Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

@frui.ts/generator

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
5
Versions
74
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

@frui.ts/generator

Frui.ts code generator

  • 1.0.0-alpha.12
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
296
increased by85%
Maintainers
5
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

Frui.ts code generator

Provides code generation for:

  • Inversify registrauion
  • Views registration
  • OpenAPI entities

Inversify configuration

Generates files needed for InversifyJS DI container:

  • A 'decorators' file with @injectable and @inject decorators so that you don't need to write them in your code.
  • A 'registry' file with container.bind() statements.

Following service export scenarios are supported:

  • No constructor
  • Custom constructor with parameters
  • Static factory method

Dependency injection scenarios supported:

  • Constructor parameters:
    • instance (constructor(dependecy: SomeService))
    • custom static factory method (constructor(dependecyFactory: ReturnType<typeof SomeService.Factory>))
    • automatic factory method (constructor(dependecyFactory: () => SomeService))

Usage

Usage: fruits-generate inversify [options]

Generate Inversify configuration files

Options:
  -p, --project <fileName>            TS project file (default: "./tsconfig.json")
  -c, --config <fileName>             Custom configuration file
  --no-decorators                     Do not generate decorators file
  --decorators-output <relativePath>  Decorators output file path (default: "src/di.decorators.ts")
  --no-registry                       Do not generate registry file
  --registry-output <relativePath>    Registry output file path (default: "src/di.registry.ts")
  -h, --help                          display help for command

Custom configuration is expected to be a JSON file with the following structure:

export interface IConfig {
  factoryName: string;
  rules: {
    pattern: string;
    addDecorators?: boolean;
    registerAutoFactory?: boolean;
    scope: "none" | "singleton" | "transient";
    identifier?: "$class" | "$interface" | string;
  }[];
}

Use none life scope if you don't want the service registered but still want the decorators generated. This is useful if you want to register the service yourself.

Identifier determines what service identifier shall be used when registering the service:

  • $class - the class constructor will be used (default)
  • $interface - name of the first interface that the service implements will be used
  • any other key - the key will be used as a string

Default configuration file:

{
  "factoryName": "Factory",
  "rules": [
    {
      "pattern": "Service$",
      "identifier": "$class",
      "addDecorators": true,
      "registerAutoFactory": false,
      "scope": "singleton"
    },
    {
      "pattern": "ViewModel$",
      "identifier": "$class",
      "addDecorators": true,
      "registerAutoFactory": false,
      "scope": "transient"
    },
    {
      "pattern": "Repository$",
      "identifier": "$class",
      "addDecorators": true,
      "registerAutoFactory": false,
      "scope": "transient"
    }
  ]
}

Example

With these classes:

export default class AService {}
import { interfaces } from "inversify";

export default class BService {
  // serviceA shall be injected from DI
  // someParam must be provided when instantiating
  constructor(private serviceA: AService, someParam: any) {}

  static Factory({ container }: interfaces.Context) {
    return (someParam: any) => new BService(container.get(AService), someParam);
  }
}
export default class CService {
  constructor(serviceBFactory: ReturnType<typeof BService.Factory>) {
    const serviceB = serviceBFactory("someParam");
  }
}

The following files will be generated:

// di.decorators.ts
import { decorate, inject, injectable } from "inversify";
decorate(injectable(), AService);
decorate(injectable(), BService);
decorate(injectable(), CService);

decorate(inject(BService.Factory) as any, CService, 0);
// di.registry.ts
import { Container, interfaces } from "inversify";
export default function registerServices(container: Container) {
  container.bind<AService>(AService).toSelf().inSingletonScope();
  container.bind<interfaces.Factory<BService>>(BService.Factory).toFactory(BService.Factory);
  container.bind<CService>(CService).toSelf().inSingletonScope();
}

Views registration

Generates a file referencing all Frui.ts views that call registerView() from the @frui.ts/views package. Therefore you just need to import this single generated file, and all your views will be registered.

Usage

Usage: fruits-generate views [options]

Generate view registrations

Options:
  -p, --project <fileName>     TS project file (default: "./tsconfig.json")
  -o, --output <relativePath>  Output file path (default: "src/views/index.ts")
  -h, --help                   display help for command

OpenApi entities

Generates typescript entities defined in the referenced OpenAPI definition. The entities also contain validation rules as defined in the OpenAPI definition and static function for conversion from JSON format (e.g., string->Date).

Note that if the file already exists during generation, only the class' body is regenerated. For example, you can remove the export default part or add custom code to the file.

Usage

Usage: fruits-generate openapi|swagger [options]

Generate OpenAPI client files

Options:
  -p, --project <fileName>     TS project file (default: "./tsconfig.json")
  -c, --config <fileName>      Custom configuration file
  -o, --output <relativePath>  Output folder path (default: "src/entities")
  --no-validation              Do not generate validation rules
  --no-conversion              Do not generate conversion function
  -h, --help                   display help for command

Custom configuration is expected to be a JSON file with the following structure:

export interface IConfig {
  api: string;
  observable?: ObservableConfig;
  enums?: "enum" | "string";
  dates?: "native" | "date-fns";
  validations?: Record<string, ValidationConfig>;
}

// helper types

interface HasExclude {
  exclude?: string[];
}

export type ObservableConfig =
  | boolean
  | {
      entities: Record<string, boolean | HasExclude>;
      properties?: HasExclude;
    };

export type ValidationConfig =
  | string // generated rule name
  | boolean // 'false' disables rule generation
  | {
      name?: string; // generated rule name
      filter?: string; // regex string matched against the rule param
    };

Default configuration file:

{
  "api": "https://fruits-demo.herokuapp.com/api/swagger-json",
  "observable": {
    "entities": {
      "EnumValue": false,
      "User": {
        "exclude": ["code"]
      },
      "Partner": {
        "include": ["name"]
      }
    },
    "properties": {
      "exclude": ["id", "created"]
    }
  },
  "enums": "enum",
  "dates": "native"
}
Validations

You can control what validation rules are generated and how. The validations property of the configuration is a key-value with the following meaning:

  • key - name of the validation rule. Available rules are defined in the Restrictions enum
  • value - configuration of the following type:
    • object - detailed configuration:
      • name - name of the resulting validation rule (by default is the same as the key/restriction name)
      • filter - validation rule will be generated only if its param matches this regex string
    • string - name of the resulting validation rule. Shortcut for { name: 'foo' }
    • boolean - if set to false, the rule will not be generated.

Example

{
  "api": "openapi/swagger.yml",
  "observable": {
    "entities": {
      "EnumValue": false,
      "User": {
        "exclude": ["code"]
      },
      "Partner": {
        "include": ["name"]
      }
    },
    "properties": {
      "exclude": ["id", "createdAt"]
    }
  },
  "enums": "enum",
  "dates": "date-fns",
  "validations": {
    "number": "isNumber",
    "readOnly": false,
    "nullable": {
      "filter": "false"
    },
  }
}

Generated file

export default class User {
  id!: number;

  @observable
  email!: string;

  @Transform(value => (value ? new Date(value) : undefined), { toClassOnly: true })
  @Transform(value => (value ? formatISO(value, { representation: "date" }) : undefined), { toPlainOnly: true })
  createdAt!: Date;

  @observable
  @Transform(value => (value ? new Date(value) : undefined), { toClassOnly: true })
  @Transform(value => (value ? formatISO(value, { representation: "date" }) : undefined), { toPlainOnly: true })
  updatedAt!: Date;

  @observable
  role!: number;

  static ValidationRules = {
    id: { required: true, isNumber: true },
    email: { required: true, format: "email" },
    createdAt: { required: true },
    updatedAt: { required: true },
    role: { required: true, isNumber: true },
  };
}

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 12 Mar 2022

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc