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yarn add dx-server jchain
Check below sample with comment for more details.
Simple server
import {Server} from 'node:http'
import chain from 'jchain'
import dxServer, {getReq, getRes, router, setHtml, setText,} from 'dx-server'
new Server().on('request', (req, res) => chain(
dxServer(req, res),
async next => {
try {
getRes().setHeader('Cache-Control', 'no-cache')
console.log(getReq().method, getReq().url)
await next()
} catch (e) {
console.error(e)
setHtml('internal server error', {status: 500})
}
},
router.get({
'/'() {setHtml('hello world')},
'/health'() {setText('ok')}
}),
() => setHtml('not found', {status: 404}),
)()
).listen(3000, () => console.log('server is listening at 3000'))
File server:
import {Server} from 'node:http'
import chain from 'jchain'
import dxServer, {chainStatic, setHtml} from 'dx-server'
import {resolve, dirname} from 'node:path'
import {fileURLToPath} from 'node:url'
new Server().on('request', (req, res) => chain(
dxServer(req, res),
chainStatic('/', {root: resolve(dirname(fileURLToPath(import.meta.url)), 'public')}),
() => setHtml('not found', {status: 404}),
)()
).listen(3000, () => console.log('server is listening at 3000'))
More complex server with express.
This sample additionally requires: yarn install express morgan
import {Server} from 'node:http'
import {promisify} from 'node:util'
import chain from 'jchain'
import dxServer, {
getReq, getRes,
getBuffer, getJson, getRaw, getText, getUrlEncoded, getQuery,
setHtml, setJson, setText, setBuffer, setRedirect, setNodeStream, setWebStream, setFile,
router, connectMiddlewares, chainStatic, makeDxContext
} from 'dx-server'
import {expressApp} from 'dx-server/express'
import express from 'express'
import morgan from 'morgan'
// it is best practice to create custom error class for non-system error
class ServerError extends Error {
name = 'ServerError'
constructor(message, status = 400, code = 'unknown') {
super(message)
this.status = status
this.code = code
}
}
const authContext = makeDxContext(async () => {
if (getReq().headers.authorization) return {id: 1, name: 'joe (private)'}
})
const requireAuth = () => {
if (!authContext.value) throw new ServerError('unauthorized', 401, 'unauthorized')
}
const serverChain = chain(
next => {
// this is the difference between express and dx-server
// req, res can be accessed from anywhere via context which uses NodeJS's AsyncLocalStorage under the hood
getRes().setHeader('Cache-Control', 'no-cache')
return next() // must return or await
},
async next => {// global error catching for all following middlewares
try {
await next()
} catch (e) {// only app error message should be shown to user
if (e instanceof ServerError) setHtml(`${e.message} (code: ${e.code})`, {status: e.status})
else {// report system error
console.error(e)
setHtml('internal server error (code: internal)', {status: 500})
}
}
},
connectMiddlewares(
morgan('common'),
// cors(),
),
await expressApp(app => {// any express feature can be used. This requires express installed, with for e.g., `yarn add express`
app.set('trust proxy', true)
if (process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production') app.set('json spaces', 2)
app.use('/public', express.static('public'))
}),
authContext.chain(), // chain context will set the context value to authContext.value in every request
router.post('/api/*', async ({next}) => {// example of catching error for all /api/* routes
try {
await next()
} catch (e) {
if (e instanceof ServerError) setJson({// only app error message should be shown to user
error: e.message,
code: e.code,
}, {status: e.status})
else {// report system error
console.error(e)
setJson({
message: 'internal server error',
code: 'internal'
}, {status: 500})
}
}
}),
router.post({
'/api/sample-public-api'() { // sample POST router
setJson({name: 'joe'})
},
'/api/me'() { // sample private router
requireAuth()
setJson({name: authContext.value.name})
},
}),
router.get('/', () => setHtml('ok')), // router.method() accepts 2 formats
router.get('/health', () => setText('ok')),
() => { // not found router
throw new ServerError('not found', 404, 'not_found')
},
)
const tcpServer = new Server()
.on('request', async (req, res) => {
try {
await chain(
dxServer(req, res, {jsonBeautify: process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production'}), // basic dx-server context
serverChain,
)()
} catch (e) {
console.error(e)
res.end()
}
})
await promisify(tcpServer.listen.bind(tcpServer))(3000)
console.log('server is listening at 3000')
getBuffer, getJson, getRaw, getText, getUrlEncoded, getQuery
are all asynchronous functions.
The associated results are calculated in the first time they are called and cached for subsequent calls.
If you want to get these values synchronously, chain it, like follows:
import {getJson} from 'dx-server'
chain(
getJson.chain(/*option*/), // json body is parsed and stored in context in every request
next => {
console.log(getJson.value) // json body can be accessed synchronously
return next()
}
)
Context can be created using makeDxContext
function:
import {makeDxContext} from 'dx-server'
const authContext = makeDxContext(() => {
if (getReq().headers.authorization) return {id: 1, name: 'joe (authorized)'}
})
const requireAuth = () => {
if (!authContext.value) throw new Error('unauthorized')
}
chain(
authContext.chain(),
next => {
requireAuth()
return next()
}
)
// or await authContext() to lazy load the context and don't require chaining authContext.chain()
chain(
async next => {
console.log(await authContext())
return next()
}
)
All exported APIs:
import dxServer, {
getReq, getRes, getBuffer, getJson, getRaw, getText, getUrlEncoded, getQuery,
setHtml, setJson, setText, setBuffer, setRedirect, setNodeStream, setWebStream, setFile,
router, connectMiddlewares, chainStatic, makeDxContext
} from 'dx-server'
import {expressApp, expressRouter} from 'dx-server/express' // requires express installed
import {
setBufferBodyDefaultOptions,
bufferFromReq, jsonFromReq, rawFromReq, textFromReq, urlEncodedFromReq, queryFromReq,
} from 'dx-server/helpers'
import dxServer, {
getReq, getRes, getBuffer, getJson, getRaw, getText, getUrlEncoded, getQuery,
setHtml, setJson, setText, setBuffer, setRedirect, setNodeStream, setWebStream, setFile,
makeDxContext
} from 'dx-server'
getReq()
, getRes()
: get request and response objects from anywhere.
getBuffer()
, getJson()
, getRaw()
, getText()
, getUrlEncoded()
, getQuery()
: get parsed request body, raw body, text body, url encoded body, query string from anywhere.
These are DX context object, can be used as follows:
const json = await getJson()
: lazily load the context, once loaded, it is cached for subsequent calls.
No chaining is required.chain(getJson.chain(), next => console.log(getJson.value))
. Note that the value is calculated in every request.makeDxContext(fn)
: create a DX context object.
setHtml
, setJson
, setText
, setBuffer
, setRedirect
, setNodeStream
, setWebStream
, setFile
: set response body.
connectMiddlewares(...middlewares)
: connect middlewares. For example:
import {connectMiddlewares} from 'dx-server'
import morgan from 'morgan'
import cors from 'cors'
connectMiddlewares(
morgan('common'),
cors(),
)
chainStatic(path, options)
: serve static files. For example:import {chainStatic} from 'dx-server'
import {resolve, dirname} from 'node:path'
import {fileURLToPath} from 'node:url'
chain(
chainStatic('/assets', {root: resolve(dirname(fileURLToPath(import.meta.url)), 'public')})
)
import {router} from 'dx-server'
router.get
, router.post
, router.put
, router.delete
, router.patch
, router.head
, router.options
, router.connect
, router.trace
: create router.
These functions accept 2 formats:
router.get(routes: {[pattern: string]: Route}, options: RouterOptions)
: create multiple routes.router.get(pattern: string, handler: Route, options: RouterOptions)
: create route for GET method.router.all(...)
: same as router.get()
but for any method.
router.method()
: create router with custom method. Similar to router.get()
, this function accepts 2 formats.
router.method(method: string, routes: {[pattern: string]: Route}, options: RouterOptions)
: create multiple routes.router.method(method: string, pattern: string, handler: Route, options: RouterOptions)
: create route for method
method.RouterOptions
is defined as follows:
interface RouterOptions {
prefix?: string
}
Patterns are matched using URLPattern.
This does not always match the same as ExpressJS.
For example, to match any path prefixed with /api/
, use /api/*
.
Note the following:
''
matches nothing.'/'
matches both https://example.com and https://example.com/.'/foo'
matches https://example.com/foo but not https://example.com/foo/.'/foo/'
matches https://example.com/foo/ but not https://example.com/foo.Route
is defined as follows:
interface RouteContext {
matched: URLPatternResult // result returned from URLPattern.exec()
params: Record<string, string>
next(): any
}
type Route = (context: RouteContext) => any
import {
setBufferBodyDefaultOptions,
bufferFromReq, jsonFromReq, rawFromReq, textFromReq, urlEncodedFromReq, queryFromReq,
} from 'dx-server/helpers'
Helpers are all pure functions, and do not rely on any context. These functions are independent of the context and can be used anywhere, even outside of this package. They require request and response objects to be passed.
import {expressApp, expressRouter} from 'dx-server/express' // requires express installed
chain(
await expressApp(app => {// any express feature can be used. This requires express installed, with for e.g., `yarn add express`
app.set('trust proxy', true)
if (process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production') app.set('json spaces', 2)
app.use('/public', express.static('public'))
}),
expressRouter(router => {
router.use(cors())
}),
)
FAQs
## Install ```bash yarn add dx-server jchain ```
The npm package dx-server receives a total of 5 weekly downloads. As such, dx-server popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that dx-server demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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.
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