Itty is arguably the smallest (~450 bytes) feature-rich JavaScript router available, while enabling dead-simple API code.
Designed originally for Cloudflare Workers, itty can be used in browsers, service workers, edge functions, or runtimes like Node, Bun, etc.!
- Tiny. ~450 bytes for the Router itself, or ~1.6k for the entire library (>100x smaller than express.js).
- Fully-Typed.
- Shorter, simpler route code than most modern routers.
- Dead-simple middleware - use ours or write your own.
- Supports nested APIs.
- Platform agnostic (based on Fetch API) - use it anywhere, in any environment.
- Parses route params, optional params, wildcards, greedy params, file formats and query strings.
- Extremely extendable/flexible. We leave you in complete control.
Complete API documentation is available at itty.dev/itty-router, or join our Discord channel to chat with community members for quick help!
npm install itty-router
import {
error, // creates error responses
json, // creates JSON responses
Router, // the ~440 byte router itself
withParams, // middleware: puts params directly on the Request
} from 'itty-router'
import { todos } from './external/todos'
// create a new Router
const router = Router()
router
// add some middleware upstream on all routes
.all('*', withParams)
// GET list of todos
.get('/todos', () => todos)
// GET single todo, by ID
.get(
'/todos/:id',
({ id }) => todos.getById(id) || error(404, 'That todo was not found')
)
// 404 for everything else
.all('*', () => error(404))
// Example: Cloudflare Worker module syntax
export default {
fetch: (request, ...args) =>
router
.handle(request, ...args)
.then(json) // send as JSON
.catch(error), // catch errors
}
Itty does a few things very differently from other routers. This allows itty route code to be shorter and more intuitive than most!
In itty, you simply return (anything) to exit the flow. If any handler ever returns a thing, that's what the router.handle
returns. If it doesn't, it's considered middleware, and the next handler is called.
That's it!
// not middleware: any handler that returns (anything at all)
(request) => [1, 4, 5, 1]
// middleware: simply doesn't return
const withUser = (request) => {
request.user = 'Halsey'
}
// a middleware that *might* return
const onlyHalsey = (request) => {
if (request.user !== 'Halsey') {
return error(403, 'Only Halsey is allowed to see this!')
}
}
// uses middleware, then returns something
route.get('/secure', withUser, onlyHalsey,
({ user }) => `Hey, ${user} - welcome back!`
)
We've been stuck in this pattern for over a decade. Almost every router still expects you to build and return a Response... in every single route.
We think you should be able to do that once, at the end. In most modern APIs for instance, we're serving JSON in the majority of our routes. So why handle that more than once?
router
// we can still do it the manual way
.get('/traditional', (request) => json([1, 2, 3]))
// or defer to later
.get('/easy-mode', (request) => [1, 2, 3])
// later, when handling a request
router
.handle(request)
.then(json) // we can turn any non-Response into valid JSON.
itty await
s every handler, looking for a return value. If it gets one, it breaks the flow and returns the value. If it doesn't, it continues processing handlers/routes until it does. This means that every handler can either be synchronous or async - it's all the same.
When paired with the fact that we can simply return raw data and transform it later, this is AWESOME for working with async APIs, database layers, etc. We don't need to transform anything at the route, we can simply return the Promise (to data) itself!
Check this out:
import { myDatabase } from './somewhere'
router
// assumes getItems() returns a Promise to some data
.get('/items', () => myDatabase.getItems())
// later, when handling a request
router
.handle(request)
.then(json) // we can turn any non-Response into valid JSON.
itty only requires one argument - a Request-like object with the following shape: { url, method }
(usually a native Request). Because itty is not opinionated about Response creation, there is not "response" argument built in. Every other argument you pass to route.handle
is given to each handler, in the same order.
Here's an example using Cloudflare Worker arguments:
router
.get('/my-route', (request, environment, context) => {
// we can access anything here that was passed to `router.handle`.
})
// Cloudflare gives us 3 arguments: request, environment, and context.
// Passing them to `route.handle` gives every route handler (above) access to each.
export default {
fetch: (request, env, ctx) => router
.handle(request, env, ctx)
.then(json)
.catch(error)
}
Have a question? Suggestion? Complaint? Want to send a gift basket?
Join us on Discord!
- Fork repo
- Install dev dependencies via
yarn
- Start test runner/dev mode
yarn dev
- Add your code and tests if needed - do NOT remove/alter existing tests
- Commit files
- Submit PR (and fill out the template)
- I'll add you to the credits! :)
These folks are the real heroes, making open source the powerhouse that it is! Help out and get your name added to this list! <3
- @mvasigh - proxy hack wizard behind itty, coding partner in crime, maker of the entire doc site, etc, etc.
- @hunterloftis - router.handle() method now accepts extra arguments and passed them to route functions
- @SupremeTechnopriest - improved TypeScript support and documentation! :D
- @taralx - router internal code-golfing refactor for performance and character savings
- @DrLoopFall - v4.x re-minification
- @taralx - QOL fixes for contributing (dev dep fix and test file consistency) <3
- @technoyes - three kind-of-a-big-deal errors fixed. Imagine the look on my face... thanks man!! :)
- @roojay520 - TS interface fixes
- @jahands - v4.x TS fixes