TailorX is a layout service that uses streams to compose a web page from fragment services. O'Reilly describes it in the title of this blog post as "a library that provides a middleware which you can integrate into any Node.js server." It's partially inspired by Facebook’s BigPipe and based on Zalando Tailor.
Some of TailorX's features and benefits:
- Composes pre-rendered markup on the backend. This is important for SEO and fastens the initial render.
- Ensures a fast Time to First Byte. TailorX requests fragments in parallel and streams them as soon as possible, without blocking the rest of the page.
- Enforces performance budget. This is quite challenging otherwise, because there is no single point where you can control performance.
- Fault Tolerance. Render the meaningful output, even if a page fragment has failed or timed out.
TailorX is part of Isomorphic Layout Composer Project, which aims to help developers create microservices for the frontend. If your front-end team is making the monolith-to-microservices transition, you might find TailorX and its available siblings beneficial.
Microservices get a lot of traction these days. They allow multiple teams to work independently from each other, choose their own technology stacks and establish their own release cycles. Unfortunately, frontend development hasn’t fully capitalized yet on the benefits that microservices offer. The common practice for building websites remains “the monolith”: a single frontend codebase that consumes multiple APIs.
What if we could have microservices on the frontend? This would allow frontend developers to work together with their backend counterparts on the same feature and independently deploy parts of the website — “fragments” such as Header, Product, and Footer. Bringing microservices to the frontend requires a layout service that composes a website out of fragments. Tailor was developed to solve this need.
Begin using TailorX with:
npm i tailorx
const http = require('http');
const Tailor = require('tailorx');
const tailor = new Tailor({/* Options */});
const server = http.createServer(tailor.requestHandler);
server.listen(process.env.PORT || 8080);
fetchContext(request)
- Function that returns a promise of the context, that is an object that maps fragment id to fragment url, to be able to override urls of the fragments on the page, defaults toPromise.resolve({})
fetchTemplate(request, parseTemplate)
- Function that should fetch the template, callparseTemplate
and return a promise of the result. Useful to implement your own way to retrieve and cache the templates, e.g. from s3. Default implementationlib/fetch-template.js
fetches the template from the file systemtemplatesPath
- To specify the path where the templates are stored locally, Defaults to/templates/
fragmentTag
- Name of the fragment tag, defaults tofragment
handledTags
- An array of custom tags, checktests/handle-tag
for more infobaseTemplatesCacheSize
- It is off by default. This cache can speed up parsing base templates. You need to specify it as a number of your base templates to cache the parsing of your templates but don't specify it less than the number of templates that your app has because when you are going to change your template several times without server rebooting than all these changed template's versions are going to be saved on your server which is causing cache issues.handleTag(request, tag, options, context)
- Receives a tag or closing tag and serializes it to a string or returns a streamfilterRequestHeaders(attributes, request)
- Function that filters the request headers that are passed to fragment request, check default implementation inlib/filter-headers
filterResponseHeaders(attributes, headers)
- Function that maps the given response headers from the primary &return-headers
fragments to the final responsemaxAssetLinks
- Number ofLink
Header directives for CSS and JS respected per fragment - defaults to1
requestFragment(filterHeaders, processFragmentResponse)(url, attributes, request)
- Function that returns a promise of request to a fragment server, check the default implementation inlib/request-fragment
processFragmentResponse(response, context): response
- Function that processes response from the fragment. Returns response or throws an error. Check the default implementation inlib/process-fragment-response
tracer
- Opentracing compliant Tracer implementation.botsGuardEnabled
-false
by default. This option forces TailorX to respond with 500 error code even if non-primary fragment fails in case the request comes from SEO/SM bot. Bot detection is done via device-detector-js.fragmentHooks
- Allows to override default behaviour of theinsertStart
&insertEnd
hooks & wrap response from the fragment with custom code.insertStart(stream, attributes, headers, index)
insertEnd(stream, attributes, headers, index)
getAssetsToPreload()
- If specified, should return array of assets that should be added to the responseLink
header for preload. Return value format:{styleRefs: ['https://ex.com/style.css'], scriptRefs: ['https://ex.com/script.js']}
shouldSetPrimaryFragmentAssetsToPreload
-true
by default. This option allows or disallows TailorX to set a primary fragment's assets to the responseLink
header for preload.
TailorX uses parse5 to parse the template, where it replaces each fragmentTag
with a stream from the fragment server and handledTags
with the result of handleTag
function.
<html>
<head>
<script type="fragment" src="http://assets.domain.com"></script>
</head>
<body>
<fragment src="http://header.domain.com"></fragment>
<fragment src="http://content.domain.com" primary></fragment>
<fragment src="http://footer.domain.com" async></fragment>
</body>
</html>
id
- optional unique identifier (autogenerated)src
- URL of the fragmentprimary
- denotes a fragment that sets the response code of the pagetimeout
- optional timeout of fragment in milliseconds (default is 3000)async
- postpones the fragment until the end of body tagpublic
- to prevent TailorX from forwarding filtered request headers from upstream to the fragments.return-headers
- makes TailorX to wait for the fragment response headers & send them in response. Note that they will be merged with headers fromprimary
fragment & may be overwritten by it.forward-querystring
- forwards query parameters from the original request down to the fragmentignore-invalid-ssl
- makes TailorX to ignore invalid SSL certificates while requesting a fragment information from an HTTPS server (default isfalse
)
Other attributes are allowed and will be passed as well to relevant functions (eg.
filterRequestHeaders
,filterResponseHeaders
, etc.)
A fragment is an http(s) server that renders only the part of the page and sets Link
, x-head-title
, x-head-meta
headers (valid only for primary fragment) to provide urls to CSS and JavaScript resources.
Primary fragment possible response headers:
Link
- Check reference.x-head-title
- Page title encoded with base64. Will be injected onto<head>
tag. Ex:Buffer.from('<title>Page title</title>', 'utf-8').toString('base64')
x-head-meta
- Page meta tags encoded with base64. Ex:Buffer.from('<meta name="description" content="Free Web tutorials"><meta name="keywords" content="HTML,CSS,XML,JavaScript">', 'utf-8').toString('base64')
Check examples/basic-css-and-js/index.js
for a draft implementation.
A JavaScript of the fragment is an AMD module, that exports an init
function, that will be called with DOM element of the fragment as an argument.
TailorX will not follow redirects even if fragment response contains 'Location' Header, that is on purpose as redirects can introduce unwanted latency. Fragments with the attribute primary
can do a redirect since it controls the status code of the page.
Note: For compatability with AWS the Link
header can also be passed as x-amz-meta-link
By default, the incoming request will be used to selecting the template.
So to get the index.html
template you go to /index
.
If you want to listen to /product/my-product-123
to go to product.html
template, you can change the req.url
to /product
.
Every header is filtered by default to avoid leaking information, but you can give the original URI and host by adding it to the headers, x-request-host
and x-request-uri
, then reading in the fragment the headers to know what product to fetch and display.
http
.createServer((req, res) => {
req.headers['x-request-uri'] = req.url
req.url = '/index'
tailor.requestHandler(req, res);
})
.listen(8080, function() {
console.log('Tailor server listening on port 8080');
});
Some of the concepts in TailorX are described in detail on the specific docs.
TailorX has out of the box distributed tracing instrumentation with OpenTracing. It will pick up any span context on the ingress HTTP request and propagate it to the existing Remote Procedure Calls (RPCs).
Currently, only the fetching of fragments is instrumented providing some additional details like the fragment tag, attributes and some logging payload like the stack trace for errors.
- Basic -
node examples/basic
- CSS and JS -
node examples/basic-css-and-js
- Multiple Fragments and AMD -
node examples/multiple-fragments-with-custom-amd
- Fragment Performance -
node examples/fragment-performance
Go to http://localhost:8080/index after running the specific example.
Note: Please run the examples with node versions > 12.0.0
To start running benchmark execute npm run benchmark
and wait for couple of seconds to see the results.
Please check the Contributing guidelines here.