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Proxies Guide

Homepage includes a set of built-in proxy handlers that can be used to fetch data from an API. We will go over how to use these proxy handlers and briefly cover how to create your own.

Available Proxy Handlers

Homepage comes with a few built-in proxy handlers that can be used to fetch data from an API. These handlers are located in the utils/proxy/handlers directory.

genericProxyHandler

A proxy handler that makes generally unauthenticated requests to the specified API endpoint.

import genericProxyHandler from "utils/proxy/handlers/generic";

const widgetExample = {
  api: "{url}/api/{endpoint}",
  proxyHandler: genericProxyHandler,
};

You can also pass API keys from the widget configuration to the proxy handler, for authenticated requests.

import genericProxyHandler from "utils/proxy/handlers/generic";

const widgetExample = {
  api: "{url}/api/{endpoint}?key={key}",
  proxyHandler: genericProxyHandler,
};
# Widget Configuration
- Your Widget:
    icon: yourwidget.svg
    href: https://example.com/
    widget:
      type: yourwidget
      url: http://example.com
      key: your-api-key

credentialedProxyHandler

A proxy handler that makes authenticated by setting request headers. Credentials are pulled from the widgets configuration.

By default the key is passed as an X-API-Key header. If you need to pass the key as something else, either add a case to the credentialedProxyHandler or create a new proxy handler.

import credentialedProxyHandler from "utils/proxy/handlers/credentialed";

const widgetExample = {
  api: "{url}/api/{endpoint}?key={key}",
  proxyHandler: credentialedProxyHandler,
};
- Your Widget:
    icon: yourwidget.svg
    href: https://example.com/
    widget:
      type: yourwidget
      url: http://127.0.0.1:1337
      key: your-api-key

jsonrpcProxyHandler

A proxy handler that makes authenticated JSON-RPC requests to the specified API endpoint. Where the endpoint is the method to call.

import jsonrpcProxyHandler from "utils/proxy/handlers/jsonrpc";

const widgetExample = {
  api: "{url}/api/jsonrpc",
  proxyHandler: jsonrpcProxyHandler,

  mappings: {
    total: { endpoint: "total" },
    average: { endpoint: "average" },
  },
};
- Your Widget:
    icon: yourwidget.svg
    href: https://example.com/
    widget:
      type: yourwidget
      url: http://127.0.0.1:1337
      username: your-username
      password: your-password

synologyProxyHandler

A proxy handler that makes authenticated requests to the specified Synology API endpoint. This is used exclusively for Synology DSM services.

import synologyProxyHandler from "utils/proxy/handlers/synology";

const widgetExample = {
  api: "{url}/webapi/{cgiPath}?api={apiName}&version={maxVersion}&method={apiMethod}",
  proxyHandler: synologyProxyHandler,

  mappings: {
    system_storage: {
      apiName: "SYNO.Core.System",
      apiMethod: 'info&type="storage"',
      endpoint: "system_storage",
    }
  },
};
- Your Widget:
    icon: yourwidget.svg
    href: https://example.com/
    widget:
      type: yourwidget
      url: http://127.0.0.1:1337
      username: your-username
      password: your-password

Creating a Custom Proxy Handler

You can create your own proxy handler to fetch data from an API. A proxy handler is a function that takes a configuration object and returns a function that makes the API request.

The proxy handler function takes three arguments:

  • req: The request object.
  • res: The response object.
  • map: A function that maps the API response to the widget data.

The proxy handler function should return a promise that resolves to the API response.

Here is an example of a simple proxy handler that fetches data from an API and passes it to the widget:

import createLogger from "utils/logger";
import { httpProxy } from "utils/proxy/http";

const logger = createLogger("customProxyHandler");

export default async function customProxyHandler(req, res, map) {
  const { url } = req.query;

  const [status, contentType, data] = await httpProxy(url);

  return res.status(status).send(data);
}

Proxy handlers are a complex topic and require a good understanding of JavaScript and the Homepage codebase. If you are new to Homepage, we recommend using the built-in proxy handlers.