Add support for the Fetch API's redirected property in HttpResponse and HttpErrorResponse when using HttpClient with the withFetch provider.
The redirected property indicates whether the response was the result of an HTTP redirect, providing valuable information for security, debugging, and conditional logic.
PR Close#62675
The fetch backend now propagates the plain body when parsing the body fails.
This replicates the behavior of the XHR backend introduced in #19773.
The current state completely obfuscates errors of the "wrong" response type.
However, it's not uncommon for successful requests to return one type and
errors to return another type. Propagating the plain error allows downstream
error consumers to reason about the error body and decide how to parse it
depending on application needs.
PR Close#62765
Add support for mode and redirect options in Angular's HttpClient based on fech provider to enable control CORS behavior and redirect handling
PR Close#62315
Streams left in a pending state (due to `break` without cancel) may continue consuming or holding onto data behind the scenes. Calling `reader.cancel()` allows the browser or the underlying system to release any network or memory resources associated with the stream.
PR Close#61528
This commit adds support for the Fetch API's keepalive option when using HttpClient with the withFetch provider.
The change includes:
- Added keepalive to HttpRequestInit interface
- Modified FetchBackend to pass the option
- Added some unit test
PR Close#60621
Drops some bytes by moving `Accept` into a variable, which is then minified to something like `var a="Accept"` and reused in all the places.
PR Close#59546
Drops some bytes by moving `Content-Type` into a variable, which is then minified to something like `var b="Content-Type"` and reused in all the places.
PR Close#59518
The `X-Request-URL` string is duplicated in multiple places. It is worth moving it to a shared constant that would be minified to something like `const a = "X-Request-URL"` and referenced in all the used places.
PR Close#59420
This commit updates the code of the HTTP code to make the `FetchBackend` class tree-shakable. The class is only needed with `withFetch()` is called and it should not be included into bundles that do not use that feature.
PR Close#59418
In this update, the fetch backend now executes fetch operations outside of the Angular zone. This adjustment primarily aims to decrease Continuous Delivery (CD) cycles on Node.js. The decision was influenced by Undici, the Node.js fetch implementation, which relies on `setTimeouts` to manage response timeouts.
PR Close#56820
Prior to this change, is the `Content-Type` passed to the `FetchBackend` was lowercase it was overwritten with the default one.
fixes#56539
PR Close#56541
PR #51670 removed the usage of `const enum`. As a consequence HttpStatusCode that were previously inlined now pull and retains the (fairly large) `HttpStatusCode` enum.
By intermediate constants, we prevent the framework from pulling this big enum by default.
PR Close#55434
Accessing the `Zone` variable without checking if it's defined or not
leads to an error "Zone is not defined" if zone.js is not imported (nooped).
This commit adds an additional check before getting the current zone where
the `doRequest` is being called.
PR Close#51119
Having the request run in the angular zone has the consequence of triggering the CD for every read of the response stream.
This commit wraps the whole `doRequest` to run outside angular with every callback on the observer being called inside the zone.
Fixes#50979.
PR Close#50981
This commit introduces a new `HttpBackend` implentation which makes requests using the fetch API
This feature is a developer preview and is opt-in.
It is enabled by setting the providers with `provideHttpClient(withFetch())`.
NB: The fetch API is experimental on Node but available without flags from Node 18 onwards.
PR Close#50247