The fastest JavaScript router.
import Blitz from "@bit-js/blitz";
// Create the router
const router = new Blitz();
// Register paths
router.on("GET", "/", () => new Response("Hi"));
// Wildcard parameter
router.on("GET", "/search/*", (ctx) => new Response(ctx.params.$));
// Path parameters
router.on("PUT", "/update/:id", (ctx) => new Response(ctx.params.id));
// Register another router with the same type as a subrouter
router.route("/api", anotherRouter);
// Get the fetch function (use with Bun and Deno)
const fetch = router.build();Blitz supports URL params and wildcards. Wildcard like /* does not match /.
The request context contains:
path: The request pathname (Always start with a slash).pathStart: The request pathname start index in the request URL.pathEnd: The request pathname end index in the request URL.params: Request URL parameters.req: The raw request object.
Other utility routers.
The basic Blitz router only works on non-edge runtimes as those block the use of the Function constructor for code generation.
EdgeRouter works everywhere as it matches routes using a recursive approach.
import { EdgeRouter } from "@bit-js/blitz";
// Create the router
const router = new EdgeRouter();API usage is the same as Blitz.
EdgeRouter should be used in edge runtimes as Blitz is around 1.5x faster and use less memory in other scenarios.
It is possible to re-use the matcher of EdgeRouter after adding more routes, unlike Blitz.
// Add some routes (need to be both static and dynamic routes)
router.on("GET", "/", () => new Response("Hi"));
router.on("GET", "/user/:id", (ctx) => new Response(ctx.params.id));
// Match '/' and '/user/:id'
const fetch = router.build();
// Add another route
router.on("GET", "/user/*", (ctx) => new Response(ctx.params.$));
// Fetch now handles '/', '/user/:id'
fetch(req);These are internals router built for path matching only.
import { internal } from "@bit-js/blitz";
// Blitz router with only path matching
const router = new internal.Radix<number>();
// EdgeRouter with only path matching;
const router = new internal.Edge<number>();
// Register routes
router.on("/", 0);
router.on("/:id", 1);
router.on("/*", 2);
// Merging routes
router.route("/api", otherInternalRouter);
// Get the matching function
const f = router.buildMatcher({}, 3);
f(ctx);The match context only has:
ctx.path: The parsed pathname.ctx.params: The output parameters.
A cross-runtime file system router API.
Example usage with Bun:
import { FileSystemRouter } from "@bit-js/blitz";
// A directory scanner
const glob = new Bun.Glob("**/*");
// Router prototype
const router = new FileSystemRouter({
// on(path): Return the metadata associated to the path to match later
// This only run once while scanning to retrieve the metadata
on: Bun.file,
// Scan synchronously and return the paths as an iterator
scan: (dir) => glob.scanSync(dir),
// style(path): Convert relative file path to route pathname (optional)
// Default to NextJS route path style
style: "basic",
});
// Get the matcher
const match = router.scan(`${import.meta.dir}/internals`);
// Serve with Bun
export default {
fetch(req: Request) {
// Result is the metadata returned by on(path)
// In this case it is the file blob
return new Response(match(req).result);
},
};Route style is a function that accepts a relative path and returns the correct route pattern.
type Style = (path: string) => string | null;If the return result is null the path will be ignored.
basic: NextJS route style (wildcard only supports[...]and wildcard parameter name is always$).preserve: No modifications to the path.
The result is a request context with result property is the matched result.