interface
Intercepts and handles an HttpRequest
or HttpResponse
.
interface HttpInterceptor { intercept(req: HttpRequest<any>, next: HttpHandler): Observable<HttpEvent<any>> }
Most interceptors transform the outgoing request before passing it to the next interceptor in the chain, by calling next.handle(transformedReq)
. An interceptor may transform the response event stream as well, by applying additional RxJS operators on the stream returned by next.handle()
.
More rarely, an interceptor may handle the request entirely, and compose a new event stream instead of invoking next.handle()
. This is an acceptable behavior, but keep in mind that further interceptors will be skipped entirely.
It is also rare but valid for an interceptor to return multiple responses on the event stream for a single request.
intercept() | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Identifies and handles a given HTTP request. | ||||||
|
req | HttpRequest | The outgoing request object to handle. |
next | HttpHandler | The next interceptor in the chain, or the backend if no interceptors remain in the chain. |
Observable<HttpEvent<any>>
: An observable of the event stream.
To use the same instance of HttpInterceptors
for the entire app, import the HttpClientModule
only in your AppModule
, and add the interceptors to the root application injector . If you import HttpClientModule
multiple times across different modules (for example, in lazy loading modules), each import creates a new copy of the HttpClientModule
, which overwrites the interceptors provided in the root module.
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0.
https://v10.angular.io/api/common/http/HttpInterceptor