oembetter
is a modern oembed client which allows you to add filters that provide or improve oembed support for services that either don't have it or don't do it very well.
oembetter
fully supports the oembed
standard including both XML and JSON responses from servers, and delivers the result as a neatly parsed JavaScript object.
oembetter
also allows you to whitelist trusted oembed
domains. We strongly recommend this to prevent session cookie theft and other attacks.
oembetter
intentionally sticks to the oembed standard so you can use it to implement straightforward proxies that provide "better oembed."
var oembetter = require('oembetter')();
oembetter.fetch(url, function(err, response) {
if (!err) {
// thumbnail_url points to an image
console.log(response.thumbnail_url);
// response.html contains markup to embed the video or
// whatever it might be
console.log(response.html);
}
});
oembetter is not restricted to handling responses of type video
. See the oembed documentation for other response types that may come down the pipe.
You can pass an object containing maxwidth
and maxheight
options. Sites vary in how well they support them.
var oembetter = require('oembetter')();
oembetter.fetch(url, function(err, { maxwidth: 480, maxheight: 480 }, response) {
if (!err) {
// response.html contains markup to embed the video or
// whatever it might be
}
});
Trusting oembed
completely isn't safe for your users, especially if you are allowing untrusted users to embed things. The HTML returned by third party sites could do nasty things like running JavaScript that sniffs user sessions or just displaying a fake login prompt.
But sites like YouTube, Vimeo and Flickr do play nicely with others. So we use a whitelist to decide which domains are OK:
oembetter.whitelist([ 'youtube.com', 'vimeo.com', 'wufoo.com' ]);
Just list acceptable domain names and oembetter
will make sure URLs are in one of those domains (or a subdomain) before doing anything else. If not, an error is delivered to the callback.
For your convenience, there is a standard whitelist available. Use it at your own risk:
oembetter.whitelist(oembetter.suggestedWhitelist);
Some services support oembed
but aren't discoverable. You can tell oembetter where to point for the oembed api by passing in an array of endpoints.
oembetter.endpoints([
{domain: 'instagram.com', endpoint: 'http://api.instagram.com/oembed'}
]);
There is also a list of suggested endpoints which you can elect to use:
oembetter.endpoints(oembetter.suggestedEndpoints);
(Hint: you can concatenate an additional array with your own endpoints if desired.)
Some services don't support oembed
. In these cases you'll want to fake it by providing a filter that substitutes its own response.
Other services support oembed
, but only for certain URLs. In these cases you'll want to change the URL that oembed
will use.
Pass a function to the addBefore
method. This function will receive the URL, the options object (which might contain maxwidth
and maxheight
), the response so far (usually undefined at this point), and a callback function. Your function should invoke the callback with an error if any, and a new URL, options object and response object if desired. You may also modify the objects you are given and skip passing any arguments to the callback.
"When would response
already be defined?" If another before
filter has already suggested one, you'll see it even though we haven't made a real oembed call yet.
If any filter provides a response object, then an actual oembed call is not made. Not all before
filters do this. Some just change the URL.
Your filter must begin by making sure this URL is relevant to its interests.
Here's an example: hootenanny.com
(yes, I made it up) has pages like /pages/50.html
. We know each one has a thumbnail at /thumbnails/50.jpg
and a video page suitable for iframes at /videos/50
. Let's create our own oembed response since hootenanny.com
doesn't support it.
var urls = require('url');
oembetter.addBefore(function(url, options, response, callback) {
var parsed = urls.parse(url);
if (!oembetter.inDomain('hootenanny.com', parsed.hostname)) {
return setImmediate(callback);
}
var matches = parsed.path.match(/pages\/(\d+).html/);
if (!matches) {
return setImmediate(callback);
}
var id = matches[1];
var newResponse = {
thumbnail_url: 'http://hootenanny.com/thumbnails/' + id + '.jpg',
html: '<iframe src="http://hootenanny.com/videos/' + id + '"></iframe>'
};
return callback(null, url, options, newResponse);
});
You can also write a filter that just adjusts URLs. This filter knows that wiggypants.com
URLs will work better if we point them at jiggypants.com
:
oembetter.addBefore(function(url, options, response, callback) {
var parsed = urls.parse(url);
if (!oembetter.inDomain('wiggypants.com', parsed.hostname)) {
return setImmediate(callback);
}
url = url.replace(/wiggypants\.com/g, 'jiggypants.com');
return callback(null, url);
});
Some services support oembed
, but not quite well enough. So you want to make a small adjustment to the standard response. You want an after
filter.
Here's an async filter that makes sure YouTube's embed codes use wmode=opaque
and also upgrades to a high-res thumbnail if possible.
oembetter.addAfter(function(url, options, response, callback) {
if (!url.match(/youtube/)) {
return setImmediate(callback);
}
// Fix YouTube iframes to use wmode=opaque so they don't
// ignore z-index in Windows Chrome
response.html = response.html.replace('feature=oembed', 'feature=oembed&wmode=opaque');
// Change thumbnail to be largest available if it exists
var maxResImage = result.thumbnail_url.replace('hqdefault.jpg', 'maxresdefault.jpg');
return request.head(maxResImage, function(err, httpResponse) {
if (response.statusCode < 400) {
result.thumbnail_url = maxResImage;
}
return callback(null);
});
});
This filter modifies the result
object directly. You may also pass a new result
object as the second argument to the callback.
after
filters are only called if there is a response.
If you wish to provide a fallback solution for cases where there is no response from oembed, use a fallback filter.
This only makes sense when you're hopeful that oembed will work some of the time. If not, write a before
filter that supplies its own response.
// "fallback" filter can create a response when oembed fails
oembetter.addFallback(function(url, options, callback) {
var parsed = urls.parse(url);
if (!oembetter.inDomain('wonkypants83742938.com', parsed.hostname)) {
return setImmediate(callback);
}
return callback(null, { html: 'so wonky' });
});
0.1.9: the new endpoints
option allows you to configure custom oembed API endpoints for services that don't advertise an endpoint or advertise it incorrectly.
0.1.7-0.1.8: support SoundCloud. Added it to the suggested whitelist and added tolerance for their incorrect JSON content type.
0.1.6: security improvement: reject all URLs that are not http:
or https:
completely, right up front. This means you don't have to protect against these obvious hacks in your before
and after
handlers.
0.1.5: packaging issues, no changes.
0.1.4: if the URL leads to a page with no oembed metadata, look for a link rel="canonical"
tag and try that URL instead. Don't pursue this more than one step.
Also, specify a user agent so that certain hosts don't give us watered-down HTML.
0.1.3: added youtu.be
to the suggested whitelist.
oembetter
was created at P'unk Avenue for use in many projects built with Apostrophe, an open-source content management system built on node.js. oembetter
isn't mandatory for Apostrophe and vice versa, but they play very well together. If you like oembetter
you should definitely check out apostrophenow.org.