A better fetch API. Works on node, browser, and workers.
Important
You are on v2 (alpha) development branch. See v1 for v1 docs.
🚀 Quick Start
Install:
Import:
import { ofetch } from "ofetch";
✔️ Parsing Response
ofetch smartly parse JSON responses.
const { users } = await ofetch("/api/users");
For binary content types, ofetch will instead return a Blob object.
You can optionally provide a different parser than JSON.parse, or specify blob, arrayBuffer, text or stream to force parsing the body with the respective FetchResponse method.
// Return text as is await ofetch("/movie?lang=en", { parseResponse: (txt) => txt }); // Get the blob version of the response await ofetch("/api/generate-image", { responseType: "blob" }); // Get the stream version of the response await ofetch("/api/generate-image", { responseType: "stream" });
✔️ JSON Body
If an object or a class with a .toJSON() method is passed to the body option, ofetch automatically stringifies it.
ofetch utilizes JSON.stringify() to convert the passed object. Classes without a .toJSON() method have to be converted into a string value in advance before being passed to the body option.
For PUT, PATCH, and POST request methods, when a string or object body is set, ofetch adds the default "content-type": "application/json" and accept: "application/json" headers (which you can always override).
Additionally, ofetch supports binary responses with Buffer, ReadableStream, Stream, and compatible body types. ofetch will automatically set the duplex: "half" option for streaming support!
Example:
const { users } = await ofetch("/api/users", { method: "POST", body: { some: "json" }, });
✔️ Handling Errors
ofetch Automatically throws errors when response.ok is false with a friendly error message and compact stack (hiding internals).
A parsed error body is available with error.data. You may also use FetchError type.
await ofetch("https://google.com/404"); // FetchError: [GET] "https://google/404": 404 Not Found // at async main (/project/playground.ts:4:3)
To catch error response:
await ofetch("/url").catch((error) => error.data);
To bypass status error catching you can set ignoreResponseError option:
await ofetch("/url", { ignoreResponseError: true });
✔️ Auto Retry
ofetch Automatically retries the request if an error happens and if the response status code is included in retryStatusCodes list:
Retry status codes:
408- Request Timeout409- Conflict425- Too Early (Experimental)429- Too Many Requests500- Internal Server Error502- Bad Gateway503- Service Unavailable504- Gateway Timeout
You can specify the amount of retry and delay between them using retry and retryDelay options and also pass a custom array of codes using retryStatusCodes option.
The default for retry is 1 retry, except for POST, PUT, PATCH, and DELETE methods where ofetch does not retry by default to avoid introducing side effects. If you set a custom value for retry it will always retry for all requests.
The default for retryDelay is 0 ms.
await ofetch("http://google.com/404", { retry: 3, retryDelay: 500, // ms retryStatusCodes: [404, 500], // response status codes to retry });
✔️ Timeout
You can specify timeout in milliseconds to automatically abort a request after a timeout (default is disabled).
await ofetch("http://google.com/404", { timeout: 3000, // Timeout after 3 seconds });
✔️ Type Friendly
The response can be type assisted:
const article = await ofetch<Article>(`/api/article/${id}`); // Auto complete working with article.id
✔️ Adding baseURL
By using baseURL option, ofetch prepends it for trailing/leading slashes and query search params for baseURL using ufo:
await ofetch("/config", { baseURL });
✔️ Adding Query Search Params
By using query option (or params as alias), ofetch adds query search params to the URL by preserving the query in the request itself using ufo:
await ofetch("/movie?lang=en", { query: { id: 123 } });
✔️ Interceptors
Providing async interceptors to hook into lifecycle events of ofetch call is possible.
You might want to use ofetch.create to set shared interceptors.
onRequest({ request, options })
onRequest is called as soon as ofetch is called, allowing you to modify options or do simple logging.
await ofetch("/api", { async onRequest({ request, options }) { // Log request console.log("[fetch request]", request, options); // Add `?t=1640125211170` to query search params options.query = options.query || {}; options.query.t = new Date(); }, });
onRequestError({ request, options, error })
onRequestError will be called when the fetch request fails.
await ofetch("/api", { async onRequestError({ request, options, error }) { // Log error console.log("[fetch request error]", request, error); }, });
onResponse({ request, options, response })
onResponse will be called after fetch call and parsing body.
await ofetch("/api", { async onResponse({ request, response, options }) { // Log response console.log("[fetch response]", request, response.status, response.body); }, });
onResponseError({ request, options, response })
onResponseError is the same as onResponse but will be called when fetch happens but response.ok is not true.
await ofetch("/api", { async onResponseError({ request, response, options }) { // Log error console.log( "[fetch response error]", request, response.status, response.body ); }, });
Passing array of interceptors
If necessary, it's also possible to pass an array of function that will be called sequentially.
await ofetch("/api", { onRequest: [ () => { /* Do something */ }, () => { /* Do something else */ }, ], });
✔️ Create fetch with default options
This utility is useful if you need to use common options across several fetch calls.
Note: Defaults will be cloned at one level and inherited. Be careful about nested options like headers.
const apiFetch = ofetch.create({ baseURL: "/api" }); apiFetch("/test"); // Same as ofetch('/test', { baseURL: '/api' })
💡 Adding headers
By using headers option, ofetch adds extra headers in addition to the request default headers:
await ofetch("/movies", { headers: { Accept: "application/json", "Cache-Control": "no-cache", }, });
🍣 Access to Raw Response
If you need to access raw response (for headers, etc), you can use ofetch.raw:
const response = await ofetch.raw("/sushi"); // response._data // response.headers // ...
🌿 Using Native Fetch
As a shortcut, you can use ofetch.native that provides native fetch API
const json = await ofetch.native("/sushi").then((r) => r.json());
📡 SSE
Example: Handle SSE response:
const stream = await ofetch("/sse"); const reader = stream.getReader(); const decoder = new TextDecoder(); while (true) { const { done, value } = await reader.read(); if (done) break; // Here is the chunked text of the SSE response. const text = decoder.decode(value); }
🕵️ Proxy Support
Important
Environment Variables: Bun and Deno respect HTTP_PROXY and HTTPS_PROXY environment variables. Node.js requires setting NODE_USE_ENV_PROXY=1 to enable built-in proxy support.
Node.js
In Node.js (>= 18), you can use the dispatcher option with undici's ProxyAgent.
import { ProxyAgent } from "undici"; const proxyAgent = new ProxyAgent("http://localhost:3128"); await ofetch("https://icanhazip.com", { dispatcher: proxyAgent });
Example: Set proxy globally for all requests:
import { ProxyAgent, setGlobalDispatcher } from "undici"; setGlobalDispatcher(new ProxyAgent("http://localhost:3128"));
Example: Allow self-signed certificates (USE AT YOUR OWN RISK!)
import { Agent } from "undici"; // Note: This makes fetch unsecure against MITM attacks. USE AT YOUR OWN RISK! const unsecureAgent = new Agent({ connect: { rejectUnauthorized: false } }); await ofetch("https://self-signed.example.com/", { dispatcher: unsecureAgent });
Bun and Deno
Bun supports the proxy option:
await ofetch("https://icanhazip.com", { proxy: "http://localhost:3128", });
Deno can also use undici with npm specifiers for programmatic configuration.
💪 Augment FetchOptions interface
You can augment the FetchOptions interface to add custom properties.
// Place this in any `.ts` or `.d.ts` file. // Ensure it's included in the project's tsconfig.json "files". declare module "ofetch" { interface FetchOptions { // Custom properties requiresAuth?: boolean; } } export {};
This lets you pass and use those properties with full type safety throughout ofetch calls.
const myFetch = ofetch.create({ onRequest(context) { // ^? { ..., options: {..., requiresAuth?: boolean }} console.log(context.options.requiresAuth); }, }); myFetch("/foo", { requiresAuth: true });
License
💛 Published under the MIT license.
