An efficient server implies a lower cost of the infrastructure, a better responsiveness under load and happy users. How can you efficiently handle the resources of your server, knowing that you are serving the highest number of requests as possible, without sacrificing security validations and handy development?
Enter Fastify. Fastify is a web framework highly focused on speed and low overhead. It is inspired from Hapi and Express and as far as we know, it is one of the fastest web frameworks in town. Use Fastify can increase your throughput up to 100%.
npm i fastify --save
// Require the framework and instantiate it
const fastify = require('fastify')()
// Declare a route
fastify.get('/', function (request, reply) {
reply.send({ hello: 'world' })
})
// Run the server!
fastify.listen(3000, function (err) {
if (err) throw err
console.log(`server listening on ${fastify.server.address().port}`)
})
Do you want to know more? Head to the Getting Started
.
- 100% asynchronous: all the core is implemented with asynchronous code, in this way not even a millisecond is wasted.
- Highly performant: as far as we know, Fastify is one of the fastest web frameworks in town, depending on the code complexity we can serve up to 20000 request per second.
- Extendible: Fastify is fully extensible via its hooks, plugins and decorators.
- Schema based: even if it is not mandatory we recommend to use JSON Schema to validate your routes and serialize your outputs, internally Fastify compiles the schema in an highly performant function.
- Logging: logs are extremely important but are costly; we chose the best logger to almost remove this cost, Pino!
- Developer friendly: the framework is built to be very expressive and help the developer in his daily use, without sacrificing performance and security.
Machine: Intel Xeon E5-2686 v4 @ 2.30GHz (4 cores, 8 threads), 16GiB RAM (Amazon EC2 m4.xlarge)
Method:: autocannon -c 100 -d 5 -p 10 localhost:3000
* 2, taking the second average
Framework | Version | Router? | Requests/sec |
---|---|---|---|
hapi | 16.5.0 | ✓ | 3,194 |
Express | 4.15.3 | ✓ | 9,418 |
Restify | 5.0.1 | ✓ | 12,014 |
take-five | 1.3.4 | ✓ | 18,658 |
Koa (koa-router ) |
2.3.0 (koa-router@7.2.1 ) |
✓ | 19,650 |
Koa | 2.3.0 | ✗ | 21,349 |
Fastify | 0.25.2 | ✓ | 23,301 |
- | |||
http.Server |
8.2.1 | ✗ | 33,435 |
Getting Started
Server Methods
Routes
Logging
Middlewares
Hooks
Decorators
Validation and Serialize
Lifecycle
Reply
Request
Content Type Parser
Plugins
Testing
Plugins Guide
point-of-view
Templates rendering (ejs, pug, handlebars, marko) plugin support for Fastify.fastify-mongodb
Fastify MongoDB connection plugin, with this you can share the same MongoDb connection pool in every part of your server.fastify-redis
Fastify Redis connection plugin, with this you can share the same Redis connection in every part of your server.fastify-swagger
Swagger documentation generator for Fastifyfastify-multipart
Multipart support for Fastifyfastify-bearer-auth
Bearer auth plugin for Fastifyfastify-pigeon
Bankai assets compiler for Fastifyfastify-react
React server side rendering support for Fastify with Nextfastify-jwt
JWT utils for Fastify, internally uses jsonwebtokenfastify-websocket
WebSocket support for Fastify. Built upon websocket-streamfastify-helmet
Important security headers for Fastifyfastify-auth
Run multiple auth functions in Fastifyfastify-leveldb
Plugin to share a common LevelDB connection across Fastify.fastify-apollo
Run an Apollo Server with Fastify.fastify-accepts
to have accepts in your request object.fastify-accepts-serializer
to serialize to output according toAccept
headerfastify-sse
to provide Server-Sent Events withreply.sse( … )
to Fastify- More coming soon
https://www.npmjs.com/~matteo.collina
https://twitter.com/matteocollina
https://www.npmjs.com/~delvedor
This project is kindly sponsored by:
Licensed under MIT.