Utility to interact with HTTP status codes.
Version 2 is a migration of the library to ESM modules and TypeScript. The API remains the same. The build system generates both ESM and CommonJS exports.
For ESM users, the import remains the same.
import status from "http-status";
// Or
import { status } from "http-status";
For CommonJs users, update the require
statement.
const { status } = require("http-status");
// Or
const { default: status } = require("http-status");
Once you import or require this module, you may call it with either an HTTP code or a status name. With an HTTP code, you will get the status name while with a status name you will get an HTTP code or some complementary information.
For example, status[418]
return IM_A_TEAPOT
while status.IM_A_TEAPOT
return "I'm a teapot"
and status.IM_A_TEAPOT_CODE
returns 418
.
The package is written in TypeScript and built for CommonJS and ESM.
HTTP code names, information, and classes are respectively accessible with the property {code}_NAME
, {code}_MESSAGE
and {code}_CLASS
. This includes all statuses in the IANA HTTP Status Code Registry, with the only addition being 418 I'm a teapot
.
Extra status code are also made available that are not defined in the IANA registry, but used by popular softwares. They are grouped by category. Specific properties are exported by http-status
under the property extra
followed by the category name. Also, extra codes are merge with regular status codes and made available as modules available inside http-status/lib/{category}
.
Available categories are:
unofficial
- This represent a list of codes which are not specified by any standard.
iis
- Microsoft's Internet Information Services (IIS) web server expands the 4xx error class to signal errors with the client's request.
nginx
- The NGINX web server software expands the 4xx error class to signal issues with the client's request.
cloudflare
- Cloudflare's reverse proxy service expands the 5xx error class to signal issues with the origin server.
They are accessible throught the status.extra[category]
property. It is also possible to import one of the category with import status from "http-status/<category>" or
const status = require("http-status/")`. In the later case, all the categories properties are merge with the common HTTP statuses.
In addition to HTTP status codes, this module also contains status code classes under the classes
property. Similar to HTTP codes, you can access class names and messages with the property {class}_NAME
and {class}_MESSAGE
.
The API is structured as follows:
100
100_NAME
100_MESSAGE
100_CLASS
CONTINUE
101
101_NAME
101_MESSAGE
101_CLASS
SWITCHING_PROTOCOLS
…
classes.
├── 1xx
├── 1xx_NAME
├── 1xx_MESSAGE
├── INFORMATIONAL
├── 2xx
├── 2xx_NAME
├── 2xx_MESSAGE
├── SUCCESSFUL
├── …
extra.
├── unofficial.
│ ├── 103
│ ├── 103_NAME
│ ├── 103_MESSAGE
│ ├── 103_CLASS
│ ├── CHECKPOINT
│ ├── …
├── iis.
│ ├── 440
│ ├── 440_NAME
│ ├── 440_MESSAGE
│ ├── 440_CLASS
│ ├── LOGIN_TIME_OUT
│ ├── …
├── nginx.
│ ├── 444
│ ├── 444_NAME
│ ├── 444_MESSAGE
│ ├── 444_CLASS
│ ├── NO_RESPONSE
│ ├── …
├── cloudflare.
│ ├── 520
│ ├── 520_NAME
│ ├── 520_MESSAGE
│ ├── 520_CLASS
│ ├── UNKNOWN_ERROR
│ ├── …
For additional information, please refer to original code.
The api example illustrate how to access status names by code and number and how to extra various associated informations.
import status from "http-status";
console.info(status.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR);
// Output: 500
console.info(status[500]);
console.info(status[status.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR]);
// Both output: "Internal Server Error"
console.info(status["500_NAME"]);
console.info(status[`${status.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR}_NAME`]);
// Both output: "INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR"
console.info(status["500_MESSAGE"]);
console.info(status[`${status.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR}_MESSAGE`]);
// Both output: "A generic error message, given when an unexpected condition was encountered and no more specific message is suitable."
console.info(status["500_CLASS"]);
console.info(status[`${status.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR}_CLASS`]);
// Both output: "5xx"
import status from "http-status";
const responseCode = status.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR;
switch (status[`${responseCode}_CLASS`]) {
case status.classes.INFORMATIONAL:
// The responseCode is 1xx
break;
case status.classes.SUCCESSFUL:
// The responseCode is 2xx
break;
case status.classes.REDIRECTION:
// The responseCode is 3xx
break;
case status.classes.CLIENT_ERROR:
// The responseCode is 4xx
break;
case status.classes.SERVER_ERROR:
// The responseCode is 5xx
break;
default:
// Unknown
break;
}
// Accessing property from the NGINX category
import status from "http-status";
console.info(status.extra.nginx.NO_RESPONSE);
// Accessing default HTTP status merged with NGINX status
import status from "http-status/lib/nginx";
console.info(status.IM_A_TEAPOT);
console.info(status.NO_RESPONSE);
The express example integrate the library with a real wold usage.
import express from "express";
import redis from "redis";
import status from "http-status";
// New Express HTTP server
const app = express.createServer();
// Regster a route
app.get("/", (req, res) => {
const client = redis.createClient();
client.ping((err, msg) => {
if (err) {
return res.send(status.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR);
}
res.send(msg, status.OK);
});
});
// Start the HTTP server
app.listen(3000);
- David Worms: https://github.com/wdavidw
- Daniel Gasienica: https://github.com/gasi
- Rodrigo: [email protected]
- Paul Vollmer: [email protected]
- James Barcellano: https://github.com/ckeboss
The project is sponsored by Adaltas based in Paris, France. Adaltas offers support and consulting on distributed systems, big data and open source.
To automatically generate a new version:
yarn run release
Package publication is handled by the CI/CD with GitHub action.