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@untool/express
Advanced tools
@untool/express
@untool/express
provides both an untool
preset and a mixin to set up your project to work with Express.
It does not only provide full featured development and production mode servers, but also a mechanism for rendering static files using Express style middlewares without having to launch an actual server.
@untool/express
strives to gracefully handle exceptions and to facilitate infrastructure integration: in case of uncaught middleware errors or upon receiving a SIGTERM
signal, the server's close
method will be called before exiting the process.
$ yarn add @untool/express # OR npm install @untool/express
serve
@untool/express
registers a single command using @untool/yargs
: serve
. As to be expected, this command launches a stand-alone Express server featuring Helmet and a Express' static file server middlewares.
$ un serve -ps
-p
/ --production
If un serve
is called with the production
argument, untool
itself sets the shell environment variable $NODE_ENV
to "production"
. This variable is generally used in lots of places, including Express itself.
$ un serve -p # OR un serve --production
This is equivalent to manually setting $NODE_ENV
before calling the actual command. Use whatever works best in your specific setting.
$ NODE_ENV=production un serve
@untool/express
provides a couple of configurable exports for your convenience: mixin hooks marked with 'callable' below can be called like in the following example example:
const { runServer } = require('@untool/express');
runServer();
If you need to provide config overrides or options to these kinds of calls, you can do so like in the next example.
const { configure } = require('@untool/express');
const { runServer } = configure(configOverrides, options);
runServer();
The above example is functionally equivalent to directly working with @untool/core
's bootstrap
export.
configureServer(app, middlewares, mode)
(sequence)This is a mixin hook defined by @untool/express
that allows you to register Express middlewares or route handlers and generally do whatever you like with app
, the Application
instance it is using under the hood.
The second argument it is being called with is middlewares
. It is a plain object containing middleware Array
s sorted into phases: initial
, files
, parse
, routes
, and final
. Additionally, each of these comes with pre
and post
variants. Use these phases-arrays to declaratively add middlewares and route handlers to our server.
Its third argument is mode
, and it can be one of the following: develop
, serve
, or static
. Use it to conditionally register middlewares or reconfigure the app.
const { Mixin } = require('@untool/core');
module.exports = class MyMixin extends Mixin {
configureServer(app, middlewares, mode) {
middlewares.routes.push((req, res, next) => next());
if (mode === 'serve') {
middlewares.preinitial.unshift((req, res, next) => next());
middlewares.postfinal.push({
path: '/foo',
method: 'get',
handler: (req, res, next) => next(),
});
}
return app;
}
};
Implement this hook in your @untool/core
core
mixin and you will be able to set up Express in any way you like.
Caveat: please do not rely on the exact number and order of middlewares and handlers passed to your mixin in the middlewares
argument: it is highly dynamic and can be altered by other mixins (or configs). It can also change between @untool/express
versions without triggering a major
release.
inspectServer(server)
(sequence)This hook will give you a running, i.e. listening, instance of http.Server
or https.Server
, depending on your https
setting. This server will emit an additional shutdown
event in case a graceful shutdown is triggered.
runServer(mode)
(callable)If you want to programmatically start a production ready Express server set up using @untool/express
' config, you can use this utility mixin method. It accepts a string: serve
or develop
.
This method is also exported so that you can use it in your own, non-mixin code. Import it like so: import { runServer } from '@untool/express';
. In this mode, it also accepts another argument, options
, which you can pass any CLI argument to.
createServer(mode)
(callable)To create an Express app to use in your own server, you can use this utility mixin method. It uses @untool/express
' settings for its configuration. It accepts a string: serve
, develop
or static
.
This method is also exported so that you can use it in your own, non-mixin code. Import it like so: import { createServer } from '@untool/express';
. In this mode, it also accepts another argument, options
, which you can pass any CLI argument to.
createRenderer()
(callable)If you need a fully configured render function like the one used in renderLocations()
(see below), you can call this utility mixin method.
This method is also exported so that you can use it in your own, non-mixin code. Import it like so: import { createRenderer } from '@untool/express';
. In this mode, it also accepts another argument, options
, which you can pass any CLI argument to.
@untool/express
defines a couple of settings as a preset for @untool/core
's configuration engine. You can manage and access them using the mechanisms outlined there.
Property | Type | Default |
---|---|---|
https | boolean /Object | false |
host | string | [HOST] |
port | number | [PORT] |
distDir | string | '<rootDir>/dist' |
gracePeriod | number | 30000 |
https
@untool/express
fully supports HTTPS and using this key, you can configure its SSL/TLS mode. You can either set it to true
to enable SSL with the included insecure certificate. Or you can tell it to use a proper SSL certificate.
{
"https": {
"keyFile": "./ssl/foo.key",
"certFile": "./ssl/foo.cert"
}
}
host
The hostname to bind the server to is, of course, configurable. By default, @untool/express
tries to read an environment variable named $HOST
and falls back to '0.0.0.0'
.
{
"host": "10.10.10.10"
}
port
The TCP port the server will be listening on can be configured, too. By default, @untool/express
tries to read an environment variable named $PORT
and falls back to a dynamically chosen free port (>=8080).
{
"port": 3000
}
distDir
This is the file system path, i.e. subfolder, your application's assets will be served from.
{
"distDir": "<rootDir>/build"
}
gracePeriod
The amount of time (in milliseconds) to wait after receiving a SIGTERM
signal or catching an unhandled middleware exception and before killing the server completely.
{
"gracePeriod": 60000
}
FAQs
untool express mixin
The npm package @untool/express receives a total of 241 weekly downloads. As such, @untool/express popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @untool/express demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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