http-proxy
nhost
http-proxy | nhost | |
---|---|---|
14 | 88 | |
13,743 | 7,529 | |
0.2% | 0.8% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
1 day ago | 8 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
http-proxy
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Is there a way to accept incoming http but outgoing must be https?
Take a look at https://github.com/http-party/node-http-proxy , specifically their .web() helper
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HTTPS proxy setup with response modification
I have been tasked with writing a proxy server that takes a clients requests and forwards it to a target server (normal proxy stuff). The client and the target are out of my control. The only change in the client is that the its requests to the proxy server instead of the target. Now, what I need to do is modify the response from target because the client expects it in a certain format and the server responds with a different format. I have a working implementation using http-proxy (https://github.com/http-party/node-http-proxy) that works over HTTP . But I need it to work over HTTPS, I can't make much sense of the documentation and I can't find any additional resources on how HTTPS can be implemented. The client-proxy and proxy-target connection both need to be encrypted(HTTPS). I found solutions using different tools but they mostly seem to be encrypted end to end, so the proxy can't read the response data(I need to be able to modify it). Any ideas on how I can do this?
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what's the stack for this application?
What you're describing is a proxy server. If you wanted to use Node.js check out https://github.com/http-party/node-http-proxy. Notice that the examples there just forward the req though which potentially has identifying information like cookies, so you'll need to rework to anonymize. Should be straightforward.
- What libraries should I use to map multiple ports into a single one with node.js?
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GraphQL is now available on Supabase
There's several ways to have a blog path contain a separate setup from the marketing/product routes.
One is to run a reverse proxy on the root domain to pull in separate routes for various services.
https://github.com/http-party/node-http-proxy
You can do rewrites at the server level for the root domain
Or if the app on the root domain can do the routing for you (have done this before with a Rails app)
- Launch HN: Requestly (YC W22) – Network debugging proxy for web and mobile
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Creating and deploying a tiny proxy server on Vercel in 10 minutes
Check the documentation of the http-proxy-middleware library (and of the node-http-proxy library, used under-the-hood) to learn how you can manipulate the proxied request & response.
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How to create a simple forward proxy
Relevant node-http-proxy issue: https://github.com/http-party/node-http-proxy/issues/230
- The history and reasons behind CORS, and how to use it
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Heroku equivalent/alternative to editing local hosts file?
I'm running Node app in Heroku which is using node-http-proxy, and I've given my Heroku app the domain "example.com"
nhost
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Database Review: Top Five Missing Features from Database APIs
Hasura ❌ (technically yes with Nhost)
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the code written during those sudden spurts of inspiration are the backbone of most software development
Only caveat I say is make sure there's something in it for you; if it's 2 AM it better be mostly for self-benefit. I'm busy constructing a monorepo with the latest technology with NX and pnpm and a half dozen other technologies (I recommend checking out http://nhost.io/); at the end I will build whatever I want and maybe make money. It's not done for the good of someone else exclusively that's for sure
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Does an open source 'backend platform' exist for dotnet?
Yeah, I knew of those, I think that's discussed often enough on the dotnet subs. Ory and Zitadel I knew too, but those provide just one thing, and are not native to dotnet. Altough I'll admit, stuff like nhost seem native to typescript but uses go projects under the covers as well.
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You're starting development today, which libraries are you going with?
I'm really digging nhost and apollo-client.
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Is there smth like firebase on-prem?
You can use Nhost (100% open source): https://github.com/nhost/nhost/tree/main/examples/docker-compose
- I created Atomic: Self Hosted Open Source Alternative to Reclaim, Clockwise & Motion
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When are we going to become millionaires?
Backend Frontend Database pick two or even one. Maybe something like this
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nhost.io error , ge.create is not a function
I am trying to use basic authentication of nhost.io .
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Help on designing 'backend' stack to go with NextJs project
If your backend needs aren't super crazy, i would check out https://nhost.io/
- Open Source Firebase Alternative with GraphQL
What are some alternatives?
axios - Promise based HTTP client for the browser and node.js
supabase - The open source Firebase alternative.
node-fetch - A light-weight module that brings the Fetch API to Node.js
Appwrite - Your backend, minus the hassle.
ky-universal - Use Ky in both Node.js and browsers
Hasura - Blazing fast, instant realtime GraphQL APIs on your DB with fine grained access control, also trigger webhooks on database events.
gh-got - Convenience wrapper for Got to interact with the GitHub API
hasura-backend-plus - 🔑Auth and 📦Storage for Hasura. The quickest way to get Auth and Storage working for your next app based on Hasura.
Nock - HTTP server mocking and expectations library for Node.js
apollo-server - 🌍 Spec-compliant and production ready JavaScript GraphQL server that lets you develop in a schema-first way. Built for Express, Connect, Hapi, Koa, and more.
got - 🌐 Human-friendly and powerful HTTP request library for Node.js
Prisma - Next-generation ORM for Node.js & TypeScript | PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, SQL Server, SQLite, MongoDB and CockroachDB