- Like browsers, Deno implements web standard APIs such as fetch.
- Deno is secure by default, meaning explicit permission must be granted to access the network.
- See also: Deno's permissions model.
When building any sort of web application developers will usually need to
retrieve data from somewhere else on the web. This works no differently in Deno
than in any other JavaScript application, just call the fetch()
method. For
more information on fetch read the
MDN documentation.
The exception with Deno occurs when running a script which makes a call over the
web. Deno is secure by default which means access to IO (Input / Output) is
prohibited. To make a call over the web Deno must be explicitly told it is ok to
do so. This is achieved by adding the --allow-net
flag to the deno run
command.
Command: deno run --allow-net fetch.ts
/**
* Output: JSON Data
*/
const jsonResponse = await fetch("https://api.github.com/users/denoland");
const jsonData = await jsonResponse.json();
console.log(jsonData);
/**
* Output: HTML Data
*/
const textResponse = await fetch("https://deno.land/");
const textData = await textResponse.text();
console.log(textData);
/**
* Output: Error Message
*/
try {
await fetch("https://does.not.exist/");
} catch (error) {
console.log(error);
}
Like in browsers, sending and receiving large files is possible thanks to the
Streams API.
Deno.FsFile
API provides
two properties:
readable
and
writable
,
which can be used to convert a Deno file into a writable or readable stream.
Command: deno run --allow-read --allow-write --allow-net fetch_file.ts
/**
* Receiving a file
*/
const fileResponse = await fetch("https://deno.land/logo.svg");
if (fileResponse.body) {
const file = await Deno.open("./logo.svg", { write: true, create: true });
await fileResponse.body.pipeTo(file.writable);
}
/**
* Sending a file
*/
const file = await Deno.open("./logo.svg", { read: true });
await fetch("https://example.com/", {
method: "POST",
body: file.readable,
});