import { Context } from "https://dotland.deno.dev/x/oak@14.2.0/context.ts";
Provides context about the current request and response to middleware
functions, and the current instance being processed is the first argument
provided a {@link Middleware
} function.
Typically this is only used as a type annotation and shouldn't be constructed directly.
Example
import { Application, Context } from "jsr:@oak/oak/";
const app = new Application();
app.use((ctx) => {
// information about the request is here:
ctx.request;
// information about the response is here:
ctx.response;
// the cookie store is here:
ctx.cookies;
});
// Needs a type annotation because it cannot be inferred.
function mw(ctx: Context) {
// process here...
}
app.use(mw);
Constructors
Properties
An object which allows access to cookies, mediating both the request and response.
Is true
if the current connection is upgradeable to a web socket.
Otherwise the value is false
. Use .upgrade()
to upgrade the connection
and return the web socket.
Determines if the request should be responded to. If false
when the
middleware completes processing, the response will not be sent back to the
requestor. Typically this is used if the middleware will take over low
level processing of requests and responses, for example if using web
sockets. This automatically gets set to false
when the context is
upgraded to a web socket via the .upgrade()
method.
The default is true
.
An object which contains information about the response that will be sent when the middleware finishes processing.
If the the current context has been upgraded, then this will be set to
with the current web socket, otherwise it is undefined
.
The object to pass state to front-end views. This can be typed by supplying the generic state argument when creating a new app. For example:
const app = new Application<{ foo: string }>();
Or can be contextually inferred based on setting an initial state object:
const app = new Application({ state: { foo: "bar" } });
On each request/response cycle, the context's state is cloned from the
application state. This means changes to the context's .state
will be
dropped when the request drops, but "defaults" can be applied to the
application's state. Changes to the application's state though won't be
reflected until the next request in the context's state.
Methods
Asserts the condition and if the condition fails, creates an HTTP error
with the provided status (which defaults to 500
). The error status by
default will be set on the .response.status
.
Because of limitation of TypeScript, any assertion type function requires
specific type annotations, so the Context
type should be used
even if it can be inferred from the context.
Example
import { Context, Status } from "jsr:@oak/oak/";
export function mw(ctx: Context) {
const body = ctx.request.body();
ctx.assert(body.type === "json", Status.NotAcceptable);
// process the body and send a response...
}
Asynchronously fulfill a response with a file from the local file system.
If the options.path
is not supplied, the file to be sent will default
to this .request.url.pathname
.
Requires Deno read permission.
Convert the connection to stream events, resolving with an event target
for sending server sent events. Events dispatched on the returned target
will be sent to the client and be available in the client's EventSource
that initiated the connection.
Invoking this will cause the a response to be sent to the client immediately to initialize the stream of events, and therefore any further changes to the response, like headers will not reach the client.
Create and throw an HTTP Error, which can be used to pass status
information which can be caught by other middleware to send more
meaningful error messages back to the client. The passed error status will
be set on the .response.status
by default as well.
Take the current request and upgrade it to a web socket, resolving with
the a web standard WebSocket
object. This will set .respond
to
false
. If the socket cannot be upgraded, this method will throw.