I have an application hosted on Heroku that sends a huge amount of JSON. I originally was getting a bodyParser - request entity too large error (HTTP 400). Googling around, I came across a few stackoverflow/github issue links
(Sails.js bodyParser - request entity too large on version 0.10.5) (https://github.com/balderdashy/skipper/issues/144)
in which I tried updating my http.js. Now my body parser looks like this:
bodyParser: {
fn: require('skipper'),
options:{
limit: '10mb'
}
}
This resolved the 400 error, but now I am getting a Heroku H13 error:
2016-08-11T14:02:08.861774+00:00 heroku[router]: at=error code=H13 desc="Connection closed without response"
At this point, I am kind of stumped. I've looked at Heroku's documentation about an H13 error
(https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/error-codes#h13-connection-closed-without-response),
but I am not sure if
- I need to configure more with Heroku (how I would even go about that) or
- Do more with Sails bodyParser configuration or
- A combination of the two
I am currently using version 0.11.2 of Sails.
[Update]
Researching more lead me to these links:
https://github.com/balderdashy/sails/issues/2653
https://github.com/balderdashy/skipper/issues/22
I noticed an individual had their bodyParser config outside the middleware block. I tried moving mine outside as well, and it seems to fix the 400 and 503 H13 Heroku issue I was receiving (and I slowly tip toed away from the issue). My new question is, why does the below work, especially since the bodyParser comment block is inside the middleware block?
module.exports.http = {
/****************************************************************************
* *
* Express middleware to use for every Sails request. To add custom *
* middleware to the mix, add a function to the middleware config object and *
* add its key to the "order" array. The $custom key is reserved for *
* backwards-compatibility with Sails v0.9.x apps that use the *
* `customMiddleware` config option. *
* *
****************************************************************************/
middleware: {
passportInit: require('passport').initialize(),
passportSession: require('passport').session(),
/***************************************************************************
* *
* The order in which middleware should be run for HTTP request. (the Sails *
* router is invoked by the "router" middleware below.) *
* *
***************************************************************************/
order: [
'startRequestTimer',
'cookieParser',
'session',
'passportInit',
'passportSession',
'myRequestLogger',
'bodyParser',
'handleBodyParserError',
'compress',
'methodOverride',
'poweredBy',
'$custom',
'router',
'www',
'favicon',
'404',
'500'
],
/****************************************************************************
* *
* Example custom middleware; logs each request to the console. *
* *
****************************************************************************/
// myRequestLogger: function (req, res, next) {
// console.log("Requested :: ", req.method, req.url);
// return next();
// }
/***************************************************************************
* *
* The body parser that will handle incoming multipart HTTP requests. By *
* default as of v0.10, Sails uses *
* [skipper](http://github.com/balderdashy/skipper). See *
* http://www.senchalabs.org/connect/multipart.html for other options. *
* *
***************************************************************************/
// bodyParser: require('skipper')
},
/***************************************************************************
* *
* The number of seconds to cache flat files on disk being served by *
* Express static middleware (by default, these files are in `.tmp/public`) *
* *
* The HTTP static cache is only active in a 'production' environment, *
* since that's the only time Express will cache flat-files. *
* *
***************************************************************************/
// cache: 31557600000
bodyParser: function () {
var opts = {limit:'10mb'};
var fn;
// Default to built-in bodyParser:
fn = require('skipper');
return fn(opts);
}
};