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Fastify

Fast and low overhead web framework, for Node.js

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Why

An efficient server implies a lower cost of the infrastructure, a better responsiveness under load and happy users. How can you efficiently handle the resources of your server, knowing that you are serving the highest number of requests possible, without sacrificing security validations and handy development?

Enter Fastify. Fastify is a web framework highly focused on providing the best developer experience with the least overhead and a powerful plugin architecture. It is inspired by Hapi and Express and as far as we know, it is one of the fastest web frameworks in town.

Who is using Fastify?

Fastify is proudly powering a large ecosystem of organisations and products out there.

Sponsors

Would you like to sponsor Fastify financially? Support us on GitHub or Open Collective.

  • Handsontable is using Fastify
  • Mercedes-Benz Group is using Fastify
  • val town is using Fastify

Using

Do you want your organisation to be featured here?

  • HEYHEY is using Fastify
  • GEOLYTIX is using Fastify
  • Dig-A-Hash is using Fastify
  • MIA Platform is using Fastify
  • NTT Com SkyWay is using Fastify
  • Swiss Dev Jobs is using Fastify
  • SKUSavvy is using Fastify
  • Microsoft is using Fastify
... and many more!

Core features

These are the main features and principles on which Fastify has been built:

  • Highly performant: as far as we know, Fastify is one of the fastest web frameworks in town, depending on the code complexity we can serve up to 30 thousand requests per second.
  • Extensible: Fastify is fully extensible via its hooks, plugins and decorators.
  • Schema based: even if it is not mandatory we recommend to use JSON Schema to validate your routes and serialize your outputs, internally Fastify compiles the schema in a highly performant function.
  • Logging: logs are extremely important but are costly; we chose the best logger to almost remove this cost, Pino!
  • Developer friendly: the framework is built to be very expressive and to help developers in their daily use, without sacrificing performance and security.
  • TypeScript ready: we work hard to maintain a TypeScript type declaration file so we can support the growing TypeScript community.

Quick start

Get Fastify with NPM:

npm install fastify

Then create server.js and add the following content:

// Import the framework and instantiate it
import Fastify from 'fastify'
const fastify = Fastify({
logger: true
})

// Declare a route
fastify.get('/', async function handler (request, reply) {
return { hello: 'world' }
})

// Run the server!
try {
await fastify.listen({ port: 3000 })
} catch (err) {
fastify.log.error(err)
process.exit(1)
}

Finally, launch the server with:

node server

and test it with:

curl http://localhost:3000

Using CLI

Get the fastify-cli to create a new scaffolding project:

npm install --global fastify-cli
fastify generate myproject

Request/Response validation and hooks

Fastify can do much more than this. For example, you can easily provide input and output validation using JSON Schema and perform specific operations before the handler is executed:

import Fastify from 'fastify'
const fastify = Fastify({
logger: true
})

fastify.route({
method: 'GET',
url: '/',
schema: {
// request needs to have a querystring with a `name` parameter
querystring: {
type: 'object',
properties: {
name: { type: 'string'}
},
required: ['name'],
},
// the response needs to be an object with an `hello` property of type 'string'
response: {
200: {
type: 'object',
properties: {
hello: { type: 'string' }
}
}
}
},
// this function is executed for every request before the handler is executed
preHandler: async (request, reply) => {
// E.g. check authentication
},
handler: async (request, reply) => {
return { hello: 'world' }
}
})

try {
await fastify.listen({ port: 3000 })
} catch (err) {
fastify.log.error(err)
process.exit(1)
}

TypeScript Support

Fastify is shipped with a typings file, but you may need to install @types/node, depending on the Node.js version you are using.
The following example creates a http server.
We pass the relevant typings for our http version used. By passing types we get correctly typed access to the underlying http objects in routes.
If using http2 we would pass <http2.Http2Server, http2.Http2ServerRequest, http2.Http2ServerResponse>.
For https pass http2.Http2SecureServer or http.SecureServer instead of Server.
This ensures within the server handler we also get http.ServerResponse with correct typings on reply.res.

import Fastify, { FastifyInstance, RouteShorthandOptions } from 'fastify'
import { Server, IncomingMessage, ServerResponse } from 'http'

const server: FastifyInstance = Fastify({})

const opts: RouteShorthandOptions = {
schema: {
response: {
200: {
type: 'object',
properties: {
pong: {
type: 'string'
}
}
}
}
}
}

server.get('/ping', opts, async (request, reply) => {
return { pong: 'it worked!' }
})

const start = async () => {
try {
await server.listen({ port: 3000 })

const address = server.server.address()
const port = typeof address === 'string' ? address : address?.port

} catch (err) {
server.log.error(err)
process.exit(1)
}
}

start()

Visit the Documentation to learn more about all the features that Fastify has to offer.

A fast web framework

Leveraging our experience with Node.js performance, Fastify has been built from the ground up to be as fast as possible. Have a look at our benchmarks section to compare Fastify performance to other common web frameworks.

Check out our benchmarks

Ecosystem

Fastify has an ever-growing ecosystem of plugins. Probably there is already a plugin for your favourite database or template language. Have a look at the Ecosystem page to navigate through the currently available plugins. Can't you find the plugin you are looking for? No problem, it's very easy to write one!

Explore 296 plugins

Meet The Team

In alphabetical order

Lead Maintainers

Matteo Collina's profile picture

Matteo Collina

Tomas Della Vedova's profile picture

Tomas Della Vedova

Manuel Spigolon's profile picture

Manuel Spigolon

James Sumners's profile picture

James Sumners

Collaborators

Aras Abbasi's profile picture

Aras Abbasi

Tommaso Allevi's profile picture

Tommaso Allevi

Ayoub El Khattabi's profile picture

Ayoub El Khattabi

David Clements's profile picture

David Clements

Dan Castilo's profile picture

Dan Castilo

Gürgün Dayıoğlu's profile picture

Gürgün Dayıoğlu

Dustin Deus's profile picture

Dustin Deus

Carlos Fuentes's profile picture

Carlos Fuentes

Rafael Gonzaga's profile picture

Rafael Gonzaga

Jean Michelet's profile picture

Jean Michelet

Vincent Le Goff's profile picture

Vincent Le Goff

Luciano Mammino's profile picture

Luciano Mammino

Salman Mitha's profile picture

Salman Mitha

Igor Savin's profile picture

Igor Savin

Evan Shortiss's profile picture

Evan Shortiss

Maksim Sinik's profile picture

Maksim Sinik

Frazer Smith's profile picture

Frazer Smith

Past Collaborators

Ethan Arrowood's profile picture

Ethan Arrowood

Çağatay Çalı's profile picture

Çağatay Çalı

Cemre Mengu's profile picture

Cemre Mengu

Trivikram Kamat's profile picture

Trivikram Kamat

Nathan Woltman's profile picture

Nathan Woltman

Acknowledgments

This project is kindly sponsored by:

Past Sponsors:

Also thanks to:

Hosted by

We are an At Large project at the OpenJS Foundation

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