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Kepi is a small, elegant, and dependency free library for setting HTTP response headers.


kepi



Build Status License NPM Downloads Known Vulnerabilities Coverage Status

Usage

Example Configuration

Simplest is to have as much as possible in a constant object ("declarative")

const Kepi = require('kepi');

let kepi = Kepi({
  'X-Powered-By': 'super duper system',
  'Content-Type': ['text/html', 'charset=utf-8']
  'Feature-Policy': {
    vibrate: "'none'",
    geolocation: "'self'",
  },
});

Later, you can add more headers declaratively

kepi.add( {Content-Encoding: ['deflate', 'gzip']} );

But sometimes you just need to add stuff dynamically

let methodArray = [ insert methods you allow here ]
kepi.accessControl.allowMethods().add(...methodArray);
kepi.header('Expires').set(Date.now() + 60*60*1000);  // good for one hour

In roll your own code

kepi.applyTo(myResponse);

In Express

app.use(kepi.middleware());

- If you just want to mimic (more or less) helmet

app.use(kepi().safe().middleware());

In Micro (note: not tested in a real app!)

originalMicroHandler = (req, res) => { ... }
module.exports = kepi.micro(originalMicroHandler);

API

Kepi

constructor(data, customOptions)

data can be

  • null
  • an Object (see example above). In may cases this is all you really need.
  • "safe": same as calling safe()

customOptions are described under Customization below

add(data)

Add that data object to the headers. (same logic as for constructor, including "safe")

applyTo(response)

Write the headers into response.

header(headerName, optionalData)

Retrieve the Header with that name, creating if necessary, setting with optional data. Name may be

  • the full name, e.g. "Content-Security-Policy"
  • a "nickname", e.g. "contentSecurityPolicy" (see Customization)

middleware()

For use in Express. Should be modifiable for others

safe()

Sets all headers in options.SAFE or options.safe, creating if needed.

Header - base class for the following subclasses

Value

  • a single value (usually a String)
  • e.g. Transfer-Encoding

DateValue

  • a single Date,
  • e.g. Expires
  • numbers get converted to a Date, null or 0 to current date.

List

  • a list of values, usually comma delimited (but sometimes semicolon)
  • e.g. Content-Encoding (comma) or Strict-Transport-Security (semicolon)

Policies

  • one or more semicolon delimited Policies
  • each Policy consists of a name and space delimited values.
  • e.g. Content-Security-Policy

Header Methods

add(data)

Adds data to the header value

  • List.add(...items)
    • e.g. add('a','b') is equivalent to add(['a','b'])
  • Policies.add(policyNameorData, ...items)
    • if first argument is a String, adds items to that policyNae
    • else parses policyNameorData as a data object
  • note items will be flattened one level deep, so add('a','b') is equivalent to add(['a','b'])

applyTo(response)

Write the header to the response. You will seldom call this directly.

clear()

Clear the value, to "", [], or {} as appropriate

  • Policies.clear(policyName) takes an optional policy name, if provided, only that policy is cleared.

remove()

Flags this header to be removed from any response. Warning: cannot be "unflagged".

safe()

Set the header to a "safe" value, as provided in the options.

set(value)

Sets the value

  • List.set(...items) like add(), items will be flattened

Customization

You can customize or add to behavior by passing a customOptions parameter to the Kepi function. This will get Object.assigned onto the default settings in defaults.js.

Simple Options

  • setupNicknames (default = true) controls if nicknames are setup
  • resetAfterApply (default = false) will reset to initial data after calling applyTo()

Complex Options

Since Object.assign is shallow, and making a deep copy is a bit of a pain, instead, provide complex user options in the lowercase properties given at the end of defaults.js.

  • headerClasses allows you to add or override the class for a Header
  • nicknames lets you add nickname shortcuts (but see setupNicknames)
    • e.g. you can use kepi.featurePolicy() instead of kepi.header("Feature-Policy")
      • Note: Unlike in helmet, you must add parentheses at the end.
  • safe allows you to add or override the "security safe" values for headers

Notes, Todos, and Caveats

This work was inspired when I ran a Security Header Audit on one of my websites and got back a lot of angry red. This quickly lead me to helmet, a popular, well tested, and well documented Express middleware. However, helmet really only sets "secure" headers, and is of little use setting general purpose response headers. It has a many dependencies and sucks down a lot of code.

To my surprise, I didn't see any general purpose "setup your response headers" npm module. This is my attempt to fill that need.