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axios

Promise based HTTP client for the browser and node.js

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Table of Contents

Features

Browser Support

Chrome

Firefox

Safari

Opera

Edge

IE

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Browser Matrixarrow-up-right

Installing

Package manager

Using npm:

Using bower:

Using yarn:

Using pnpm:

Once the package is installed, you can import the library using import or require approach:

You can also use the default export, since the named export is just a re-export from the Axios factory:

If you use require for importing, only default export is available:

For cases where something went wrong when trying to import a module into a custom or legacy environment, you can try importing the module package directly:

CDN

Using jsDelivr CDN (ES5 UMD browser module):

Using unpkg CDN:

Example

Note CommonJS usage In order to gain the TypeScript typings (for intellisense / autocomplete) while using CommonJS imports with require(), use the following approach:

Note async/await is part of ECMAScript 2017 and is not supported in Internet Explorer and older browsers, so use with caution.

Performing a POST request

Performing multiple concurrent requests

axios API

Requests can be made by passing the relevant config to axios.

axios(config)

axios(url[, config])

Request method aliases

For convenience, aliases have been provided for all common request methods.

axios.request(config)

axios.get(url[, config])

axios.delete(url[, config])

axios.head(url[, config])

axios.options(url[, config])

axios.post(url[, data[, config]])

axios.put(url[, data[, config]])

axios.patch(url[, data[, config]])

NOTE

When using the alias methods url, method, and data properties don't need to be specified in config.

Concurrency (Deprecated)

Please use Promise.all to replace the below functions.

Helper functions for dealing with concurrent requests.

axios.all(iterable) axios.spread(callback)

Creating an instance

You can create a new instance of axios with a custom config.

axios.create([config])

Instance methods

The available instance methods are listed below. The specified config will be merged with the instance config.

axios#request(config)

axios#get(url[, config])

axios#delete(url[, config])

axios#head(url[, config])

axios#options(url[, config])

axios#post(url[, data[, config]])

axios#put(url[, data[, config]])

axios#patch(url[, data[, config]])

axios#getUri([config])

Request Config

These are the available config options for making requests. Only the url is required. Requests will default to GET if method is not specified.

Response Schema

The response for a request contains the following information.

When using then, you will receive the response as follows:

When using catch, or passing a rejection callbackarrow-up-right as second parameter of then, the response will be available through the error object as explained in the Handling Errors section.

Config Defaults

You can specify config defaults that will be applied to every request.

Global axios defaults

Custom instance defaults

Config order of precedence

Config will be merged with an order of precedence. The order is library defaults found in lib/defaults.jsarrow-up-right, then defaults property of the instance, and finally config argument for the request. The latter will take precedence over the former. Here's an example.

Interceptors

You can intercept requests or responses before they are handled by then or catch.

If you need to remove an interceptor later you can.

You can also clear all interceptors for requests or responses.

You can add interceptors to a custom instance of axios.

When you add request interceptors, they are presumed to be asynchronous by default. This can cause a delay in the execution of your axios request when the main thread is blocked (a promise is created under the hood for the interceptor and your request gets put on the bottom of the call stack). If your request interceptors are synchronous you can add a flag to the options object that will tell axios to run the code synchronously and avoid any delays in request execution.

If you want to execute a particular interceptor based on a runtime check, you can add a runWhen function to the options object. The interceptor will not be executed if and only if the return of runWhen is false. The function will be called with the config object (don't forget that you can bind your own arguments to it as well.) This can be handy when you have an asynchronous request interceptor that only needs to run at certain times.

Multiple Interceptors

Given you add multiple response interceptors and when the response was fulfilled

  • then each interceptor is executed

  • then they are executed in the order they were added

  • then only the last interceptor's result is returned

  • then every interceptor receives the result of its predecessor

  • and when the fulfillment-interceptor throws

    • then the following fulfillment-interceptor is not called

    • then the following rejection-interceptor is called

    • once caught, another following fulfill-interceptor is called again (just like in a promise chain).

Read the interceptor testsarrow-up-right for seeing all this in code.

Handling Errors

the default behavior is to reject every response that returns with a status code that falls out of the range of 2xx and treat it as an error.

Using the validateStatus config option, you can override the default condition (status >= 200 && status < 300) and define HTTP code(s) that should throw an error.

Using toJSON you get an object with more information about the HTTP error.

Cancellation

AbortController

Starting from v0.22.0 Axios supports AbortController to cancel requests in fetch API way:

CancelToken πŸ‘Ždeprecated

You can also cancel a request using a CancelToken.

The axios cancel token API is based on the withdrawn cancellable promises proposalarrow-up-right.

This API is deprecated since v0.22.0 and shouldn't be used in new projects

You can create a cancel token using the CancelToken.source factory as shown below:

You can also create a cancel token by passing an executor function to the CancelToken constructor:

Note: you can cancel several requests with the same cancel token/abort controller. If a cancellation token is already cancelled at the moment of starting an Axios request, then the request is cancelled immediately, without any attempts to make a real request.

During the transition period, you can use both cancellation APIs, even for the same request:

Using application/x-www-form-urlencoded format

URLSearchParams

By default, axios serializes JavaScript objects to JSON. To send data in the application/x-www-form-urlencoded formatarrow-up-right instead, you can use the URLSearchParamsarrow-up-right API, which is supportedarrow-up-right in the vast majority of browsers,and Nodearrow-up-right starting with v10 (released in 2018).

Query string (Older browsers)

For compatibility with very old browsers, there is a polyfillarrow-up-right available (make sure to polyfill the global environment).

Alternatively, you can encode data using the qsarrow-up-right library:

Or in another way (ES6),

Older Node.js versions

For older Node.js engines, you can use the querystringarrow-up-right module as follows:

You can also use the qsarrow-up-right library.

Note The qs library is preferable if you need to stringify nested objects, as the querystring method has known issuesarrow-up-right with that use case.

πŸ†• Automatic serialization to URLSearchParams

Axios will automatically serialize the data object to urlencoded format if the content-type header is set to "application/x-www-form-urlencoded".

The server will handle it as:

If your backend body-parser (like body-parser of express.js) supports nested objects decoding, you will get the same object on the server-side automatically

Using multipart/form-data format

FormData

To send the data as a multipart/formdata you need to pass a formData instance as a payload. Setting the Content-Type header is not required as Axios guesses it based on the payload type.

In node.js, you can use the form-dataarrow-up-right library as follows:

πŸ†• Automatic serialization to FormData

Starting from v0.27.0, Axios supports automatic object serialization to a FormData object if the request Content-Type header is set to multipart/form-data.

The following request will submit the data in a FormData format (Browser & Node.js):

In the node.js build, the (form-dataarrow-up-right) polyfill is used by default.

You can overload the FormData class by setting the env.FormData config variable, but you probably won't need it in most cases:

Axios FormData serializer supports some special endings to perform the following operations:

  • {} - serialize the value with JSON.stringify

  • [] - unwrap the array-like object as separate fields with the same key

Note unwrap/expand operation will be used by default on arrays and FileList objects

FormData serializer supports additional options via config.formSerializer: object property to handle rare cases:

  • visitor: Function - user-defined visitor function that will be called recursively to serialize the data object to a FormData object by following custom rules.

  • dots: boolean = false - use dot notation instead of brackets to serialize arrays and objects;

  • metaTokens: boolean = true - add the special ending (e.g user{}: '{"name": "John"}') in the FormData key. The back-end body-parser could potentially use this meta-information to automatically parse the value as JSON.

  • indexes: null|false|true = false - controls how indexes will be added to unwrapped keys of flat array-like objects

    • null - don't add brackets (arr: 1, arr: 2, arr: 3)

    • false(default) - add empty brackets (arr[]: 1, arr[]: 2, arr[]: 3)

    • true - add brackets with indexes (arr[0]: 1, arr[1]: 2, arr[2]: 3)

Let's say we have an object like this one:

The following steps will be executed by the Axios serializer internally:

Axios supports the following shortcut methods: postForm, putForm, patchForm which are just the corresponding http methods with the Content-Type header preset to multipart/form-data.

Files Posting

You can easily submit a single file:

or multiple files as multipart/form-data:

FileList object can be passed directly:

All files will be sent with the same field names: files[].

πŸ†• HTML Form Posting (browser)

Pass HTML Form element as a payload to submit it as multipart/form-data content.

FormData and HTMLForm objects can also be posted as JSON by explicitly setting the Content-Type header to application/json:

For example, the Form

will be submitted as the following JSON object:

Sending Blobs/Files as JSON (base64) is not currently supported.

πŸ†• Progress capturing

Axios supports both browser and node environments to capture request upload/download progress.

You can also track stream upload/download progress in node.js:

Note: Capturing FormData upload progress is currently not currently supported in node.js environments.

⚠️ Warning It is recommended to disable redirects by setting maxRedirects: 0 to upload the stream in the node.js environment, as follow-redirects package will buffer the entire stream in RAM without following the "backpressure" algorithm.

πŸ†• Rate limiting

Download and upload rate limits can only be set for the http adapter (node.js):

Semver

Until axios reaches a 1.0 release, breaking changes will be released with a new minor version. For example 0.5.1, and 0.5.4 will have the same API, but 0.6.0 will have breaking changes.

Promises

axios depends on a native ES6 Promise implementation to be supportedarrow-up-right. If your environment doesn't support ES6 Promises, you can polyfillarrow-up-right.

TypeScript

axios includes TypeScriptarrow-up-right definitions and a type guard for axios errors.

Because axios dual publishes with an ESM default export and a CJS module.exports, there are some caveats. The recommended setting is to use "moduleResolution": "node16" (this is implied by "module": "node16"). Note that this requires TypeScript 4.7 or greater. If use ESM, your settings should be fine. If you compile TypeScript to CJS and you can’t use "moduleResolution": "node 16", you have to enable esModuleInterop. If you use TypeScript to type check CJS JavaScript code, your only option is to use "moduleResolution": "node16".

Online one-click setup

You can use Gitpod, an online IDE(which is free for Open Source) for contributing or running the examples online.

Open in Gitpodarrow-up-right

Resources

Credits

axios is heavily inspired by the $http servicearrow-up-right provided in AngularJSarrow-up-right. Ultimately axios is an effort to provide a standalone $http-like service for use outside of AngularJS.

License

MITarrow-up-right

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