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@builtwithjavascript/server-side-config

Hook useServerSideConfig to more easily load json files with strongly typed configuration models for use in Nuxt, Next, Node, etc on the server side

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@builtwithjavascript/server-side-config

npm version

Hook useServerSideConfig to more easily load JSON files with strongly typed configuration models for use in Node.js environments (including frameworks like Nuxt, Next.js, etc.) on the server side.

Codebase

TypeScript

Description

This package provides a single hook:

  • useServerSideConfig

How to use

IMPORTANT: This package should be installed as a local dependency (not globally) as it is designed for project-specific server-side configuration loading.

Installation:

npm i -D @builtwithjavascript/server-side-config

Consumption:

  • Define your Configuration Model: Create a TypeScript interface that defines the structure of your configuration file. Save it in your models directory or a suitable location (e.g., ./your-path-to-your-iconfig-model.ts):

    TypeScript

    // your-path-to-your-iconfig-model.ts
    interface IConfig {
      name: string,
      marketing: {
        title: string
        hero: string
      },
      meta: {
        title: string
        description: string
      }
    }
    
  • Create your JSON Configuration File: Create a JSON file (e.g., app1.json) that adheres to your defined interface. By default, useServerSideConfig will look for config files within a directory you specify. A common convention is config/config-files/.

    Example app1.json:

    JSON

    {
      "name": "for-development",
      "marketing": {
        "title": "My Awesome App",
        "hero": "The best app ever!"
      },
      "meta": {
        "title":  "My App Title",
        "description": "A description of my awesome app."
      }
    }
    
  • Integrate and Load the Configuration: In your server-side code (e.g., nuxt.config.ts, API routes, Node.js server scripts), import the useServerSideConfig hook and your IConfig interface.

    Crucially, you must provide the configFilesDirectoryPath argument. This path should be relative to the root of your project (where your package.json resides, and where your Node.js process is typically started, i.e., process.cwd()).

    TypeScript

    import { useServerSideConfig } from '@builtwithjavascript/server-side-config'
    import type { IConfig } from './your-path-to-your-iconfig-model' // Adjust this path to your model
    
    // Example 1: Using a hardcoded app key (for specific scenarios or testing)
    const config = useServerSideConfig<IConfig>('app1', 'config/config-files');
    console.log(config.name); // Output: "for-development"
    
    // Example 2: Using an environment variable for the app key (recommended for dynamic environments)
    // Assuming your config files are in 'config/config-files/' relative to your project root
    const configFilesDir = 'config/config-files';
    
    // In Nuxt, this might be used in nuxt.config.ts for server-side operations
    // or in server/api routes.
    const instance = useServerSideConfig<IConfig>(process.env.SITE_KEY, configFilesDir);
    
    // Note: The `configFilesDir` parameter MUST be a path that `fs.readFileSync` can resolve
    // relative to the current working directory (`process.cwd()`) of your running Node.js process.
    // For most Nuxt/Next.js/Node projects, 'config/config-files' will be correct if your
    // config files are directly within a 'config/config-files' folder at your project root.
    

Development Dependencies:

  • @types/jest
  • @types/node
  • jsdom
  • prettier
  • ts-node
  • typescript
  • vite
  • vitest

Keywords

config, configuration, server side, server-side, large scale apps, nuxt, next, node

FAQs

Package last updated on 26 Jun 2025

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