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What does middleware and app.use actually mean in Expressjs?

Almost every Express app I see has an app.use statement for middleware but I haven't found a clear, concise explanation of what middleware actually is and what the app.use statement is doing. Even the express docs themselves are a bit vague on this. Can you explain these concepts for me please?

similar question for reference (tho this one was created earlier): stackoverflow.com/questions/11321635/…
^ Ha! These two questions reference each other in the comments.
So it's a Cirular Reference.
I wrote an article on express.js middleware. Here is the link:nodexplained.com/blog-detail/2017/12/31/…

d
dsomel21

middleware

I'm halfway through separating the concept of middleware in a new project.

Middleware allows you to define a stack of actions that you should flow through. Express servers themselves are a stack of middlewares.

// express
var app = express();
// middleware
var stack = middleware();

Then you can add layers to the middleware stack by calling .use

// express
app.use(express.static(..));
// middleware
stack.use(function(data, next) {
  next();
});

A layer in the middleware stack is a function, which takes n parameters (2 for express, req & res) and a next function.

Middleware expects the layer to do some computation, augment the parameters and then call next.

A stack doesn't do anything unless you handle it. Express will handle the stack every time an incoming HTTP request is caught on the server. With middleware you handle the stack manually.

// express, you need to do nothing
// middleware
stack.handle(someData);

A more complete example :

var middleware = require("../src/middleware.js");

var stack = middleware(function(data, next) {
    data.foo = data.data*2;
    next();
}, function(data, next) {
    setTimeout(function() {
        data.async = true;
        next();
    }, 100)
}, function(data) {
    console.log(data);
});

stack.handle({
    "data": 42
})

In express terms you just define a stack of operations you want express to handle for every incoming HTTP request.

In terms of express (rather than connect) you have global middleware and route specific middleware. This means you can attach a middleware stack to every incoming HTTP requests or only attach it to HTTP requests that interact with a certain route.

Advanced examples of express & middleware :

// middleware 

var stack = middleware(function(req, res, next) {
    users.getAll(function(err, users) {
        if (err) next(err);
        req.users = users;
        next();  
    });
}, function(req, res, next) {
    posts.getAll(function(err, posts) {
        if (err) next(err);
        req.posts = posts;
        next();
    })
}, function(req, res, next) {
    req.posts.forEach(function(post) {
        post.user = req.users[post.userId];
    });

    res.render("blog/posts", {
        "posts": req.posts
    });
});

var app = express.createServer();

app.get("/posts", function(req, res) {
   stack.handle(req, res); 
});

// express

var app = express.createServer();

app.get("/posts", [
    function(req, res, next) {
        users.getAll(function(err, users) {
            if (err) next(err);
            req.users = users;
            next();  
        });
    }, function(req, res, next) {
        posts.getAll(function(err, posts) {
            if (err) next(err);
            req.posts = posts;
            next();
        })
    }, function(req, res, next) {
        req.posts.forEach(function(post) {
            post.user = req.users[post.userId];
        });

        res.render("blog/posts", {
            "posts": req.posts
        });
    }
], function(req, res) {
   stack.handle(req, res); 
});

Hmm... is middleware in this case your own library or part of express?
Cool. I'm still a bit confused by the app.use() syntax. What is the actual return value of the middleware and what does use do with it?
@iZ use adds it to a stack. Then every single request goes through the stack.
@Raynos, the link to your project, "middleware", is broken.
@Raynos but I see middleware still being used in Express? what do you mean it's nuked?
B
Barum Rho

After simplifying things, a web server can be seen as a function that takes in a request and outputs a response. So if you view a web server as a function, you could organize it into several pieces and separate them into smaller functions so that the composition of them will be the original function.

Middlewares are the smaller functions that you can compose with others and the obvious benefit is that you can reuse them.


S
Sergio

I add a late answer to add something not mentioned in the previous answers.

By now it should be clear that middleware is/are function(s) run between the client request and the server answer. The most common middleware functionality needed are error managing, database interaction, getting info from static files or other resources. To move on the middleware stack the next callback must be called, you can see it in the end of middleware function to move to the next step in the flow.

You can use the app.use approach and have a flow like this:

var express = require('express'),
    app = express.createServer(),                                                                                                                                                 
    port = 1337;

function middleHandler(req, res, next) {
    console.log("execute middle ware");
    next();
}

app.use(function (req, res, next) {
    console.log("first middle ware");                                                                                                             
    next();
});

app.use(function (req, res, next) {
    console.log("second middle ware");                                                                                                             
    next();
});

app.get('/', middleHandler, function (req, res) {
    console.log("end middleware function");
    res.send("page render finished");
});

app.listen(port);
console.log('start server');

but you can also use another approach and pass each middleware as function arguments. Here is a example from the MooTools Nodejs website where midleware gets the Twitter, Github and Blog flow before the response is sent back to the client. Note how the functions are passed as arguments in app.get('/', githubEvents, twitter, getLatestBlog, function(req, res){. Using app.get will only be called for GET requests, app.use will be called for all requests.

// github, twitter & blog feeds
var githubEvents = require('./middleware/githubEvents')({
    org: 'mootools'
});
var twitter = require('./middleware/twitter')();
var blogData = require('./blog/data');
function getLatestBlog(req, res, next){
    blogData.get(function(err, blog) {
        if (err) next(err);
        res.locals.lastBlogPost = blog.posts[0];
        next();
    });
}

// home
app.get('/', githubEvents, twitter, getLatestBlog, function(req, res){
    res.render('index', {
        title: 'MooTools',
        site: 'mootools',
        lastBlogPost: res.locals.lastBlogPost,
        tweetFeed: res.locals.twitter
    });
});

I was looking for an answer to whether Express.js supports the route based (NOT Router based) middleware mounting? It seems you have showed it in your answer.
Can you explain your above example?, how can you pass in so many functions into app.get(...) and what order are they called?
Hi @TannerSummers, the .get() method takes 3 types of arguments: the first, the last and the middle ones. Internally it detects if there are more arguments than 2 and uses those (the middle ones) as middleware functions, calling them from left to right.
I wasn't sure if there was a difference in the two styles. This post helped clarify - thanks!
S
Suraj Jain

expressjs guide has pretty neat answer to your question, I highly recommend you to read that, I am posting a short snippet of the guide, the guide is quite good.

Writing middleware for use in Express apps

Overview

Middleware functions are functions that have access to the request object (req), the response object (res), and the next function in the application’s request-response cycle. The next function is a function in the Express router which, when invoked, executes the middleware succeeding the current middleware.

Middleware functions can perform the following tasks:

Execute any code.

Make changes to the request and the response objects.

End the request-response cycle.

Call the next middleware in the stack.

If the current middleware function does not end the request-response cycle, it must call next() to pass control to the next middleware function. Otherwise, the request will be left hanging.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/gVnGL.png

Example

Here is an example of a simple “Hello World” Express application. The remainder of this article will define and add two middleware functions to the application: one called myLogger that prints a simple log message and another called requestTime1 that displays the timestamp of the HTTP request.

var express = require('express')
var app = express()

app.get('/', function (req, res) {
  res.send('Hello World!')
})

app.listen(3000)   

Middleware function myLogger

Here is a simple example of a middleware function called “myLogger”. This function just prints “LOGGED” when a request to the app passes through it. The middleware function is assigned to a variable named myLogger.

var myLogger = function (req, res, next) {
  console.log('LOGGED')
  next()
}

Notice the call above to next(). Calling this function invokes the next middleware function in the app. The next() function is not a part of the Node.js or Express API, but is the third argument that is passed to the middleware function. The next() function could be named anything, but by convention it is always named “next”. To avoid confusion, always use this convention.

To load the middleware function, call app.use(), specifying the middleware function. For example, the following code loads the myLogger middleware function before the route to the root path (/).

var express = require('express')
var app = express()

var myLogger = function (req, res, next) {
  console.log('LOGGED')
  next()
}

app.use(myLogger)

app.get('/', function (req, res) {
  res.send('Hello World!')
})

app.listen(3000)

Every time the app receives a request, it prints the message “LOGGED” to the terminal.

The order of middleware loading is important: middleware functions that are loaded first are also executed first.

If myLogger is loaded after the route to the root path, the request never reaches it and the app doesn’t print “LOGGED”, because the route handler of the root path terminates the request-response cycle.

The middleware function myLogger simply prints a message, then passes on the request to the next middleware function in the stack by calling the next() function.

This post will only contain myLogger middleware, for further post you could go to the original expressjs guide here.


Very nice explanation.
It is available on express site here expressjs.com/en/guide/writing-middleware.html, it is really good. I wonder why no one mentioned it so far.
Nice one. It's the clearest explanation I've seen here and yes, strange that no-one has referenced it!
Nicely explained
The order of middleware loading is important: middleware functions that are loaded first are also executed first. : This is such an important note. No other answer mentions this. For a beginner who has worked only on python this is extremely important as these things might have never been encountered.
V
Vaibhav KB

=====Very very simple explanation=====

Middlewares are often used in the context of Express.js framework and are a fundamental concept for node.js . In a nutshell, Its basically a function that has access to the request and response objects of your application. The way I'd like to think about it, is a series of 'checks/pre-screens' that the request goes through before the it is handled by the application. For e.g, Middlewares would be a good fit to determine if the request is authenticated before it proceeds to the application and return the login page if the request is not authenticated or for logging each request. A lot of third-party middlewares are available that enables a variety of functionality.

Simple Middleware example:

var app = express();
app.use(function(req,res,next)){
    console.log("Request URL - "req.url);
    next();
}

The above code would be executed for each request that comes in and would log the request url, the next() method essentially allows the program to continue. If the next() function is not invoked, the program would not proceed further and would halt at the execution of the middleware.

A couple of Middleware Gotchas:

The order of middlewares in your application matters, as the request would go through each one in a sequential order. Forgetting to call the next() method in your middleware function can halt the processing of your request. Any change the req and res objects in the middleware function, would make the change available to other parts of the application that uses req and res


Thank you very much! this is the best explanation so far to understand this. A question, I am reading some code with middleware and it doesn't call next() but return next(). What is the difference?
Thanks a lot friend for kind words... we do next() because we want next middleware get called, i don't think next() or return next(), should make any difference! Still it depends on what the code is...
n
naz

Middlewares are functions executed in the middle after the input/source then produces an output which could be the final output or could be used by the next middleware until the cycle is complete.

It is like a product that goes through an assembly line where it gets modified as it moves along until it gets completed, evaluated or gets rejected.

A middleware expects some value to work on (i.e. parameter values) and based on some logic the middleware will call or not call the next middleware or send a response back to the client.

If you can't still grasp the middleware concept, it is in a way similar to the Decorator or Chain of command patterns.


r
rishabh dev

Middleware is a subset of chained functions called by the Express js routing layer before the user-defined handler is invoked. Middleware functions have full access to the request and response objects and can modify either of them. The middleware chain is always called in the exact order in which it has been defined, so it is vital for you to know exactly what a specific piece of middleware is doing. Once a middleware function finishes, it calls the next function in the chain by invoking its next argument as function. After the complete chain gets executed,the user request handler is called.


M
MNR

Keep things simple, man!

Note: the answer is related to the ExpressJS builtin middlware cases, however there are different definitions and use cases of middlewares.

From my point of view, middleware acts as utility or helper functions but its activation and use is fully optional by using the app.use('path', /* define or use builtin middleware */) which don't wants from us to write some code for doing very common tasks which are needed for each HTTP request of our client like processing cookies, CSRF tokens and ..., which are very common in most applications so middleware can help us do these all for each HTTP request of our client in some stack, sequence or order of operations then provide the result of the process as a single unit of client request.

Example:

Accepting clients requests and providing back responses to them according to their requests is the nature of web server technology.

Imagine if we are providing a response with just "Hello, world!" text for a GET HTTP request to our webserver's root URI is very simple scenario and don't needs anything else, but instead if we are checking the currently logged-in user and then responding with "Hello, Username!" needs something more than usual in this case we need a middleware to process all the client request metadata and provide us the identification info grabbed from the client request then according to that info we can uniquely identify our current user and it is possible to response to him/her with some related data.

Hope it to help someone!


A
Akshay Vinchurkar

In very basic term if i want to explain it like this i learn this from traversymedia youtube channel express crash course. ok so middle ware is a function who execute after you make a call to your route like this.

var logger = function(req, res, next){
   console.log('logging...');
   next();
}

app.use(logger);

This logger function execute every time you refresh your page that means you can write anything in it that you required to do after your page get rendered any operation api call, reset things basically anything. and put this middleware before your route function order of middleware is really important or it dons't work