HTTP/2 is a major revision of the HTTP network protocol mainly in highlights because it makes our applications faster. Tech giants including Google, Netflix, Twitter already use this protocol.
In this post, I'll be showing how you can utilize spdy
npm package to run loopback applications on this protocol.
Here's what you have to do in your existing app:
Step 1: Install spdy
npm i spdy
Step 2: Configure index.ts
Change your main function in src/index.ts
with this:
import spdy from "spdy";
export async function main(options: ApplicationConfig = {}) {
// specify cert and key file paths for SSL
const serverOptions: spdy.ServerOptions = {
key: fs.readFileSync(
path.join(__dirname, '..', 'keys', 'localhost-privkey.pem'),
),
cert: fs.readFileSync(
path.join(__dirname, '..', 'keys', 'localhost-cert.pem'),
),
};
// setting listenOnStart to false will not start the default httpServer
options.rest.listenOnStart = false;
// Replace YourApplication with your class
const app = new YourApplication(options);
await app.boot();
await app.start();
// create server
const server = spdy.createServer(spdyOptions, app.requestHandler);
// to avoid process exit on warnings
server.on('warning', console.warn);
server.listen(3000, () => {
console.log('Listening on https://localhost:3000/');
});
return app;
}
All we're doing in the above code is, preventing the default http server from being started and starting the server using spdy with loopback's request handler app.requestHandler
that will be used for all incoming request.
Check out this pastebin containing entire
index.ts
file content after the changes.
To generate certificate and keys for localhost use:
openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:2048 -nodes -sha256 -subj '/CN=localhost' \
-keyout localhost-privkey.pem -out localhost-cert.pem
You may need to allow self-signed certificates in Chrome as well for /explorer
to work as expected.
And that's it, you can now run your app, and enjoy the power of http2 :)