
Security News
Risky Biz Podcast: Making Reachability Analysis Work in Real-World Codebases
This episode explores the hard problem of reachability analysis, from static analysis limits to handling dynamic languages and massive dependency trees.
var clerk = require('clerk');
var client = clerk('http://127.0.0.1:5984');
var db = client.db('test');
db.info(function (err, info) {
console.log(err || info);
});
// if a Promise implementation is available, you may leave out the callback
var promise = db.info()
promise.then(function (info) {
console.log(info);
}).catch(function (err) {
console.log(err);
});
Full documentation at http://mikepb.github.io/clerk/
For more information about promises, see this Mozilla documentation.
$ npm install clerk
Browser support is provided by superagent. The browser versions of the
library may be found under the dist/
directory. The browser files are updated
on each versioned release, but not for development. Modern browsers are
generally supported, but not widely tested. Karma is used to run the
mocha tests in the browser.
Security restrictions on cross-domain requests currently limits the usefulness of the browser version. Using a local proxy or configuring Cross-Origin Resource Sharing in CouchDB may allow you to use the library in the browser. Please see the configuration notes in the testing section for more information about CouchDB CORS support.
To build the client files:
$ npm run dist
To run tests in node:
$ npm test
To run tests with Karma, make sure that you have enabled cors in
CouchDB. By default, CouchDB does not allow the Authorization
header, so if you will be authenticating, you'll need to add it to the list as
well.
[httpd]
enable_cors = true
[cors]
credentials = true
origins = *
headers = Accept, Accept-Language, Authorization, Content-Length, Content-Range, Content-Type, Destination, Expires, If-Match, Last-Modified, Origin, Pragma, X-Requested-With, X-Http-Method-Override
Then, you may run Karma:
$ npm run karma
The philosophy of clerk is to provide a thin wrapper around the CouchDB API, making the database easier to use from JavaScript. clerk is designed to quickly allow you to get started with CouchDB, while still giving you full access to CouchDB's more advanced features.
The library API generally follows the RESTful API, so you can use the CouchDB
docs as well as the clerk docs to build your applications. If a feature is
missing from clerk or you need to access more advanced features, the
request
method allows you to send custom requests directly to CouchDB.
Copyright 2012-2015 Michael Phan-Ba <michael@mikepb.com>
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
<http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0>
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
FAQs
CouchDB library for Node and the browser
The npm package clerk receives a total of 866 weekly downloads. As such, clerk popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that clerk 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.
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