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Common Routing Patterns

This guide gives examples of common routing patterns using Edgio.

Proxying an Origin

Same Path

To forward a request to the same path on one of the backends listed in edgio.config.js, use the proxy method of ResponseWriter:

JavaScript
1router.get('/some-path', ({ proxy }) => {
2 proxy('origin')
3})

The first argument corresponds to the name of a backend in edgio.config.js. For example:

JavaScript
1module.exports = {
2 backends: {
3 origin: {
4 domainOrIp: 'my-shop.example.com',
5 hostHeader: 'my-shop.example.com',
6 },
7 },
8}

Different Path

To forward the request to a different path, use the path option of the ProxyOptions interface:

JavaScript
1router.get('/products/:productId', ({ proxy }) => {
2 proxy('origin', { path: '/p/:productId' })
3})

Adding Caching

To cache proxied requests at the edge, use the cache method.

JavaScript
1router.get('/products/:productId', ({ cache, proxy }) => {
2 cache({
3 edge: {
4 maxAgeSeconds: 60 * 60 * 24 // keep entries in the cache for 24 hours
5 staleWhileRevalidateSeconds: 60 * 60 // when a cached page is older than 24 hours, serve it one more time
6 // for up to 60 minutes while fetching a new version from the origin
7 }
8 })
9 proxy('origin')
10})

Altering the Request

You can alter request headers when forwarding a request to a backend:

JavaScript
1router.get(
2 '/products/:productId',
3 ({ setRequestHeader, updateRequestHeader, removeRequestHeader, proxy }) => {
4 setRequestHeader('header-name', 'header-value')
5 updateRequestHeader('header-name', /some-.*-part/gi, 'some-replacement')
6 removeRequestHeader('header-name')
7 proxy('origin')
8 },
9)

The above example makes use of setRequestHeader, updateRequestHeader, and removeRequestHeader API calls.

Altering the Response

You can also alter the response before and after the cache:

JavaScript
1router.get(
2 '/products/:productId',
3 ({
4 setUpstreamResponseHeader,
5 setResponseHeader,
6 removeResponseHeader,
7 removeUpstreamResponseHeader,
8 updateResponseHeader
9 updateUpstreamResponseHeader
10 proxy,
11 }) => {
12 proxy('origin')
13
14 // applied before the cache
15 setUpstreamResponseHeader('header-name', 'header-value')
16 updateUpstreamResponseHeader('header-name', /some-.*-part/gi, 'some-replacement')
17 removeUpstreamResponseHeader('header-name')
18
19 // applied after the cache
20 setResponseHeader('header-name', 'header-value')
21 updateResponseHeader('header-name', /some-.*-part/gi, 'some-replacement')
22 removeResponseHeader('header-name')
23 },
24)

Altering All Responses

You can also write catch-all routes that will alter all responses. One example where this is useful is injecting Content Security Policy headers.

Another example is adding response headers for debugging, which is often useful if Edgio is behind another CDN or if you are troubleshooting your router rules. For example, you could respond with the value of request x-forwarded-for into x-debug-xff to see the value that Edgio is receiving from the CDN:

JavaScript
1router.match(
2 {
3 path: '/:path*',
4 query: {
5 my_site_debug: 'true',
6 },
7 },
8 ({ setResponseHeader }) => {
9 setResponseHeader('x-debug-xff', '${req:x-forwarded-for}')
10 },
11)
12// The rest of your router...

The rules for interpolating the values of request and response objects can be found in the routing guide. Note that catch-all routes that alter headers, cookies, or caching can be placed at the start of your router while allowing subsequent routes to run because they alter the request or the response without actually sending a response. See route execution for more information on route execution order and sending responses.

Manipulating Cookies

You can manipulate cookies before they are sent to the browser using cookie response API calls like addResponseCookie:

JavaScript
1router.get('/some/path', ({
2 addUpstreamResponseCookie,
3 addResponseCookie,
4 removeResponseCookie,
5 removeUpstreamResponseCookie,
6 updateResponseCookie
7 updateUpstreamResponseCookie,
8 proxy
9}) => {
10 proxy('origin')
11
12 // applied before the cache
13 addUpstreamResponseCookie('cookie-to-add', 'cookie-value')
14 removeUpstreamResponseCookie('cookie-to-remove')
15 updateUpstreamResponseCookie('cookie-to-alter', /Domain=.+;/, 'Domain=mydomain.com;')
16
17 // applied after the cache
18 addResponseCookie('cookie-to-add', 'cookie-value')
19 removeResponseCookie('cookie-to-remove')
20 updateResponseCookie('cookie-to-alter', /Domain=.+;/, 'Domain=mydomain.com;')
21})

Adding Options to Cookies

In addition to the name and value of the cookie, you can also add attributes to each cookie. For information on possible cookie attributes, please refer to https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Set-Cookie

JavaScript
1router.get('/some/path', ({ addUpstreamResponseCookie, addResponseCookie, proxy }) => {
2 proxy('origin')
3
4 addUpstreamResponseCookie('cookie-to-add', 'cookie-value', {
5 domain: 'test.com',
6 })
7
8 addResponseCookie('cookie-to-add', 'cookie-value', { 'max-age': 50000 })
9})

Proxying to Different Backends Based on Different Host Names

To proxy to different backends by matching the host header (e.g. different backends for different international sites):

JavaScript
1router
2 .match(
3 {
4 path: '/:path*',
5 headers: {
6 host: 'yoursite.c1',
7 },
8 },
9 ({ proxy }) => {
10 proxy('country1-backend')
11 },
12 )
13 .match(
14 {
15 path: '/:path*',
16 headers: {
17 host: 'yoursite.c2',
18 },
19 },
20 ({ proxy }) => {
21 proxy('country2-backend')
22 },
23 )
24 .match(
25 {
26 path: '/:path*',
27 },
28 ({ proxy }) => {
29 proxy('everybody-else-backend')
30 },
31 )

Serving a Static File

To serve a specific file use the serveStatic API:

JavaScript
1router.get('/favicon.ico', ({ serveStatic, cache }) => {
2 cache({
3 edge: {
4 maxAgeSeconds: 60 * 60 * 24, // cache at the edge for 24 hours
5 },
6 browser: {
7 maxAgeSeconds: 60 * 60 * 24, // cache for 24 hours
8 },
9 })
10 serveStatic('assets/favicon.ico') // path is relative to the root of your project
11})

Serving Static Files From a Directory

Here’s an example that serves all requests by sending the corresponding file in the public directory

JavaScript
1router.get('/:path*', ({ serveStatic, cache }) => {
2 cache({
3 edge: {
4 maxAgeSeconds: 60 * 60 * 24, // cache at the edge for 24 hours
5 },
6 browser: false, // prevent caching of stale html in the browser
7 })
8 serveStatic('public/:path*')
9})

Routing to Serverless

If your request needs to be run on the serverless tier, you can use the renderWithApp handler to render your result using your application. Use this method to respond with an SSR or API result from your application.

Example using the renderWithApp handler:

JavaScript
1router.get('/some/:path*', ({ renderWithApp, cache }) => {
2 cache(CACHE_PAGES)
3 renderWithApp()
4})

Falling Back to Server-side Rendering

If you render some but not all paths for a given route at build time, you can fall back to server side rendering using the onNotFound option. Add the loadingPage option to display a loading page while server-side rendering is in progress.

JavaScript
1router.get('/products/:id', ({ serveStatic, cache, renderWithApp }) => {
2 cache({
3 edge: {
4 maxAgeSeconds: 60 * 60 * 24, // cache at the edge for 24 hours
5 },
6 })
7 serveStatic('dist/products/:id.html', {
8 onNotFound: () => renderWithApp(),
9 loadingPage: 'dist/products/loading.html',
10 })
11})

This hybrid of static and dynamic rendering was first introduced in Next.js as Incremental Static Generation (ISG). In Next.js apps, developers enable this behavior by returning fallback: true from getStaticPaths(). The @edgio/next package automatically configures the routes for ISG pages to use onNotFound and loadingPage.

Returning a Custom 404 Page

When a request matches a route with serveStatic, but no matching static asset exists, you can serve a custom 404 page using the onNotFound option.

JavaScript
1router.get('/products/:id', ({ serveStatic, cache }) => {
2 cache({
3 edge: {
4 maxAgeSeconds: 60 * 60 * 24, // cache at the edge for 24 hours
5 },
6 })
7 serveStatic('dist/products/:id.html', {
8 onNotFound: async () => {
9 await serveStatic('/products/not-found.html', {
10 statusCode: 404,
11 statusMessage: 'Not Found',
12 })
13 },
14 })
15})

Responding with a String Response Body

To respond with a simple, constant string as the response body use the send method:

JavaScript
1router.get('/some-path', ({ cache, setResponseHeader, send }) => {
2 cache({
3 edge: {
4 maxAgeSeconds: 60 * 60 * 24, // cache for 24 hours
5 },
6 })
7 setResponseHeader('Content-Type', 'text/html')
8 send(`
9 <!doctype html>
10 <html>
11 <body>Hello World</body>
12 </html>
13 `)
14})

To compute a dynamic response use the compute method:

JavaScript
1router.get('/hello/:name', ({ cache, setResponseHeader, compute, send }) => {
2 cache({
3 edge: {
4 maxAgeSeconds: 60 * 60 * 24, // cache for 24 hours
5 },
6 })
7 setResponseHeader('Content-Type', 'text/html')
8 compute((request, response) => {
9 send(`
10 <!doctype html>
11 <html>
12 <body>Hello ${request.params.name}</body>
13 </html>
14 `)
15 })
16})

Redirecting

To redirect the browser to a different URL, use the redirect API:

JavaScript
1router.get('/p/:productId', ({ redirect }) => {
2 return redirect('/products/:productId', 301) // overrides the default status of 302 (Temporary Redirect)
3})

If you need to compute the destination with sophisticated logic:

JavaScript
1router.get('/p/:productId', ({ redirect, compute, cache }) => {
2 cache({
3 edge: {
4 maxAgeSeconds: 60 * 60 * 24, // cache for 24 hours
5 },
6 })
7 compute(async request => {
8 const destination = await getDestinationFromMyAPI(request.params.productId)
9 redirect(destination)
10 })
11})

Redirecting All Traffic to a Different Domain

JavaScript
1// Redirect all traffic except those with host header starting with www. to www.mydomain.com
2router.match({ headers: { host: /^(?!www\.).*$/ } }, ({ redirect }) => {
3 redirect('https://www.mydomain.com${path}')
4})
5
6// Redirect all traffic from www.domain.com to domain.com
7router.match({ headers: { host: /^(www\.).*$/ } }, ({ redirect }) => {
8 redirect('https://domain.com${path}')
9})

Blocking Unwanted Traffic

Blocking traffic from specific countries

If you need to block all traffic from a specific country or set of countries, you can do so by matching requests by the country code geolocation header:

JavaScript
1router.get(
2 {
3 headers: {
4 'x-0-geo-country-code': /XX|XY|XZ/, // Regex matching two-letter country codes of the countries you want to block
5 },
6 },
7 ({ send }) => {
8 send('Blocked', 403)
9 },
10)

You can find more about geolocation headers here.

Allowing Specific IPs

If you need to block all traffic except requests that originate from specific IP addresses, you can do so by matching requests by the x-0-client-ip header:

JavaScript
1router.get(
2 {
3 headers: {
4 // Regex that will do a negative lookahead for IPs you want to allow.
5 // In this example 172.16.16.0/24 and 10.10.10.3/32 will be allowed and everything else will receive a 403
6 'x-0-client-ip': /\b((?!172\.16\.16)(?!10.10.10.3)\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3})\b/,
7 },
8 },
9 ({ send }) => {
10 send('Blocked', 403)
11 },
12)

Blocking Search Engine Crawlers

If you need to block all search engine bot traffic to specific environments (such as your default or staging environment), the easiest way is to include the x-robots-tag header with the same directives you would otherwise set in a meta tag.

The search engine traffic is automatically blocked on Edgio edge links and permalinks as of Edgio v6.

If you would like to enable indexing on those links, you need to pass { indexPermalink: true } into the Router constructor in routes.js file:

JavaScript
1new Router({ indexPermalink: true })

Otherwise, Edgio will match requests with the host header matching /layer0.link|layer0-perma.link/ and set a response header of x-robots-tag: noindex.

Additionally, you can customize this to block traffic to development or staging websites based on the host header of the request:

JavaScript
1router
2 .get(
3 {
4 headers: {
5 // Regex to catch multiple hostnames
6 host: /dev.example.com|staging.example.com/,
7 },
8 },
9 ({ setResponseHeader }) => {
10 setResponseHeader('x-robots-tag', 'noindex')
11 },
12 )

For other available directives, see Google Developer Central and Bing Webmaster Tools for lists of supported options.