Cloudflare Workers Router is a super lightweight router (3.6 kB) with middleware support and ZERO dependencies for CloudFlare Workers, inspired by the express.js syntax.
When I was trying out Cloudflare Workers I almost immediately noticed how fast it was compared to other serverless offerings. So I wanted to build a full fledged API to see how it performs doing real work, but since I wasn't able to find a router that suited my needs I created my own.
const Router = require('@tsndr/cloudflare-worker-router')
const router = new Router()
// Enabling buildin CORS support
router.cors()
// Simple get
router.get('/user', (req, res) => {
res.body = {
data: {
id: 1,
name: 'John Doe'
}
}
})
// Post route with url parameter
router.post('/user/:id', (req, res) => {
const userId = req.params.id
// Do stuff...
if (errorDoingStuff) {
res.status = 400
res.body = {
error: 'User did stupid stuff!'
}
return
}
res.status = 204
})
// Delete route using a middleware
router.delete('/user/:id', (req, res, next) => {
if (!apiTokenIsCorrect) {
res.status = 401
return
}
await next()
}, (req, res) => {
const userId = req.params.id
// Do stuff...
})
// Listen Cloudflare Workers Fetch Event
addEventListener('fetch', event => {
event.respondWith(router.handle(event))
})
See reference here.
You can use wrangler to generate a new Cloudflare Workers project based on this router by running the following command from your terminal:
wrangler generate my-app https://github.com/tsndr/cloudflare-worker-router-template
Before publishing your code you need to edit wrangler.toml
file and add your Cloudflare account_id
- more information about publishing your code can be found in the documentation.
Once you are ready, you can publish your code by running the following command:
wrangler publish
You can also test it loacally by running the following command:
wrangler dev
If you already have a wrangler project you can install the router like this:
npm i @tsndr/cloudflare-worker-router
To deploy using serverless add a serverless.yml
file.