HTTP #
The HTTP protocol is widely used to build APIs.
This protocol consumes less energy and easily allows compression or caching of requests.
The use of the HTTP protocol is recommended when the client is in an environment requiring energy saving. (e.g. IoT device, smartphone)
However it can be quite slow because each request usually requires to establish a new connection to the server. Some clients, such as browsers, keep connections open to speed things up, but you shouldn't count on that.
The HTTP protocol is not meant to maintain persistent connections. It is therefore not possible to use Kuzzle's Realtime Engine
Configuration #
The protocol can be configured under the server.protocols.http
section of the configuration file.
The listening port can be modified under the server.port
section of the configuration file.
HTTP protocol configuration section of the kuzzlerc:
"server": {
// The listening port for HTTP and WebSocket
"port": 7512,
"protocols": {
"http": {
// Set to "false" to disable HTTP support
"enabled": true,
// Maximum size of requests sent via http forms
"maxFormFileSize": "1mb",
// Maximum number of encoding layers that can be applied
// to an http message, using the Content-Encoding header.
// This parameter is meant to prevent abuses by setting an
// abnormally large number of encodings, forcing Kuzzle to
// allocate as many decoders to handle the incoming request.
"maxEncodingLayers": 3,
// Enable support for compressed requests, using the
// Content-Encoding header
// Currently supported compression algorithms:
// gzip, deflate, identity
// Note: "identity" is always an accepted value, even if
// compression support is disabled
"allowCompression": true,
// Enables Kuzzle to accept additional Content-Types.
// Note: This relies on the implementation of a
// "protocol:http:beforeParsingPayload" pipe that implements
// the formatting of the additional content types to JSON.
// The default content types are:
// * application/json
// * application/x-www-form-urlencoded
// * multipart/form-data
"additionalContentTypes": [],
},
}
HTTP and WebSocket protocols share the same underlying server instance. Modifying the listening port will impact these two protocols.
HTTP-only options #
Only the HTTP protocol does support the following options in a KuzzleRequest
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
pretty | boolean | Prettify the JSON response, making it more readable for humans |
HTTP headers #
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
X-Kuzzle-Request-Id | string | Custom request ID. Will be returned in the response. |