What
If you don't know what those HTTP timeouts are, I recommend you to read the following articles:
How
When using the NestJS framework, sometimes you may need to change some default timeout. You can define them just like you'd do in a plain Node.js HTTP server like so:
import * as http from 'http' import { NestFactory } from '@nestjs/core' // import { FastifyAdapter } from '@nestjs/platform-fastify' import { AppModule } from './app.module' async function bootstrap() { const app = await NestFactory.create(AppModule) // const app = await NestFactory.create(AppModule, new FastifyAdapter()) const server = app.getHttpServer() console.log(server instanceof http.Server) // true // The timeout value for sockets server.setTimeout(2 * 60 * 1000) // The number of milliseconds of inactivity a server needs to wait for additional incoming data server.keepAliveTimeout = 30000 // Limit the amount of time the parser will wait to receive the complete HTTP headers server.headersTimeout = 31000 await app.listen(3000) } bootstrap()
That's all!
Here you can find all the docs about the http.server
we used above:
Top comments (2)
It is a little more correct to configure the server before it starts listening for HTTP requests.
to be honest I thought that the 'listen' is invoked only in the next tick, so changing the server after that line shouldn't matter. I edit the post so it works as expected now.