for formatting the cookie that can be manipulated by the function to customize the request cookie header. Note that changing the definition.contextualize property will be ignored.
      • request - the current request object.

Return value: none.

State defaults can be modified via the server.options.state configuration option.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

// Set cookie definition

server.state('session', {
    ttl: 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000,     // One day
    isSecure: true,
    path: '/',
    encoding: 'base64json'
});

// Set state in route handler

const handler = function (request, h) {

    let session = request.state.session;
    if (!session) {
        session = { user: 'joe' };
    }

    session.last = Date.now();

    return h.response('Success').state('session', session);
};

Registered cookies are automatically parsed when received. Parsing rules depends on the route state.parse configuration. If an incoming registered cookie fails parsing, it is not included in request.state, regardless of the state.failAction setting. When state.failAction is set to 'log' and an invalid cookie value is received, the server will emit a 'request' event. To capture these errors subscribe to the 'request' event on the 'internal' channel and filter on 'error' and 'state' tags:

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

server.events.on({ name: 'request', channels: 'internal' }, (request, event, tags) => {

    if (tags.error && tags.state) {
        console.error(event);
    }
});

Access: read only.

Same as calling server.state().

Formats an HTTP 'Set-Cookie' header based on the server.options.state where:

  • cookies - a single object or an array of object where each contains:
    • name - the cookie name.
    • value - the cookie value.
    • options - cookie configuration to override the server settings.

Return value: a header string.

Note that this utility uses the server configuration but does not change the server state. It is provided for manual cookie formatting (e.g. when headers are set manually).

Parses an HTTP 'Cookies' header based on the server.options.state where:

  • header - the HTTP header.

Return value: an object where each key is a cookie name and value is the parsed cookie.

Note that this utility uses the server configuration but does not change the server state. It is provided for manual cookie parsing (e.g. when server parsing is disabled).

Stops the server's listener by refusing to accept any new connections or requests (existing connections will continue until closed or timeout), where:

  • options - (optional) object with:

    • timeout - sets the timeout in millisecond before forcefully terminating any open connections that arrived before the server stopped accepting new connections. The timeout only applies to waiting for existing connections to close, and not to any 'onPreStop' or 'onPostStop' server extensions which can delay or block the stop operation indefinitely. Ignored if server.options.operations.cleanStop is false. Note that if the server is set as a group controller, the timeout is per controlled server and the controlling server itself. Defaults to 5000 (5 seconds).

Return value: none.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    await server.start();
    await server.stop({ timeout: 60 * 1000 });
    console.log('Server stopped');
}

Returns a copy of the routing table where:

  • host - (optional) host to filter routes matching a specific virtual host. Defaults to all virtual hosts.

Return value: an array of routes where each route contains:

  • settings - the route config with defaults applied.
  • method - the HTTP method in lower case.
  • path - the route path.
const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
server.route({ method: 'GET', path: '/example', handler: () => 'ok' });

const table = server.table();

Registers a server validation module used to compile raw validation rules into validation schemas for all routes where:

  • validator - the validation module (e.g. joi).

Return value: none.

Note: the validator is only used when validation rules are not pre-compiled schemas. When a validation rules is a function or schema object, the rule is used as-is and the validator is not used. When setting a validator inside a plugin, the validator is only applied to routes set up by the plugin and plugins registered by it.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const Joi = require('joi');

async function example() {

    const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
    server.validator(Joi);
}

Route options

Each route can be customized to change the default behavior of the request lifecycle.

Application-specific route configuration state. Should not be used by plugins which should use options.plugins[name] instead.

Route authentication configuration. Value can be:

Default value: none.

An object or array of objects specifying the route access rules. Each rule is evaluated against an incoming request and access is granted if at least one of the rules matches. Each rule object must include at least one of scope or entity.

Default value: false (no scope requirements).

The application scope required to access the route. Value can be a scope string or an array of scope strings. When authenticated, the credentials object scope property must contain at least one of the scopes defined to access the route.

If a scope string begins with a + character, that scope is required. If a scope string begins with a ! character, that scope is forbidden. For example, the scope ['!a', '+b', 'c', 'd'] means the incoming request credentials' scope must not include 'a', must include 'b', and must include one of 'c' or 'd'.

You may also access properties on the request object (query, params, payload, and credentials) to populate a dynamic scope by using the '{' and '}' characters around the property name, such as 'user-{params.id}'.

Default value: 'any'.

The required authenticated entity type. If set, must match the entity value of the request authenticated credentials. Available values:

  • 'any' - the authentication can be on behalf of a user or application.
  • 'user' - the authentication must be on behalf of a user which is identified by the presence of a 'user' attribute in the credentials object returned by the authentication strategy.
  • 'app' - the authentication must be on behalf of an application which is identified by the lack of presence of a user attribute in the credentials object returned by the authentication strategy.

Default value: 'required'.

The authentication mode. Available values:

  • 'required' - authentication is required.
  • 'optional' - authentication is optional - the request must include valid credentials or no credentials at all.
  • 'try' - similar to 'optional', any request credentials are attempted authentication, but if the credentials are invalid, the request proceeds regardless of the authentication error.

Default value: false, unless the scheme requires payload authentication.

If set, the incoming request payload is authenticated after it is processed. Requires a strategy with payload authentication support (e.g. Hawk). Cannot be set to a value other than 'required' when the scheme sets the authentication options.payload to true.

Available values:

  • false - no payload authentication.
  • 'required' - payload authentication required.
  • 'optional' - payload authentication performed only when the client includes payload authentication information (e.g. hash attribute in Hawk).

Default value: the default strategy set via server.auth.default().

An array of string strategy names in the order they should be attempted. Cannot be used together with strategy.

Default value: the default strategy set via server.auth.default().

A string strategy names. Cannot be used together with strategies.

Default value: null.

An object passed back to the provided handler (via this) when called. Ignored if the method is an arrow function.

Default value: { privacy: 'default', statuses: [200], otherwise: 'no-cache' }.

If the route method is 'GET', the route can be configured to include HTTP caching directives in the response. Caching can be customized using an object with the following options:

  • privacy - determines the privacy flag included in client-side caching using the 'Cache-Control' header. Values are:

    • 'default' - no privacy flag.
    • 'public' - mark the response as suitable for public caching.
    • 'private' - mark the response as suitable only for private caching.
  • expiresIn - relative expiration expressed in the number of milliseconds since the item was saved in the cache. Cannot be used together with expiresAt.

  • expiresAt - time of day expressed in 24h notation using the 'HH:MM' format, at which point all cache records for the route expire. Cannot be used together with expiresIn.

  • statuses - an array of HTTP response status code numbers (e.g. 200) which are allowed to include a valid caching directive.

  • otherwise - a string with the value of the 'Cache-Control' header when caching is disabled.

The default Cache-Control: no-cache header can be disabled by setting cache to false.

An object where each key is a content-encoding name and each value is an object with the desired encoder settings. Note that decoder settings are set in compression.

Default value: false (no CORS headers).

The Cross-Origin Resource Sharing protocol allows browsers to make cross-origin API calls. CORS is required by web applications running inside a browser which are loaded from a different domain than the API server. To enable, set cors to true, or to an object with the following options:

  • origin - an array of allowed origin servers strings ('Access-Control-Allow-Origin'). The array can contain any combination of fully qualified origins along with origin strings containing a wildcard '*' character, or a single '*' origin string. If set to 'ignore', any incoming Origin header is ignored (present or not) and the 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is set to '*'. Defaults to any origin ['*'].

  • maxAge - number of seconds the browser should cache the CORS response ('Access-Control-Max-Age'). The greater the value, the longer it will take before the browser checks for changes in policy. Defaults to 86400 (one day).

  • headers - a strings array of allowed headers ('Access-Control-Allow-Headers'). Defaults to ['Accept', 'Authorization', 'Content-Type', 'If-None-Match'].

  • additionalHeaders - a strings array of additional headers to headers. Use this to keep the default headers in place.

  • exposedHeaders - a strings array of exposed headers ('Access-Control-Expose-Headers'). Defaults to ['WWW-Authenticate', 'Server-Authorization'].

  • additionalExposedHeaders - a strings array of additional headers to exposedHeaders. Use this to keep the default headers in place.

  • credentials - if true, allows user credentials to be sent ('Access-Control-Allow-Credentials'). Defaults to false.

  • preflightStatusCode - the status code used for CORS preflight responses, either 200 or 204. Defaults to 200.

Default value: none.

Route description used for generating documentation (string).

This setting is not available when setting server route defaults using server.options.routes.

Default value: none.

Route-level request extension points by setting the option to an object with a key for each of the desired extension points ('onRequest' is not allowed), and the value is the same as the server.ext(events) event argument.

Default value: { relativeTo: '.' }.

Defines the behavior for accessing files:

  • relativeTo - determines the folder relative paths are resolved against.

Default value: none.

The route handler function performs the main business logic of the route and sets the response. handler can be assigned:

  • a lifecycle method.

  • an object with a single property using the name of a handler type registered with the server.decorate() method. The matching property value is passed as options to the registered handler generator.

const handler = function (request, h) {

    return 'success';
};

Note: handlers using a fat arrow style function cannot be bound to any bind property. Instead, the bound context is available under h.context.

Default value: none.

An optional unique identifier used to look up the route using server.lookup(). Cannot be assigned to routes added with an array of methods.

Default value: false.

If true, the route cannot be accessed through the HTTP listener but only through the server.inject() interface with the allowInternals option set to true. Used for internal routes that should not be accessible to the outside world.

Default value: none.

Optional arguments passed to JSON.stringify() when converting an object or error response to a string payload or escaping it after stringification. Supports the following:

  • replacer - the replacer function or array. Defaults to no action.

  • space - number of spaces to indent nested object keys. Defaults to no indentation.

  • suffix - string suffix added after conversion to JSON string. Defaults to no suffix.

  • escape - calls Hoek.jsonEscape() after conversion to JSON string. Defaults to false.

Default value: { collect: false }.

Request logging options:

  • collect - if true, request-level logs (both internal and application) are collected and accessible via request.logs.

Default value: none.

Route notes used for generating documentation (string or array of strings).

This setting is not available when setting server route defaults using server.options.routes.

Determines how the request payload is processed.

Default value: allows parsing of the following mime types:

  • application/json
  • application/*+json
  • application/octet-stream
  • application/x-www-form-urlencoded
  • multipart/form-data
  • text/*

A string or an array of strings with the allowed mime types for the endpoint. Use this settings to limit the set of allowed mime types. Note that allowing additional mime types not listed above will not enable them to be parsed, and if parse is true, the request will result in an error response.

Default value: none.

An object where each key is a content-encoding name and each value is an object with the desired decoder settings. Note that encoder settings are set in compression.

Default value: 'application/json'.

The default content type if the 'Content-Type' request header is missing.

Default value: 'error' (return a Bad Request (400) error response).

A failAction value which determines how to handle payload parsing errors.

Default value: 1048576 (1MB).

Limits the size of incoming payloads to the specified byte count. Allowing very large payloads may cause the server to run out of memory.

Default value: 1000.

Limits the number of parts allowed in multipart payloads.

Default value: false.

Overrides payload processing for multipart requests. Value can be one of:

  • false - disable multipart processing (this is the default value).

  • true - enable multipart processing using the output value.

  • an object with the following required options:

    • output - same as the output option with an additional value option:
      • annotated - wraps each multipart part in an object with the following keys:

        • headers - the part headers.
        • filename - the part file name.
        • payload - the processed part payload.

Default value: 'data'.

The processed payload format. The value must be one of:

  • 'data' - the incoming payload is read fully into memory. If parse is true, the payload is parsed (JSON, form-decoded, multipart) based on the 'Content-Type' header. If parse is false, a raw Buffer is returned.

  • 'stream' - the incoming payload is made available via a Stream.Readable interface. If the payload is 'multipart/form-data' and parse is true, field values are presented as text while files are provided as streams. File streams from a 'multipart/form-data' upload will also have a hapi property containing the filename and headers properties. Note that payload streams for multipart payloads are a synthetic interface created on top of the entire multipart content loaded into memory. To avoid loading large multipart payloads into memory, set parse to false and handle the multipart payload in the handler using a streaming parser (e.g. pez).

  • 'file' - the incoming payload is written to temporary file in the directory specified by the uploads settings. If the payload is 'multipart/form-data' and parse is true, field values are presented as text while files are saved to disk. Note that it is the sole responsibility of the application to clean up the files generated by the framework. This can be done by keeping track of which files are used (e.g. using the request.app object), and listening to the server 'response' event to perform cleanup.

Default value: none.

A mime type string overriding the 'Content-Type' header value received.

Default value: true.

Determines if the incoming payload is processed or presented raw. Available values:

  • true - if the request 'Content-Type' matches the allowed mime types set by allow (for the whole payload as well as parts), the payload is converted into an object when possible. If the format is unknown, a Bad Request (400) error response is sent. Any known content encoding is decoded.

  • false - the raw payload is returned unmodified.

  • 'gunzip' - the raw payload is returned unmodified after any known content encoding is decoded.

Default value: 'error'.

Sets handling of incoming payload that may contain a prototype poisoning security attack. Available values:

  • 'error' - returns a 400 bad request error when the payload contains a prototype.

  • 'remove' - sanitizes the payload to remove the prototype.

  • 'ignore' - disables the protection and allows the payload to pass as received. Use this option only when you are sure that such incoming data cannot pose any risks to your application.

Default value: to 10000 (10 seconds).

Payload reception timeout in milliseconds. Sets the maximum time allowed for the client to transmit the request payload (body) before giving up and responding with a Request Timeout (408) error response.

Set to false to disable.

Default value: os.tmpdir().

The directory used for writing file uploads.

Default value: {}.

Plugin-specific configuration. plugins is an object where each key is a plugin name and the value is the plugin configuration.

Default value: none.

The pre option allows defining methods for performing actions before the handler is called. These methods allow breaking the handler logic into smaller, reusable components that can be shared across routes, as well as provide a cleaner error handling of prerequisite operations (e.g. load required reference data from a database).

pre is assigned an ordered array of methods which are called serially in order. If the pre array contains another array of methods as one of its elements, those methods are called in parallel. Note that during parallel execution, if any of the methods error, return a takeover response, or abort signal, the other parallel methods will continue to execute but will be ignored once completed.

pre can be assigned a mixed array of:

  • an array containing the elements listed below, which are executed in parallel.

  • an object with:

    • method - a lifecycle method.
    • assign - key name used to assign the response of the method to in request.pre and request.preResponses.
    • failAction - A failAction value which determine what to do when a pre-handler method throws an error. If assign is specified and the failAction setting is not 'error', the error will be assigned.
  • a method function - same as including an object with a single method key.

Note that pre-handler methods do not behave the same way other lifecycle methods do when a value is returned. Instead of the return value becoming the new response payload, the value is used to assign the corresponding request.pre and request.preResponses properties. Otherwise, the handling of errors, takeover response response, or abort signal behave the same as any other lifecycle methods.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const pre1 = function (request, h) {

    return 'Hello';
};

const pre2 = function (request, h) {

    return 'World';
};

const pre3 = function (request, h) {

    return request.pre.m1 + ' ' + request.pre.m2;
};

server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/',
    options: {
        pre: [
            [
                // m1 and m2 executed in parallel
                { method: pre1, assign: 'm1' },
                { method: pre2, assign: 'm2' }
            ],
            { method: pre3, assign: 'm3' },
        ],
        handler: function (request, h) {

            return request.pre.m3 + '!\n';
        }
    }
});

Processing rules for the outgoing response.

Default value: 499.

The default HTTP status code used to set a response error when the request is closed or aborted before the response is fully transmitted. Value can be any integer greater or equal to 400. The default value 499 is based on the non-standard nginx "CLIENT CLOSED REQUEST" error. The value is only used for logging as the request has already ended.

Default value: 204.

The default HTTP status code when the payload is considered empty. Value can be 200 or 204. Note that a 200 status code is converted to a 204 only at the time of response transmission (the response status code will remain 200 throughout the request lifecycle unless manually set).

Default value: 'error' (return an Internal Server Error (500) error response).

A failAction value which defines what to do when a response fails payload validation.

Default value: false.

If true, applies the validation rule changes to the response payload.

Default value: none.

joi options object pass to the validation function. Useful to set global options such as stripUnknown or abortEarly. If a custom validation function is defined via schema or status then options can an arbitrary object that will be passed to this function as the second argument.

Default value: true.

If false, payload range support is disabled.

Default value: 100 (all responses).

The percent of response payloads validated (0 - 100). Set to 0 to disable all validation.

Default value: true (no validation).

The default response payload validation rules (for all non-error responses) expressed as one of:

  • true - any payload allowed (no validation).

  • false - no payload allowed.

  • a joi validation object. The options along with the request context ({ headers, params, query, payload, state, app, auth }) are passed to the validation function.

  • a validation function using the signature async function(value, options) where:

    • value - the pending response payload.

    • options - The options along with the request context ({ headers, params, query, payload, state, app, auth }).

    • if the function returns a value and modify is true, the value is used as the new response. If the original response is an error, the return value is used to override the original error output.payload. If an error is thrown, the error is processed according to failAction.

Default value: none.

Validation schemas for specific HTTP status codes. Responses (excluding errors) not matching the listed status codes are validated using the default schema.

status is set to an object where each key is a 3 digit HTTP status code and the value has the same definition as schema.

Default value: none.

A custom rules object passed to each rules processor registered with server.rules().

Default value: false (security headers disabled).

Sets common security headers. To enable, set security to true or to an object with the following options:

  • hsts - controls the 'Strict-Transport-Security' header, where:

    • true - the header will be set to max-age=15768000. This is the default value.

    • a number - the maxAge parameter will be set to the provided value.

    • an object with the following fields:

      • maxAge - the max-age portion of the header, as a number. Default is 15768000.
      • includeSubDomains - a boolean specifying whether to add the includeSubDomains flag to the header.
      • preload - a boolean specifying whether to add the 'preload' flag (used to submit domains inclusion in Chrome's HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) preload list) to the header.
  • xframe - controls the 'X-Frame-Options' header, where:

    • true - the header will be set to 'DENY'. This is the default value.

    • 'deny' - the headers will be set to 'DENY'.

    • 'sameorigin' - the headers will be set to 'SAMEORIGIN'.

    • an object for specifying the 'allow-from' rule, where:

      • rule - one of:
        • 'deny'
        • 'sameorigin'
        • 'allow-from'
      • source - when rule is 'allow-from' this is used to form the rest of the header, otherwise this field is ignored. If rule is 'allow-from' but source is unset, the rule will be automatically changed to 'sameorigin'.
  • xss - controls the 'X-XSS-Protection' header, where:

    • 'disable' - the header will be set to '0'. This is the default value.
    • 'enable' - the header will be set to '1; mode=block'.
    • false - the header will be omitted.

    Note: when enabled, this setting can create a security vulnerabilities in versions of Internet Explorer below 8, unpatched versions of IE8, and browsers that employ an XSS filter/auditor. See here, here, and here for more information.

  • noOpen - boolean controlling the 'X-Download-Options' header for Internet Explorer, preventing downloads from executing in your context. Defaults to true setting the header to 'noopen'.

  • noSniff - boolean controlling the 'X-Content-Type-Options' header. Defaults to true setting the header to its only and default option, 'nosniff'.

  • referrer - controls the 'Referrer-Policy' header, which has the following possible values.

    • false - the 'Referrer-Policy' header will not be sent to clients with responses. This is the default value.
    • '' - instructs clients that the Referrer-Policy will be defined elsewhere, such as in a meta html tag.
    • 'no-referrer' - instructs clients to never include the referrer header when making requests.
    • 'no-referrer-when-downgrade' - instructs clients to never include the referrer when navigating from HTTPS to HTTP.
    • 'same-origin' - instructs clients to only include the referrer on the current site origin.
    • 'origin' - instructs clients to include the referrer but strip off path information so that the value is the current origin only.
    • 'strict-origin' - same as 'origin' but instructs clients to omit the referrer header when going from HTTPS to HTTP.
    • 'origin-when-cross-origin' - instructs clients to include the full path in the referrer header for same-origin requests but only the origin components of the URL are included for cross origin requests.
    • 'strict-origin-when-cross-origin' - same as 'origin-when-cross-origin' but the client is instructed to omit the referrer when going from HTTPS to HTTP.
    • 'unsafe-url' - instructs the client to always include the referrer with the full URL.

Default value: { parse: true, failAction: 'error' }.

HTTP state management (cookies) allows the server to store information on the client which is sent back to the server with every request (as defined in RFC 6265). state supports the following options:

  • parse - determines if incoming 'Cookie' headers are parsed and stored in the request.state object.

  • failAction - A failAction value which determines how to handle cookie parsing errors. Defaults to 'error' (return a Bad Request (400) error response).

Default value: none.

Route tags used for generating documentation (array of strings).

This setting is not available when setting server route defaults using server.options.routes.

Default value: { server: false }.

Timeouts for processing durations.

Default value: false.

Response timeout in milliseconds. Sets the maximum time allowed for the server to respond to an incoming request before giving up and responding with a Service Unavailable (503) error response.

Default value: none (use node default of 2 minutes).

By default, node sockets automatically timeout after 2 minutes. Use this option to override this behavior. Set to false to disable socket timeouts.

Default value: { headers: true, params: true, query: true, payload: true, state: true, failAction: 'error' }.

Request input validation rules for various request components.

Default value: none.

An optional object with error fields copied into every validation error response.

Default value: 'error' (return a Bad Request (400) error response).

A failAction value which determines how to handle failed validations. When set to a function, the err argument includes the type of validation error under err.output.payload.validation.source. The default error that would otherwise have been logged or returned can be accessed under err.data.defaultError.

Default value: true (no validation).

Validation rules for incoming request headers:

  • true - any headers allowed (no validation performed).

  • a joi validation object.

  • a validation function using the signature async function(value, options) where:

Note that all header field names must be in lowercase to match the headers normalized by node.

Default value: none.

An options object passed to the joi rules or the custom validation methods. Used for setting global options such as stripUnknown or abortEarly.

If a custom validation function (see headers, params, query, or payload above) is defined then options can an arbitrary object that will be passed to this function as the second parameter.

The values of the other inputs (i.e. headers, query, params, payload, state, app, and auth) are added to the options object under the validation context (accessible in rules as Joi.ref('$query.key')).

Note that validation is performed in order (i.e. headers, params, query, and payload) and if type casting is used (e.g. converting a string to a number), the value of inputs not yet validated will reflect the raw, unvalidated and unmodified values.

If the validation rules for headers, params, query, and payload are defined at both the server routes level and at the route level, the individual route settings override the routes defaults (the rules are not merged).

Default value: true (no validation).

Validation rules for incoming request path parameters, after matching the path against the route, extracting any parameters, and storing them in request.params, where:

  • true - any path parameter value allowed (no validation performed).

  • a joi validation object.

  • a validation function using the signature async function(value, options) where:

    • value - the request.params object containing the request path parameters.
    • options - options.
    • if a value is returned, the value is used as the new request.params value and the original value is stored in request.orig.params. Otherwise, the path parameters are left unchanged. If an error is thrown, the error is handled according to failAction.

Note that failing to match the validation rules to the route path parameters definition will cause all requests to fail.

Default value: true (no validation).

Validation rules for incoming request payload (request body), where:

  • true - any payload allowed (no validation performed).

  • false - no payload allowed.

  • a joi validation object.

    • Note that empty payloads are represented by a null value. If a validation schema is provided and empty payload are allowed, the schema must be explicitly defined by setting the rule to a joi schema with null allowed (e.g. Joi.object({ /* keys here */ }).allow(null)).
  • a validation function using the signature async function(value, options) where:

Note that validating large payloads and modifying them will cause memory duplication of the payload (since the original is kept), as well as the significant performance cost of validating large amounts of data.

Default value: true (no validation).

Validation rules for incoming request URI query component (the key-value part of the URI between '?' and '#'). The query is parsed into its individual key-value pairs, decoded, and stored in request.query prior to validation. Where:

  • true - any query parameter value allowed (no validation performed).

  • false - no query parameter value allowed.

  • a joi validation object.

  • a validation function using the signature async function(value, options) where:

    • value - the request.query object containing the request query parameters.
    • options - options.
    • if a value is returned, the value is used as the new request.query value and the original value is stored in request.orig.query. Otherwise, the query parameters are left unchanged. If an error is thrown, the error is handled according to failAction.

Note that changes to the query parameters will not be reflected in request.url.

Default value: true (no validation).

Validation rules for incoming cookies. The cookie header is parsed and decoded into the request.state prior to validation. Where:

  • true - any cookie value allowed (no validation performed).

  • false - no cookies allowed.

  • a joi validation object.

  • a validation function using the signature async function(value, options) where:

    • value - the request.state object containing all parsed cookie values.
    • options - options.
    • if a value is returned, the value is used as the new request.state value and the original value is stored in request.orig.state. Otherwise, the cookie values are left unchanged. If an error is thrown, the error is handled according to failAction.

Default value: null (no default validator).

Sets a server validation module used to compile raw validation rules into validation schemas (e.g. joi).

Note: the validator is only used when validation rules are not pre-compiled schemas. When a validation rules is a function or schema object, the rule is used as-is and the validator is not used.

Request lifecycle

Each incoming request passes through the request lifecycle. The specific steps vary based on the server and route configurations, but the order in which the applicable steps are executed is always the same. The following is the complete list of steps a request can go through:

  • onRequest

    • always called when onRequest extensions exist.
    • the request path and method can be modified via the request.setUrl() and request.setMethod() methods. Changes to the request path or method will impact how the request is routed and can be used for rewrite rules.
    • request.payload is undefined and can be overridden with any non-undefined value to bypass payload processing.
    • request.route is unassigned.
    • request.url can be null if the incoming request path is invalid.
    • request.path can be an invalid path.
  • Route lookup

    • lookup based on request.path and request.method.
    • skips to onPreResponse if no route is found or if the path violates the HTTP specification.
  • Cookies processing

  • onPreAuth

    • called regardless if authentication is performed.
  • Authentication

    • based on the route auth option.
  • Payload processing

  • Payload authentication

    • based on the route auth option.
  • onCredentials

    • called only if authentication is performed.
  • Authorization

    • based on the route authentication access option.
  • onPostAuth

    • called regardless if authentication is performed.
  • Headers validation

  • Path parameters validation

  • Query validation

  • Payload validation

  • State validation

  • onPreHandler

  • Pre-handler methods

    • based on the route pre option.
    • error handling based on each pre-handler method's failAction setting.
  • Route handler

  • onPostHandler

    • the response contained in request.response may be modified (but not assigned a new value). To return a different response type (for example, replace an error with an HTML response), return a new response value.
  • Response validation

  • onPreResponse

    • always called, unless the request is aborted.
    • the response contained in request.response may be modified (but not assigned a new value). To return a different response type (for example, replace an error with an HTML response), return a new response value. Note that any errors generated will not be passed back to onPreResponse to prevent an infinite loop.
  • Response transmission

  • Finalize request

    • emits 'response' event.
  • onPostResponse

    • return value is ignored since the response is already set.
    • emits a 'request' event on the 'error' channel if an error is returned.
    • all extension handlers are executed even if some error.
    • note that since the handlers are executed in serial (each is awaited), care must be taken to avoid blocking execution if other extension handlers expect to be called immediately when the response is sent. If an onPostResponse handler is performing IO, it should defer that activity to another tick and return immediately (either without a return value or without a promise that is solve to resolve).

Lifecycle methods

Lifecycle methods are the interface between the framework and the application. Many of the request lifecycle steps: extensions, authentication, handlers, pre-handler methods, and failAction function values are lifecyle methods provided by the developer and executed by the framework.

Each lifecycle method is a function with the signature await function(request, h, [err]) where:

Each lifecycle method must return a value or a promise that resolves into a value. If a lifecycle method returns without a value or resolves to an undefined value, an Internal Server Error (500) error response is sent.

The return value must be one of:

  • Plain value:
    • null
    • string
    • number
    • boolean
  • Buffer object
  • Error object
    • plain Error.
    • a Boom object.
  • Stream object
    • must be compatible with the "streams2" API and not be in objectMode.
    • if the stream object has a statusCode property, that status code will be used as the default response code based on the passThrough option.
    • if the stream object has a headers property, the headers will be included in the response based on the passThrough option.
    • if the stream object has a function property setCompressor(compressor) and the response passes through a compressor, a reference to the compressor stream will be passed to the response stream via this method.
  • any object or array
    • must not include circular references.
  • a toolkit signal:
    • h.abandon - abort processing the request.
    • h.close - abort processing the request and call end() to ensure the response is closed.
    • h.continue - continue processing the request lifecycle without changing the response.
  • a toolkit method response:
  • a promise object that resolve to any of the above values

Any error thrown by a lifecycle method will be used as the response object. While errors and valid values can be returned, it is recommended to throw errors. Throwing non-error values will generate a Bad Implementation (500) error response.

const handler = function (request, h) {

    if (request.query.forbidden) {
        throw Boom.badRequest();
    }

    return 'success';
};

If the route has a bind option or server.bind() was called, the lifecycle method will be bound to the provided context via this as well as accessible via h.context.

Lifecycle workflow

The flow between each lifecycle step depends on the value returned by each lifecycle method as follows:

  • an error:

    • the lifecycle skips to the Response validation step.
    • if returned by the onRequest step it skips to the onPreResponse step.
    • if returned by the Response validation step it skips to the onPreResponse step.
    • if returned by the onPreResponse step it skips to the Response transmission step.
  • an abort signal (h.abandon or h.close):

    • skips to the Finalize request step.
  • a h.continue signal:

    • continues processing the request lifecycle without changing the request response.
    • cannot be used by the authenticate() scheme method.
  • a takeover response:

    • overrides the request response with the provided value and skips to the Response validation step.
    • if returned by the Response validation step it skips to the onPreResponse step.
    • if returned by the onPreResponse step it skips to the Response transmission step.
  • any other response:

    • overrides the request response with the provided value and continues processing the request lifecycle.
    • cannot be returned from any step prior to the Pre-handler methods step.

The authenticate() method has access to two additional return values: - h.authenticated() - indicate request authenticated successfully. - h.unauthenticated() - indicate request failed to authenticate.

Note that these rules apply somewhat differently when used in a pre-handler method.

Takeover response

A takeover response is a response object on which response.takeover() was called to signal that the lifecycle method return value should be set as the response and skip to immediately validate and trasmit the value, bypassing other lifecycle steps.

Various configuration options allows defining how errors are handled. For example, when invalid payload is received or malformed cookie, instead of returning an error, the framework can be configured to perform another action. When supported the failAction option supports the following values:

  • 'error' - return the error object as the response.

  • 'log' - report the error but continue processing the request.

  • 'ignore' - take no action and continue processing the request.

  • a lifecycle method with the signature async function(request, h, err) where:

Errors

hapi uses the boom error library for all its internal error generation. boom provides an expressive interface to return HTTP errors. Any error thrown by a lifecycle method is converted into a boom object and defaults to status code 500 if the error is not already a boom object.

When the error is sent back to the client, the response contains a JSON object with the statusCode, error, and message keys.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const Boom = require('@hapi/boom');

const server = Hapi.server();

server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/badRequest',
    handler: function (request, h) {

        throw Boom.badRequest('Unsupported parameter');     // 400
    }
});

server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/internal',
    handler: function (request, h) {

        throw new Error('unexpect error');                  // 500
    }
});
Error transformation

Errors can be customized by changing their output content. The boom error object includes the following properties:

  • isBoom - if true, indicates this is a Boom object instance.

  • message - the error message.

  • output - the formatted response. Can be directly manipulated after object construction to return a custom error response. Allowed root keys:

    • statusCode - the HTTP status code (typically 4xx or 5xx).

    • headers - an object containing any HTTP headers where each key is a header name and value is the header content.

    • payload - the formatted object used as the response payload. Can be directly manipulated but any changes will be lost if reformat() is called. Any content allowed and by default includes the following content:

      • statusCode - the HTTP status code, derived from error.output.statusCode.

      • error - the HTTP status message (e.g. 'Bad Request', 'Internal Server Error') derived from statusCode.

      • message - the error message derived from error.message.

  • inherited Error properties.

It also supports the following method:

  • reformat() - rebuilds error.output using the other object properties.
const Boom = require('@hapi/boom');

const handler = function (request, h) {

    const error = Boom.badRequest('Cannot feed after midnight');
    error.output.statusCode = 499;    // Assign a custom error code
    error.reformat();
    error.output.payload.custom = 'abc_123'; // Add custom key
    throw error;
});

When a different error representation is desired, such as an HTML page or a different payload format, the 'onPreResponse' extension point may be used to identify errors and replace them with a different response object, as in this example using Vision's .view() response toolkit property.

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const Vision = require('@hapi/vision');

const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });
server.register(Vision, (err) => {
    server.views({
        engines: {
            html: require('handlebars')
        }
    });
});

const preResponse = function (request, h) {

    const response = request.response;
    if (!response.isBoom) {
        return h.continue;
    }

    // Replace error with friendly HTML

      const error = response;
      const ctx = {
          message: (error.output.statusCode === 404 ? 'page not found' : 'something went wrong')
      };

      return h.view('error', ctx).code(error.output.statusCode);
};

server.ext('onPreResponse', preResponse);

Response Toolkit

Access: read only.

The response toolkit is a collection of properties and utilities passed to every lifecycle method. It is somewhat hard to define as it provides both utilities for manipulating responses as well as other information. Since the toolkit is passed as a function argument, developers can name it whatever they want. For the purpose of this document the h notation is used. It is named in the spirit of the RethinkDB r method, with h for hapi.

Toolkit properties

Access: read only.

A response symbol. When returned by a lifecycle method, the request lifecycle skips to the finalizing step without further interaction with the node response stream. It is the developer's responsibility to write and end the response directly via request.raw.res.

Access: read only.

A response symbol. When returned by a lifecycle method, the request lifecycle skips to the finalizing step after calling request.raw.res.end()) to close the node response stream.

Access: read / write (will impact the shared context if the object is modified).

A response symbol. Provides access to the route or server context set via the route bind option or server.bind().

Access: read only.

A response symbol. When returned by a lifecycle method, the request lifecycle continues without changing the response.

Access: read only.

The server realm associated with the matching route. Defaults to the root server realm in the onRequest step.

Access: read only and public request interface.

The [request] object. This is a duplication of the request lifecycle method argument used by toolkit decorations to access the current request.

Used by the [authentication] method to pass back valid credentials where:

  • data - an object with:

    • credentials - (required) object representing the authenticated entity.
    • artifacts - (optional) authentication artifacts object specific to the authentication scheme.

Return value: an internal authentication object.

Sets the response 'ETag' and 'Last-Modified' headers and checks for any conditional request headers to decide if the response is going to qualify for an HTTP 304 (Not Modified). If the entity values match the request conditions, h.entity() returns a response object for the lifecycle method to return as its value which will set a 304 response. Otherwise, it sets the provided entity headers and returns undefined. The method arguments are:

  • options - a required configuration object with:
    • etag - the ETag string. Required if modified is not present. Defaults to no header.
    • modified - the Last-Modified header value. Required if etag is not present. Defaults to no header.
    • vary - same as the response.etag() option. Defaults to true.

Return value: - a response object if the response is unmodified. - undefined if the response has changed.

If undefined is returned, the developer must return a valid lifecycle method value. If a response is returned, it should be used as the return value (but may be customize using the response methods).

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

server.route({
    method: 'GET',
    path: '/',
    options: {
        cache: { expiresIn: 5000 },
        handler: function (request, h) {

            const response = h.entity({ etag: 'abc' });
            if (response) {
                response.header('X', 'y');
                return response;
            }

            return 'ok';
        }
    }
});

Redirects the client to the specified uri. Same as calling h.response().redirect(uri).

Returns a response object.

const handler = function (request, h) {

    return h.redirect('http://example.com');
};

Wraps the provided value and returns a response object which allows customizing the response (e.g. setting the HTTP status code, custom headers, etc.), where:

  • value - (optional) return value. Defaults to null.

Returns a response object.

// Detailed notation

const handler = function (request, h) {

    const response = h.response('success');
    response.type('text/plain');
    response.header('X-Custom', 'some-value');
    return response;
};

// Chained notation

const handler = function (request, h) {

    return h.response('success')
        .type('text/plain')
        .header('X-Custom', 'some-value');
};

Sets a response cookie using the same arguments as response.state().

Return value: none.

const ext = function (request, h) {

    h.state('cookie-name', 'value');
    return h.continue;
};

Used by the [authentication] method to indicate authentication failed and pass back the credentials received where:

  • error - (required) the authentication error.
  • data - (optional) an object with:
    • credentials - (required) object representing the authenticated entity.
    • artifacts - (optional) authentication artifacts object specific to the authentication scheme.

The method is used to pass both the authentication error and the credentials. For example, if a request included expired credentials, it allows the method to pass back the user information (combined with a 'try' authentication mode) for error customization.

There is no difference between throwing the error or passing it with the h.unauthenticated() method if no credentials are passed, but it might still be helpful for code clarity.

Clears a response cookie using the same arguments as response.unstate().

const ext = function (request, h) {

    h.unstate('cookie-name');
    return h.continue;
};

Response object

The response object contains the request response value along with various HTTP headers and flags. When a lifecycle method returns a value, the value is wrapped in a response object along with some default flags (e.g. 200 status code). In order to customize a response before it is returned, the h.response() method is provided.

Response properties

Access: read / write.

Default value: {}.

Application-specific state. Provides a safe place to store application data without potential conflicts with the framework. Should not be used by plugins which should use plugins[name].

Access: read.

Default value: none.

Provides a preview of the response HTTP Content-Type header based on the implicit response type, any explicit Content-Type header set, and any content character-set defined. The returned value is only a preview as the content type can change later both internally and by user code (it represents current response state). The value is null if no implicit type can be determined.

Access: read only and the public podium interface.

The response.events object supports the following events:

  • 'peek' - emitted for each chunk of data written back to the client connection. The event method signature is function(chunk, encoding).

  • 'finish' - emitted when the response finished writing but before the client response connection is ended. The event method signature is function ().

const Crypto = require('crypto');
const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const preResponse = function (request, h) {

    const response = request.response;
    if (response.isBoom) {
        return null;
    }

    const hash = Crypto.createHash('sha1');
    response.events.on('peek', (chunk) => {

        hash.update(chunk);
    });

    response.events.once('finish', () => {

        console.log(hash.digest('hex'));
    });

    return h.continue;
};

server.ext('onPreResponse', preResponse);

Access: read only.

Default value: {}.

An object containing the response headers where each key is a header field name and the value is the string header value or array of string.

Note that this is an incomplete list of headers to be included with the response. Additional headers will be added once the response is prepared for transmission.

Access: read / write.

Default value: {}.

Plugin-specific state. Provides a place to store and pass request-level plugin data. plugins is an object where each key is a plugin name and the value is the state.

Access: read only.

Object containing the response handling flags.

Access: read only.

Defaults value: true.

If true and source is a Stream, copies the statusCode and headers properties of the stream object to the outbound response.

Access: read only.

Default value: null (use route defaults).

Override the route json options used when source value requires stringification.

Access: read only.

Default value: null (use route defaults).

If set, overrides the route cache with an expiration value in milliseconds.

Default value: false.

If true, a suffix will be automatically added to the 'ETag' header at transmission time (separated by a '-' character) when the HTTP 'Vary' header is present.

Access: read only.

The raw value returned by the lifecycle method.

Access: read only.

Default value: 200.

The HTTP response status code.

Access: read only.

A string indicating the type of source with available values:

  • 'plain' - a plain response such as string, number, null, or simple object.
  • 'buffer' - a Buffer.
  • 'stream' - a Stream.

Sets the HTTP 'Content-Length' header (to avoid chunked transfer encoding) where:

  • length - the header value. Must match the actual payload size.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets the 'Content-Type' HTTP header 'charset' property where:

  • charset - the charset property value. When charset value is falsy, it will prevent hapi from using its default charset setting.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets the HTTP status code where:

  • statusCode - the HTTP status code (e.g. 200).

Return value: the current response object.

Sets the HTTP status message where:

  • httpMessage - the HTTP status message (e.g. 'Ok' for status code 200).

Return value: the current response object.

Sets the HTTP 'content-encoding' header where:

  • encoding - the header value string.

Return value: the current response object.

Note that setting content encoding via this method does not set a 'vary' HTTP header with 'accept-encoding' value. To vary the response, use the response.header() method instead.

Sets the HTTP status code to Created (201) and the HTTP 'Location' header where:

  • uri - an absolute or relative URI used as the 'Location' header value.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets the string encoding scheme used to serial data into the HTTP payload where:

Return value: the current response object.

Sets the representation entity tag where:

  • tag - the entity tag string without the double-quote.

  • options - (optional) settings where:

    • weak - if true, the tag will be prefixed with the 'W/' weak signifier. Weak tags will fail to match identical tags for the purpose of determining 304 response status. Defaults to false.

    • vary - if true and content encoding is set or applied to the response (e.g 'gzip' or 'deflate'), the encoding name will be automatically added to the tag at transmission time (separated by a '-' character). Ignored when weak is true. Defaults to true.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets an HTTP header where:

  • name - the header name.

  • value - the header value.

  • options - (optional) object where:

    • append - if true, the value is appended to any existing header value using separator. Defaults to false.

    • separator - string used as separator when appending to an existing value. Defaults to ','.

    • override - if false, the header value is not set if an existing value present. Defaults to true.

    • duplicate - if false, the header value is not modified if the provided value is already included. Does not apply when append is false or if the name is 'set-cookie'. Defaults to true.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets the HTTP 'Location' header where:

  • uri - an absolute or relative URI used as the 'Location' header value.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets an HTTP redirection response (302) and decorates the response with additional methods, where:

  • uri - an absolute or relative URI used to redirect the client to another resource.

Return value: the current response object.

Decorates the response object with the response.temporary(), response.permanent(), and response.rewritable() methods to easily change the default redirection code (302).

Permanent Temporary
Rewritable 301 302
Non-rewritable 308 307

Sets the JSON.stringify() replacer argument where:

  • method - the replacer function or array. Defaults to none.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets the JSON.stringify() space argument where:

  • count - the number of spaces to indent nested object keys. Defaults to no indentation.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets an HTTP cookie where:

  • name - the cookie name.

  • value - the cookie value. If no options.encoding is defined, must be a string. See server.state() for supported encoding values.

  • options - (optional) configuration. If the state was previously registered with the server using server.state(), the specified keys in options are merged with the default server definition.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets a string suffix when the response is process via JSON.stringify() where:

  • suffix - the string suffix.

Return value: the current response object.

Overrides the default route cache expiration rule for this response instance where:

  • msec - the time-to-live value in milliseconds.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets the HTTP 'Content-Type' header where:

  • mimeType - is the mime type.

Return value: the current response object.

Should only be used to override the built-in default for each response type.

Clears the HTTP cookie by setting an expired value where:

  • name - the cookie name.
  • options - (optional) configuration for expiring cookie. If the state was previously registered with the server using server.state(), the specified options are merged with the server definition.

Return value: the current response object.

Adds the provided header to the list of inputs affected the response generation via the HTTP 'Vary' header where:

  • header - the HTTP request header name.

Return value: the current response object.

Marks the response object as a takeover response.

Return value: the current response object.

Sets the status code to 302 or 307 (based on the response.rewritable() setting) where:

  • isTemporary - if false, sets status to permanent. Defaults to true.

Return value: the current response object.

Only available after calling the response.redirect() method.

Sets the status code to 301 or 308 (based on the response.rewritable() setting) where:

  • isPermanent - if false, sets status to temporary. Defaults to true.

Return value: the current response object.

Only available after calling the response.redirect() method.

Sets the status code to 301/302 for rewritable (allows changing the request method from 'POST' to 'GET') or 307/308 for non-rewritable (does not allow changing the request method from 'POST' to 'GET'). Exact code based on the response.temporary() or response.permanent() setting. Arguments:

  • isRewritable - if false, sets to non-rewritable. Defaults to true.

Return value: the current response object.

Only available after calling the response.redirect() method.

Request

The request object is created internally for each incoming request. It is not the same object received from the node HTTP server callback (which is available via request.raw.req). The request properties change throughout the request lifecycle.

Request properties

Access: read / write.

Application-specific state. Provides a safe place to store application data without potential conflicts with the framework. Should not be used by plugins which should use plugins[name].

Access: read only.

Authentication information:

  • artifacts - an artifact object received from the authentication strategy and used in authentication-related actions.

  • credentials - the credential object received during the authentication process. The presence of an object does not mean successful authentication.

  • error - the authentication error if failed and mode set to 'try'.

  • isAuthenticated - true if the request has been successfully authenticated, otherwise false.

  • isAuthorized - true is the request has been successfully authorized against the route authentication access configuration. If the route has not access rules defined or if the request failed authorization, set to false.

  • isInjected - true if the request has been authenticated via the server.inject() auth option, otherwise undefined.

  • mode - the route authentication mode.

  • strategy - the name of the strategy used.

Access: read only and the public podium interface.

The request.events supports the following events:

  • 'peek' - emitted for each chunk of payload data read from the client connection. The event method signature is function(chunk, encoding).

  • 'finish' - emitted when the request payload finished reading. The event method signature is function ().

  • 'disconnect' - emitted when a request errors or aborts unexpectedly.

const Crypto = require('crypto');
const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const onRequest = function (request, h) {

    const hash = Crypto.createHash('sha1');
    request.events.on('peek', (chunk) => {

        hash.update(chunk);
    });

    request.events.once('finish', () => {

        console.log(hash.digest('hex'));
    });

    request.events.once('disconnect', () => {

        console.error('request aborted');
    });

    return h.continue;
};

server.ext('onRequest', onRequest);

Access: read only.

The raw request headers (references request.raw.req.headers).

Access: read only.

Request information:

  • acceptEncoding - the request preferred encoding.

  • completed - request processing completion timestamp (0 is still processing).

  • cors - request CORS information (available only after the 'onRequest' extension point as CORS is configured per-route and no routing decisions are made at that point in the request lifecycle), where:

    • isOriginMatch - true if the request 'Origin' header matches the configured CORS restrictions. Set to false if no 'Origin' header is found or if it does not match.
  • host - content of the HTTP 'Host' header (e.g. 'example.com:8080').

  • hostname - the hostname part of the 'Host' header (e.g. 'example.com').

  • id - a unique request identifier (using the format '{now}:{server.info.id}:{5 digits counter}').

  • received - request reception timestamp.

  • referrer - content of the HTTP 'Referrer' (or 'Referer') header.

  • remoteAddress - remote client IP address.

  • remotePort - remote client port.

  • responded - request response timestamp (0 is not responded yet or response failed when completed is set).

Note that the request.info object is not meant to be modified.

Access: read only.

true if the request was created via server.inject(), and false otherwise.

Access: read only.

An array containing the logged request events.

Note that this array will be empty if route log.collect is set to false.

Access: read only.

The request method in lower case (e.g. 'get', 'post').

Access: read only.

The parsed content-type header. Only available when payload parsing enabled and no payload error occurred.

Access: read only.

An object containing the values of params, query, payload and state before any validation modifications made. Only set when input validation is performed.

Access: read only.

An object where each key is a path parameter name with matching value as described in Path parameters.

Access: read only.

An array containing all the path params values in the order they appeared in the path.

Access: read only.

The request URI's pathname component.

Access: read only / write in 'onRequest' extension method.

The request payload based on the route payload.output and payload.parse settings. Set to undefined in 'onRequest' extension methods and can be overridden to any non-undefined value to bypass payload processing.

Access: read / write.

Plugin-specific state. Provides a place to store and pass request-level plugin data. The plugins is an object where each key is a plugin name and the value is the state.

Access: read only.

An object where each key is the name assigned by a route pre-handler methods function. The values are the raw values provided to the continuation function as argument. For the wrapped response object, use responses.

Access: read / write (see limitations below).

The response object when set. The object can be modified but must not be assigned another object. To replace the response with another from within an extension point, return a new response value. Contains an error when a request terminates prematurely when the client disconnects.

Access: read only.

Same as pre but represented as the response object created by the pre method.

Access: read only.

An object where each key is a query parameter name and each matching value is the parameter value or an array of values if a parameter repeats. Can be modified indirectly via request.setUrl.

Access: read only.

An object containing the Node HTTP server objects. Direct interaction with these raw objects is not recommended.

  • req - the node request object.
  • res - the node response object.

Access: read only.

The request route information object, where:

  • method - the route HTTP method.
  • path - the route path.
  • vhost - the route vhost option if configured.
  • realm - the active realm associated with the route.
  • settings - the route options object with all defaults applied.
  • fingerprint - the route internal normalized string representing the normalized path.

Access: read only and the public server interface.

The server object.

Access: read only.

An object containing parsed HTTP state information (cookies) where each key is the cookie name and value is the matching cookie content after processing using any registered cookie definition.

Access: read only.

The parsed request URI.

Returns a response which you can pass to h.response() where:

  • source - the value to set as the source of h.response(), optional.
  • options - optional object with the following optional properties:
    • variety - a sting name of the response type (e.g. 'file').
    • prepare - a function with the signature async function(response) used to prepare the response after it is returned by a lifecycle method such as setting a file descriptor, where:
      • response - the response object being prepared.
      • must return the prepared response object (response).
      • may throw an error which is used as the prepared response.
    • marshal - a function with the signature async function(response) used to prepare the response for transmission to the client before it is sent, where:
      • response - the response object being marshaled.
      • must return the prepared value (not as response object) which can be any value accepted by the h.response() value argument.
      • may throw an error which is used as the marshaled value.
    • close - a function with the signature function(response) used to close the resources opened by the response object (e.g. file handlers), where:
      • response - the response object being marshaled.
      • should not throw errors (which are logged but otherwise ignored).

Returns true when the request is active and processing should continue and false when the request terminated early or completed its lifecycle. Useful when request processing is a resource-intensive operation and should be terminated early if the request is no longer active (e.g. client disconnected or aborted early).

const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

server.route({
    method: 'POST',
    path: '/worker',
    handler: function (request, h) {

        // Do some work...

        // Check if request is still active
        if (!request.active()) {
            return h.close;
        }

        // Do some more work...

        return null;
    }
});

Logs request-specific events. When called, the server emits a 'request' event on the 'app' channel which can be used by other listeners or plugins. The arguments are:

  • tags - a string or an array of strings (e.g. ['error', 'database', 'read']) used to identify the event. Tags are used instead of log levels and provide a much more expressive mechanism for describing and filtering events.
  • data - (optional) an message string or object with the application data being logged. If data is a function, the function signature is function() and it called once to generate (return value) the actual data emitted to the listeners.
const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80, routes: { log: { collect: true } } });

server.events.on({ name: 'request', channels: 'app' }, (request, event, tags) => {

    if (tags.error) {
        console.log(event);
    }
});

const handler = function (request, h) {

    request.log(['test', 'error'], 'Test event');
    return null;
};

Note that any logs generated by the server internally will be emitted using the 'request' event on the 'internal' channel.

server.events.on({ name: 'request', channels: 'internal' }, (request, event, tags) => {

    console.log(event);
});

Validates a request against the route's authentication access configuration, where:

Return value: true if the request would have passed the route's access requirements.

Note that the route's authentication mode and strategies are ignored. The only match is made between the request.auth.credentials scope and entity information and the route access configuration.

If the route uses dynamic scopes, the scopes are constructed against the request.query, request.params, request.payload, and request.auth.credentials which may or may not match between the route and the request's route. If this method is called using a request that has not been authenticated (yet or not at all), it will return false if the route requires any authentication.

Changes the request method before the router begins processing the request where:

  • method - is the request HTTP method (e.g. 'GET').
const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const onRequest = function (request, h) {

    // Change all requests to 'GET'
    request.setMethod('GET');
    return h.continue;
};

server.ext('onRequest', onRequest);

Can only be called from an 'onRequest' extension method.

Changes the request URI before the router begins processing the request where:

  • url - the new request URI. url can be a string or an instance of Url.URL in which case url.href is used.
  • stripTrailingSlash - if true, strip the trailing slash from the path. Defaults to false.
const Hapi = require('@hapi/hapi');
const server = Hapi.server({ port: 80 });

const onRequest = function (request, h) {

    // Change all requests to '/test'
    request.setUrl('/test');
    return h.continue;
};

server.ext('onRequest', onRequest);

Can only be called from an 'onRequest' extension method.

Plugins

Plugins provide a way to organize application code by splitting the server logic into smaller components. Each plugin can manipulate the server through the standard server interface, but with the added ability to sandbox certain properties. For example, setting a file path in one plugin doesn't affect the file path set in another plugin.

A plugin is an object with the following properties:

  • register - (required) the registration function with the signature async function(server, options) where:

    • server - the server object with a plugin-specific server.realm.
    • options - any options passed to the plugin during registration via server.register().
  • name - (required) the plugin name string. The name is used as a unique key. Published plugins (e.g. published in the npm registry) should use the same name as the name field in their 'package.json' file. Names must be unique within each application.

  • version - (optional) plugin version string. The version is only used informatively to enable other plugins to find out the versions loaded. The version should be the same as the one specified in the plugin's 'package.json' file.

  • multiple - (optional) if true, allows the plugin to be registered multiple times with the same server. Defaults to false.

  • dependencies - (optional) a string or an array of strings indicating a plugin dependency. Same as setting dependencies via server.dependency().

  • requirements - (optional) object declaring the plugin supported semver range for:

  • once - (optional) if true, will only register the plugin once per server. If set, overrides the once option passed to server.register(). Defaults to no override.

const plugin = {
    name: 'test',
    version: '1.0.0',
    register: function (server, options) {

        server.route({
            method: 'GET',
            path: '/test',
            handler: function (request, h) {

                return 'ok';
            }
        });
    }
};

Alternatively, the name and version can be included via the pkg property containing the 'package.json' file for the module which already has the name and version included:

const plugin = {
    pkg: require('./package.json'),
    register: function (server, options) {

        server.route({
            method: 'GET',
            path: '/test',
            handler: function (request, h) {

                return 'ok';
            }
        });
    }
};