eolas/Programming_Languages/NodeJS/Http_Module.md
2022-04-23 18:30:04 +01:00

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---
tags:
- Programming_Languages
- backend
- node-js
- node-modules
---
The HTTP Module allows us to create a web server that listens for HTTP requests on a given port. It is therefore perfect for creating backends for client-side JavaScript.
## Creating a server
An HTTP server is another instance of an [event emitter](Events%20module.md#event-emitters). It therefore has all the same methods as the `EventEmitter` class: `on`, `emit`, `addListener` etc. This demonstrates again how much of Node's core functionality is based on event emitters.
*Creating a server*
````js
const http = require('http')
const server = http.createServer() // Create server as emitter
// Register functions to run when listener listener is triggered
server.on('connection', (socket) => {
console.log('new connection...')
})
server.listen(3000)
console.log('Listening on port 3000')
````
This server is functionally equivalent to a generic event emitter:
````js
// Raise an event
const emitter = new EventEmitter('messageLogged')
// Register a listener
emitter.on('messagedLogged', function() {
console.log('The listener was called.')
})
````
Whenever a request is made to this server, it raises an event. We can therefore target it with the `on` method and make it execute a function when requests are made.
If we were to start the server by running the file and we then used a browser to navigate to the port, we would see `new connection` logged every time we refresh the page.
### Sockets and `req, res`
A socket is a generic protocol for client-server communication. Crucially it allows simultaneous communication both ways. The client can contact the server but the server can also contact the client. Our listener function above uses a socket as the callback function but in most cases this is quite low-level, not distinguishing responses from requests. It is more likely that you would initiate a `request, resource` architecture in place of a socket:
````js
const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {
if (req.url === '/'){
res.write('hello')
res.end()
}
})
````
#### Return JSON
Below is an example of using this architecture to return JSON to the client:
````js
const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {
if (req.url === '/products'){
res.write(JSON.stringify(['shoes', 'lipstick', 'cups']))
res.end()
}
})
````
### Express
In reality you would rarely use the `http` module directly to create a server. This is because it is quite low level and each response must be written in a linear fashion as with the two URLs in the previous example. Instead we use Express which is a framework for creating servers and routing that is an abstraction on top of the core HTTP module.
* [Create RESTful API with Express](Create%20RESTful%20API%20with%20Express.md)