express-enrouten
Lead Maintainer: Jean-Charles Sisk
Route configuration middleware for expressjs.
Note: express-enrouten >=1.0
is only compatible with express >=4.0
.
For express 3.x
support, please use express-enrouten 0.3.x
.
API
app.use(enrouten(options))
var express = require('express'),
enrouten = require('express-enrouten');
var app = express();
app.use(enrouten({ ... }));
Configuration
express-enrouten supports routes via configuration and convention.
app.use(enrouten({ directory: 'routes' }));
directory
The directory
configuration option (optional) is the path to a directory.
Specify a directory to have enrouten scan all files recursively to find files
that match the controller-spec API. With this API, the directory structure
dictates the paths at which handlers will be mounted.
controllers
|-user
|-create.js
|-list.js
module.exports = function (router) {
router.post('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('ok');
});
};
app.use(enrouten({
directory: 'controllers'
}));
Routes are now:
/user/create
/user/list
index
The index
configuration option (optional) is the path to the single file to
load (which acts as the route 'index' of the application).
app.use(enrouten({
index: 'routes/'
}));
module.exports = function (router) {
router.get('/', index);
router.all(passport.protect).get('/account', account);
};
routes
The routes
configuration option (optional) is an array of route definition objects.
Each definition must have a path
and handler
property and can have an optional
method
property (method
defaults to 'GET').
Optionally, a middleware
property can be provided to specify an array of middleware functions
(with typical req
, res
and next
arguments) for that specific route.
Note that a handler
has a different function signature than a controller
. While a
controller
takes a single argument (a router
), a handler
takes the typical
req
and res
pair.
app.use(enrouten({
routes: [
{ path: '/', method: 'GET', handler: require('./routes/index') },
{ path: '/foo', method: 'GET', handler: require('./routes/foo') },
{ path: '/admin', method: 'GET', handler: require('./routes/foo'), middleware: [isAuthenticated] }
]
}));
routerOptions
The routerOptions
configuration option (optional) allows additional options to be
specified on each Router instance created by express-enrouten
. Please see the
Express API documentation for complete
documentation on each possible option.
app.set('case sensitive routing', true);
app.use(enrouten({
directory: 'controllers',
routerOptions: {
caseSensitive: true
}
}));
Named Routes
For index
and directory
configurations there is also support for named routes.
The normal express router that is passed in will always behave as such, but in addition
it can be used to name a route, adding the name and path to app.locals.enrouten.routes
.
For example:
'use strict';
module.exports = function (router) {
router({ path: '/user/:id', name: 'user-info' })
.get(function (req, res) {
res.send('ok');
});
};
Controller Files
A 'controller' is defined as any require
-able file which exports a function
that accepts a single argument. Any files with an extension of .js
(or .coffee
if CoffeeScript is registered) will be loaded and if it exports a function that
accepts a single argument then this function will be called. NOTE: Any file in
the directory tree that matches the API will be invoked/initialized with the
express router object.
module.exports = function (router) {
router.get('/', function (req, res) {
});
};
exports = function (router) {
};
modules.exports = function (config) {
};
module.exports = {
importantHelper: function () {
}
};
Linting
$ npm run-script lint
Tests
$ npm test
Coverage
$ npm run-script cover && open coverage/lcov-report/index.html