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ember-fetch

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HTML5 fetch polyfill from github wrapped and bundled for ember-cli users.

Installation

ember-fetch requries ember-cli 2.13 or above.

Usage

import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import fetch from 'fetch';

export default Route.extend({
  model() {
    return fetch('/my-cool-end-point.json').then(function(response) {
      return response.json();
    });
  }
});

Available imports:

import fetch, { Headers, Request, Response, AbortController } from 'fetch';

Use with TypeScript

To use ember-fetch with TypeScript or enable editor's type support, You can add "fetch": ["node_modules/ember-fetch"] to your tsconfig.json.

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "paths": {
      "fetch": [
        "node_modules/ember-fetch"
      ]
    }
  }
}

Use with Ember Data

ember-data@3.9.2 was released with built-in fetch support, if your ember-data is below 3.9.2, please checkout ember-fetch v7.x.

Use with Fastboot

relative url

ember-fetch uses node-fetch in Fastboot, which doesn't allow relative URL.

url should be an absolute url, such as https://example.com/. A path-relative URL (/file/under/root) or protocol-relative URL (//can-be-http-or-https.com/) will result in a rejected promise.

However, ember-fetch grabs the protocol and host info from fastboot request after the instance-initializes. This allows you to make a relative URL request unless the app is not initialized, e.g. initializers and app.js.

top-level addon

For addon authors, if the addon supports Fastboot mode, ember-fetch should also be listed as a peer dependency. This is because Fastboot only invokes top-level addon's updateFastBootManifest (detail), thus ember-fetch has to be a top-level addon installed by the host app.

Allow native fetch

ember-fetch allows access to native fetch in browser through a build config flag:

// ember-cli-build.js
let app = new EmberAddon(defaults, {
  // Add options here
  'ember-fetch': {
    preferNative: true
  }
});

If set to true, the fetch polyfill will be skipped if native fetch is available, otherwise the polyfilled fetch will be installed during the first pass of the vendor js file.

If set to false, the polyfilled fetch will replace native fetch be there or not.

If all your browser targets support native fetch, and preferNative: true, the polyfill will not be included in the output build. If, for some reason, you still need the polyfill to be included in the bundle, you can set alwaysIncludePolyfill: true.

The way you do import remains same.

Use native promise instead of RSVP

If you do not want to use RSVP, but native Promises, you can specify this build config flag:

// ember-cli-build.js
let app = new EmberAddon(defaults, {
  // Add options here
  'ember-fetch': {
    nativePromise: true
  }
});

Error Handling

A fetch response is successful if response.ok is true, otherwise you can read the status code to determine the bad response type. fetch will only reject with network errors.

ember-fetch provides some utility functions:

import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import fetch from 'fetch';
import {
  isAbortError,
  isServerErrorResponse,
  isUnauthorizedResponse
} from 'ember-fetch/errors';

export default Route.extend({
  model() {
    return fetch('/omg.json')
      .then(function(response) {
        if (response.ok) {
          return response.json();
        } else if (isUnauthorizedResponse(response)) {
          // handle 401 response
        } else if (isServerErrorResponse(response)) {
          // handle 5xx respones
        }
      })
      .catch(function(error) {
        if (isAbortError(error)) {
          // handle aborted network error
        }
        // handle network error
      });
  }
});

Browser Support

Q & A

Does it work with pretender?

What about all the run-loop and promise mixing details?

Why is this wrapper needed?

Won't this wrapper get out-of-sync?