Security News
vlt Debuts New JavaScript Package Manager and Serverless Registry at NodeConf EU
vlt introduced its new package manager and a serverless registry this week, innovating in a space where npm has stagnated.
18h is a Next.js-inspired Koa-router wrapper, which allows you to create routes that match the pattern of your filesystem. This speeds up iteration, while maintaining a serverful architecture.
This library is best used with Node.js & TypeScript in order to unlock all the type-safety capabilities it has to offer.
That is how long Koala's sleep, and all the cooler names were taken.
Getting started is pretty snappy.
In order to install the package, in your root directory simply use your favourite package manager in order to install the package. It is registered on the NPM under the name 18h
.
npm install 18h
First, using your favourite file manager, or the command line, create the folder in which your routes will be stored in. This folder will mirror the structure of your API.
mkdir routes
Once this is complete, we will be able to instantiate our router object by referencing this folder. It's best practice to use the Node.js path
module, along with the global __dirname
constant in order to ensure the application runs correctly once it is transpiled to JavaScript.
import { join } from "path";
import { router } from "18h";
router({
routesFolder: join(__dirname, "routes"),
port: 8000,
hostname: "localhost",
});
We can also instantiate the 18h router with global middleware that will run prior to every API call.
const logRequest = async (context, next) => {
console.log(context);
await next();
};
router({
// ...
middleware: [logRequest],
});
Its important to remember that the structure of the filesystem within the routes folder you provide as the routesFolder
key is going to mirror the structure of your URLs.
Example
Assuming you provided a folder called
routes
as theroutesFolder
when creating your router object, creating a file atroutes/index.ts
it will allow consumers to interact with that endpoint at thehttp://localhost/
URL.Creating a file called
routes/example.ts
will allow consumers to interact with that endpoint at thehttp://localhost/example
URL.Creating a file called
routes/example/index.ts
will produce the same result as mentioned above.
Note
Placing square brackets
[]
around the entire name of a folder or file in the routes folder will allow for route parameters to be accepted through that endpoint.
/a/[b]/c
would become the endpoint path/a/:b/c
.
The following file structure would generate the corresponding API endpoint structure.
package.json
package-lock.json
node_modules/
src/
├── index.ts
└── routes/
├── index.ts
├── feed/
│ └── index.ts
├── user/
│ ├── delete.ts
│ ├── index.ts
│ └── settings/
│ ├── private.ts
│ └── name.ts
├── users/
│ └── [userId]/
│ ├── block.ts
│ ├── index.ts
│ └── follow.ts
└── posts/
├── create.ts
├── delete.ts
├── index.ts
├── like.ts
└── share.ts
tsconfig.json
/
/feed
/user/
/user/delete
/user/settings
/user/settings/private
/user/settings/name
/users/:userId
/users/:userId/block
/users/:userId/follow
/posts
/posts/create
/posts/delete
/posts/like
/posts/share
Of course, we want the paths to do things when someone interacts with them, that logic is defined in RouteController
object, which takes multiple MethodControllers
in which we define the logic of that endpoint.
Let's start off by creating the logic for the /users/[userId]/block
endpoint so we can get a better feel for all the features.
// src/routes/users/[userId]/block
import { route, method, validation } from "18h";
export default route<{ userId: string }>({
get: method({
/** If you are accepting a body, you must
* define whether it can be `"form"`,
* `"json"`, or both. */
// accepts: ["json", "form"],
/** Validation, request, and response schema
* definition is done in one swoop. Uses "zod"
* library under the hood. */
schema: {
request: validation.null(),
response: validation.object({
userId: validation.string(),
}),
},
/** Optional middleware, `pre` will occur
* before the hanler, while `post` will happen
* after. */
middleware: {
pre: [],
post: [],
},
async handler(context) {
console.log(context.params.userId); // :userId sourced from URL.
console.log(context.request.body); // null
return {
status: 200,
headers: {
"x-custom-header": "true",
},
body: {
userId: "some_id",
},
};
},
}),
});
We can create a simple endpoint that just responds with the node package version of the current project we're in. The endpoint will work on all HTTP methods, not just GET
, but we could change it to do that by changing all occurances of all
to get
.
import { route, method, validation } from "18h";
const { npm_package_version: version } = process.env;
export default route({
all: method({
schema: {
request: validation.null(),
response: validation.object({
version: validation.string().optional(),
}),
},
async handler() {
return { body: { version } };
},
}),
});
FAQs
A Next.js style dynamic API router for Koa-based APIs.
The npm package 18h receives a total of 50 weekly downloads. As such, 18h popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that 18h demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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