@vercel/fetch-retry
v5.1.3@vercel/fetch-retry
A layer on top of fetch
(via node-fetch)
with sensible defaults for retrying to prevent common errors.
How to use
fetch-retry
is a drop-in replacement for fetch
:
const fetch = require('@vercel/fetch-retry')(require('node-fetch'))
module.exports = async () => {
const res = await fetch('http://localhost:3000')
console.log(res.status);
}
Make sure to yarn add @vercel/fetch-retry
in your main package.
Note that you can pass retry options to using opts.retry
.
We also provide a opts.onRetry
and opts.retry.maxRetryAfter
options.
opts.onRetry
is a customized version of opts.retry.onRetry
and passes
not only the error
object in each retry but also the current opts
object.
opts.retry.maxRetryAfter
is the max wait time according to the Retry-After
header.
If it exceeds the option value, stop retrying and returns the error response. It defaults to 20
.
Rationale
Some errors are very common in production (like the underlying Socket
yielding ECONNRESET
), and can easily and instantly be remediated
by retrying.
The default behavior of fetch-retry
is to attempt retries 10, 60
360, 2160 and 12960 milliseconds (a total of 5 retries) after
a network error, 429 or 5xx error occur.
The idea is to provide a sensible default: most applications should continue to perform correctly with a worst case scenario of a given request having an additional 15550ms overhead.
On the other hand, most applications that use fetch-retry
instead of
vanilla fetch
should see lower rates of common errors and fewer 'glitches'
in production.
Tests
To run rests, execute
npm test
Source Code
github.com/vercel/fetchMetadata
- MIT
- Whatever
- Unknown
- released 2/28/2022