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Hooks

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An optional src/hooks.js (or src/hooks.ts, or src/hooks/index.js) file exports four functions, all optional, that run on the server — handle, handleError, getSession, and externalFetch.

The location of this file can be configured as config.kit.files.hooks

handlepermalink

This function runs every time SvelteKit receives a request — whether that happens while the app is running, or during prerendering — and determines the response. It receives an event object representing the request and a function called resolve, which invokes SvelteKit's router and generates a response (rendering a page, or invoking an endpoint) accordingly. This allows you to modify response headers or bodies, or bypass SvelteKit entirely (for implementing endpoints programmatically, for example).

Requests for static assets — which includes pages that were already prerendered — are not handled by SvelteKit.

If unimplemented, defaults to ({ event, resolve }) => resolve(event).

// Type declarations for `handle` (declarations marked with
// an `export` keyword can be imported from `@sveltejs/kit`)

export interface RequestEvent {
	request: Request;
	url: URL;
	params: Record<string, string>;
	locals: App.Locals;
	platform: App.Platform;
}

export interface ResolveOpts {
	ssr?: boolean;
	transformPage?: ({ html }: { html: string }) => string;
}

export interface Handle {
	(input: {
		event: RequestEvent;
		resolve(event: RequestEvent, opts?: ResolveOpts): MaybePromise<Response>;
	}): MaybePromise<Response>;
}

See the TypeScript section for information on App.Locals and App.Platform.

To add custom data to the request, which is passed to endpoints, populate the event.locals object, as shown below.

/** @type {import('@sveltejs/kit').Handle} */
export async function handle({ event, resolve }) {
	event.locals.user = await getUserInformation(event.request.headers.get('cookie'));

	const response = await resolve(event);
	response.headers.set('x-custom-header', 'potato');

	return response;
}

You can add call multiple handle functions with the sequence helper function.

resolve also supports a second, optional parameter that gives you more control over how the response will be rendered. That parameter is an object that can have the following fields:

  • ssr: boolean (default true) — if false, renders an empty 'shell' page instead of server-side rendering
  • transformPage(opts: { html: string }): string — applies custom transforms to HTML
/** @type {import('@sveltejs/kit').Handle} */
export async function handle({ event, resolve }) {
	const response = await resolve(event, {
		ssr: !event.url.pathname.startsWith('/admin'),
		transformPage: ({ html }) => html.replace('old', 'new')
	});

	return response;
}

Disabling server-side rendering effectively turns your SvelteKit app into a single-page app or SPA. In most situations this is not recommended (see appendix). Consider whether it's truly appropriate to disable it, and do so selectively rather than for all requests.

handleErrorpermalink

If an error is thrown during rendering, this function will be called with the error and the event that caused it. This allows you to send data to an error tracking service, or to customise the formatting before printing the error to the console.

During development, if an error occurs because of a syntax error in your Svelte code, a frame property will be appended highlighting the location of the error.

If unimplemented, SvelteKit will log the error with default formatting.

export interface HandleError {
	(input: { error: Error & { frame?: string }; event: RequestEvent }): void;
}
/** @type {import('@sveltejs/kit').HandleError} */
export async function handleError({ error, event }) {
	// example integration with https://sentry.io/
	Sentry.captureException(error, { event });
}

handleError is only called in the case of an uncaught exception. It is not called when pages and endpoints explicitly respond with 4xx and 5xx status codes.

getSessionpermalink

This function takes the event object and returns a session object that is accessible on the client and therefore must be safe to expose to users. It runs whenever SvelteKit server-renders a page.

If unimplemented, session is {}.

export interface GetSession {
	(event: RequestEvent): MaybePromise<App.Session>;
}
/** @type {import('@sveltejs/kit').GetSession} */
export function getSession(event) {
	return event.locals.user
		? {
				user: {
					// only include properties needed client-side —
					// exclude anything else attached to the user
					// like access tokens etc
					name: event.locals.user.name,
					email: event.locals.user.email,
					avatar: event.locals.user.avatar
				}
		  }
		: {};
}

session must be serializable, which means it must not contain things like functions or custom classes, just built-in JavaScript data types

externalFetchpermalink

This function allows you to modify (or replace) a fetch request for an external resource that happens inside a load function that runs on the server (or during pre-rendering).

For example, your load function might make a request to a public URL like https://api.yourapp.com when the user performs a client-side navigation to the respective page, but during SSR it might make sense to hit the API directly (bypassing whatever proxies and load balancers sit between it and the public internet).

export interface ExternalFetch {
	(req: Request): Promise<Response>;
}
/** @type {import('@sveltejs/kit').ExternalFetch} */
export async function externalFetch(request) {
	if (request.url.startsWith('https://api.yourapp.com/')) {
		// clone the original request, but change the URL
		request = new Request(
			request.url.replace('https://api.yourapp.com/', 'http://localhost:9999/'),
			request
		);
	}

	return fetch(request);
}
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