SRV
Node.js servers rethought: Functional, lean, performant.
What if we were to write express from scratch in 2019...
Would we use async functions and promises? Would we make it more functional? With TypeScript in mind?
Sure we would! So here we go.
- Built for modern JavaScript / TypeScript
- Functional - Take a request, return a response
- Explicit - Clear static types
- Few dependencies & less than 1000 lines of code
⚠️ Status: Experimental ⚠️
At a glance
import {
Response,
Route,
Router,
Service
} from "@andywer/srv"
const greet = Route.GET("/welcome", async (request) => {
const name = request.query.name
return Response.JSON({
name: "Greeting service",
welcome: name ? `Hello, ${name}!` : `Hi there!`
})
})
const service = Service(Router([ greet ]))
service.listen(8080)
.catch(console.error)
Documentation
Find some documentation and sample code here. Work in progress right now.
Features
Async functions
No callbacks. Leverage modern day features instead for an optimal developer experience.
import { Response, Route } from "@andywer/srv"
const greet = Route.GET("/health", async () => {
try {
const stats = await fetchHealthMetrics()
return Response.JSON({
operational: true,
stats
})
} catch (error) {
return Response.JSON(500, {
operational: false
})
}
})
Functional route handlers
Take a request, return a response. Lean, clean, easy to test and debug.
import { Response, Route, Router } from "@andywer/srv"
import { queryUserByID } from "./database/users"
const getUser = Route.GET("/user/:id", async request => {
const userID = request.params.id
const user = await queryUserByID(userID)
if (!user) {
return Response.JSON(404, {
message: `User ${userID} not found`
})
}
const headers = {
"Last-Modified": user.updated_at || user.created_at
}
return Response.JSON(200, headers, user)
})
export const router = Router([
getUser
])
No mutations
Stop passing data from middlewares to route handlers by dumping it in an untypeable context. Take the request object, extend it, pass it down to the route handler.
By applying middlewares in a direct and explicit manner, the passed requests and responses are completely type-safe, even if customized by middlewares.
import { Middleware, Request, RequestHandler, Service } from "@andywer/srv"
import { Logger } from "./logger"
export default function LoggingMiddleware(logger: Logger): Middleware {
return async (request: Request, next: RequestHandler) => {
const requestWithLogger = request.derive({
log: logger
})
return next(requestWithLogger)
}
}
import { composeMiddlewares, Service } from "@andywer/srv"
import logger from "./logger"
import router from "./routes"
const applyMiddlewares = composeMiddlewares(
LoggingMiddleware(logger),
SomeOtherMiddleware()
)
const service = Service(applyMiddlewares(router))
Everything is a function
The code base is relatively simple. Middlewares, routes and routers, they are all just implementations of the following function type:
type RequestHandler = (request: Request, next?: NextCallback) => Response | Promise<Response>
type NextCallback = (req: Request) => Response | Promise<Response>
Debugging
Set the DEBUG environment variable to srv:* to get some debug logging:
$ DEBUG=srv:* node ./dist/my-server
License
MIT