The full documentation is available here.
To install the client framework perform the following steps:
npm install opensearch-browser
The easiest way to use the library is by using the discover
function, which
takes a single parameter, the URL of the OpenSearch service:
import { discover } from 'opensearch-browser';
// or: var discover = require('opensearch-browser').discover;
discover('http://example.com/search').then((service) => {
service.search({ searchTerms: 'Test', startIndex: 1 }).then((results) => {
// your results:
});
});
If you already have the OpenSearch description document locally, you can also
use the fromXml
function to create the service class:
import { fromXml } from 'opensearch-browser';
const osddDocumentString = `
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<OpenSearchDescription xmlns="http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearch/1.1/">
...
</OpenSearchDescription>`;
const service = fromXml(osddDocumentString);
This OpenSearch library requires Promises
. If you are not sure whether you
have it available use the following polyfill:
require('es6-promise').polyfill();
This library uses a global configuration interface, provided by the config
function, which is used for getting and setting configuration values:
import { config } from 'opensearch-browser';
// getting the config
const { useXHR, Promise } = config();
// setting the config
config({
useXHR: true,
Promise: Promise,
});
Currently supported are the following config values:
useXHR
: Whether to use theXMLHttpRequest
or thefetch
API. The former has the advantage that the requests can be aborted. This is exposed when aPromise
type is used that supports cancelling, like the great bluebird library.Promise
: If set, overrides default ES6 Promise with a custom implementation, for examplebluebird
. However bluebird is not set as a dependency to avoid bloating the library.
Request parameters are supplied as an object whose attribute names shall either be the URL parameter names or their types. For example, if the OpenSearch service provides a URL like the following example:
<Url type="text/html"
template="http://example.com/search?q={searchTerms}&pw={startPage?}"
/>
then the following request parameters are possible:
// Using the types
service.search({ searchTerms: 'Test', startPage: 1 }).then( ... );
// Using the parameter names
service.search({ q: 'Test', pw: 1 }).then( ... );
// Omitting the optional parameter 'startPage'
service.search({ searchTerms: 'Test' }).then( ... );
An exception will be raised when mandatory parameters are not supplied.
Some parameter types will be automatically translated from their object to their string representation:
Parameter type | Object | Value |
---|---|---|
time:start and time:end |
Date |
an ISO 8601 string representation |
geo:box |
[left, bottom, right, top] |
a string "left,bottom,right,top" |
geo:geometry |
GeoJSON Geometry Object |
the WKT representation |
all numeric types + datetime from eo |
Number |
"<value>" |
[value1, value2, ...] |
"{<value1>,<value2>,...}" |
|
{ min: minValue, max: maxValue } |
"[<minValue>,<maxValue>]" |
|
{ min: minValue } |
"[<minValue>" |
|
{ max: maxValue } |
"<maxValue>]" |
|
{ minExclusive: minValue } |
"]<minValue>" |
|
{ maxExclusive: maxValue } |
"<maxValue>[" |
|
... |
By default, the library is able to parse RSS, Atom and GeoJSON responses. They are parsed to a structure based upon the GeoJSON format.
It is possible to extend the supported formats by adding additional format handlers:
import { registerFormat } from 'opensearch-browser';
const format = {
parse: function(text) {
// insert parsing logic here...
return ...;
}
};
// register the format under the given mime-type
registerFormat('application/vnd.special+xml', format);
When a search URL is used with that mime-type, the response is now parsed with the registered handler.
Alternatively, raw responses can be used, and parsing be performed outside of this library:
const mimeType = null;
const raw = true;
service.search({ searchTerms: 'Test', startIndex: 1 }, mimeType, raw)
.then(function(response) {
// do something with the response
});
For both cases, the response is a
Response object
from the fetch
API.
This library also supports the Suggestions extension of OpenSearch. This is
implemented on the Service
via the getSuggestions
method:
service.getSuggestions({ searchTerms: 'someth' })
.then(function(suggestions) {
for (let i = 0; i < suggestions.length; ++i) {
console.log(
suggestion.completion,
suggestion.description,
suggestion.url
);
}
});
For this to work, the server must have a search url with the type
application/x-suggestions+json
defined.
To run the unit tests do
npm test
To run the unit tests continuously, run the following command:
npm run test:watch
To generate the API documentation run:
npm run docs
This library aims to provide a broad support of the most common OpenSearch functionality and exchange formats. It also supports the Geo, Time, EO Products, Parameters, and Suggestions extensions and adheres to various points of the CEOS OpenSearch best practice paper.