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fastify-cli
Advanced tools
Command line tools for Fastify. Generate, write, and run an application with one single command!
npm install fastify-cli --global
fastify-cli
offers a single command line interface for your Fastify
project:
$ fastify
Will print an help:
Fastify command line interface, available commands are:
* start start a server
* eject turns your application into a standalone executable with a server.(js|ts) file being added
* generate generate a new project
* generate-plugin generate a new plugin project
* readme generate a README.md for the plugin
* print-routes prints the representation of the internal radix tree used by the router, useful for debugging.
* version the current fastify-cli version
* help help about commands
Launch 'fastify help [command]' to know more about the commands.
The default command is start, you can hit
fastify start plugin.js
to start plugin.js.
You can start any Fastify plugin with:
$ fastify start plugin.js
A plugin can be as simple as:
// plugin.js
module.exports = function (fastify, options, next) {
fastify.get('/', function (req, reply) {
reply.send({ hello: 'world' })
})
next()
}
If you are using Node 8+, you can use Promises
or async
functions too:
// async-await-plugin.js
module.exports = async function (fastify, options) {
fastify.get('/', async function (req, reply) {
return { hello: 'world' }
})
}
For a list of available flags for fastify start
see the help: fastify help start
.
If you want to use custom options for the server creation, just export an options object with your route and run the cli command with the --options
flag.
// plugin.js
module.exports = function (fastify, options, next) {
fastify.get('/', function (req, reply) {
reply.send({ hello: 'world' })
})
next()
}
module.exports.options = {
https: {
key: 'key',
cert: 'cert'
}
}
And if you are using EcmaScript Module format:
export default async function plugin (fastify, options) {
// Both `/foo` and `/foo/` are registered
fastify.get('/foo/', async function (req, reply) {
return 'foo'
})
}
export const options = {
ignoreTrailingSlash: true
}
If you want to use custom options for your plugin, just add them after the --
terminator.
// plugin.js
module.exports = function (fastify, options, next) {
if (option.one) {
//...
}
//...
next()
}
$ fastify start plugin.js -- --one
Modules in EcmaScript Module format can be used on Node.js >= 14 or >= 12.17.0 but < 13.0.0'
// plugin.js
export default async function plugin (fastify, options) {
fastify.get('/', async function (req, reply) {
return options
})
}
This works with a .js
extension if you are using Node.js >= 14 and the nearest parent package.json
has "type": "module"
(more info here).
If your package.json
does not have "type": "module"
, use .mjs
for the extension (plugin.mjs
in the above example).
You can pass the following options via CLI arguments. You can also use --config
or -c
flag to pass a configuration file that exports all the properties listed below in camelCase convention. In case of collision (i.e., An argument existing in both the configuration file and as a command-line argument, the command-line argument is given the priority). Every option has a corresponding environment variable:
Description | Short command | Full command | Environment variable |
---|---|---|---|
Path to configuration file that can be used to manage the options listed below | -c | --config | FASTIFY_CONFIG or CONFIG |
Port to listen on (default to 3000) | -p | --port | FASTIFY_PORT or PORT |
Address to listen on | -a | --address | FASTIFY_ADDRESS |
Socket to listen on | -s | --socket | FASTIFY_SOCKET |
Module to preload | -r | --require | FASTIFY_REQUIRE |
Log level (default to fatal) | -l | --log-level | FASTIFY_LOG_LEVEL |
Path to logging configuration module to use | -L | --logging-module | FASTIFY_LOGGING_MODULE |
Start Fastify app in debug mode with nodejs inspector | -d | --debug | FASTIFY_DEBUG |
Set the inspector port (default: 9320) | -I | --debug-port | FASTIFY_DEBUG_PORT |
Set the inspector host to listen on (default: loopback address or 0.0.0.0 inside Docker) | --debug-host | FASTIFY_DEBUG_HOST | |
Prints pretty logs | -P | --pretty-logs | FASTIFY_PRETTY_LOGS |
Watch process.cwd() directory for changes, recursively; when that happens, the process will auto reload | -w | --watch | FASTIFY_WATCH |
Ignore changes to the specified files or directories when watch is enabled. (e.g. --ignore-watch='node_modules .git logs/error.log' ) | --ignore-watch | FASTIFY_IGNORE_WATCH | |
Prints events triggered by watch listener (useful to debug unexpected reload when using --watch ) | -V | --verbose-watch | FASTIFY_VERBOSE_WATCH |
Use custom options | -o | --options | FASTIFY_OPTIONS |
Set the prefix | -x | --prefix | FASTIFY_PREFIX |
Set the plugin timeout | -T | --plugin-timeout | FASTIFY_PLUGIN_TIMEOUT |
Defines the maximum payload, in bytes, that the server is allowed to accept | --body-limit | FASTIFY_BODY_LIMIT | |
Set the maximum ms delay before forcefully closing pending requests after receiving SIGTERM or SIGINT signals; and uncaughtException or unhandledRejection errors (default: 500) | -g | --close-grace-delay | FASTIFY_CLOSE_GRACE_DELAY |
By default fastify-cli
runs dotenv
, so it will load all the env variables stored in .env
in your current working directory.
The default value for --plugin-timeout
is 10 seconds.
By default --ignore-watch
flag is set to ignore `node_modules build dist .git bower_components logs .swp' files.
When deploying to a Docker, and potentially other, containers, it is advisable to set a fastify address of 0.0.0.0
because these containers do not default to exposing mapped ports to localhost.
For containers built and run specifically by the Docker Daemon, fastify-cli is able to detect that the server process is running within a Docker container and the 0.0.0.0
listen address is set automatically.
Other containerization tools (eg. Buildah and Podman) are not detected automatically, so the 0.0.0.0
listen address must be set explicitly with either the --address
flag or the FASTIFY_ADDRESS
environment variable.
If Fastify is installed as a project dependency (with npm install --save fastify
),
then fastify-cli
will use that version of Fastify when running the server.
Otherwise, fastify-cli
will use the version of Fastify included within fastify-cli
.
If you would like to turn your application into a standalone executable,
just add the following server.js
:
'use strict'
// Read the .env file.
require('dotenv').config()
// Require the framework
const Fastify = require('fastify')
// Require library to exit fastify process, gracefully (if possible)
const closeWithGrace = require('close-with-grace')
// Instantiate Fastify with some config
const app = Fastify({
logger: true
})
// Register your application as a normal plugin.
const appService = require('./app.js')
app.register(appService)
// delay is the number of milliseconds for the graceful close to finish
const closeListeners = closeWithGrace({ delay: process.env.FASTIFY_CLOSE_GRACE_DELAY || 500 }, async function ({ signal, err, manual }) {
if (err) {
app.log.error(err)
}
await app.close()
})
app.addHook('onClose', (instance, done) => {
closeListeners.uninstall()
done()
})
// Start listening.
app.listen({ port: process.env.PORT || 3000 }, (err) => {
if (err) {
app.log.error(err)
process.exit(1)
}
})
fastify-cli uses make-promises-safe to avoid memory leaks
in case of an 'unhandledRejection'
.
fastify-cli
can also help with generating some project scaffolding to
kickstart the development of your next Fastify application. To use it:
fastify generate <yourapp>
cd yourapp
npm install
The sample code offers you the following npm tasks:
npm start
- starts the applicationnpm run dev
- starts the application with
pino-pretty
pretty logging
(not suitable for production)npm test
- runs the testsnpm run lint
- fixes files accordingly to linter rules, for templates generated with --standardlint
You will find three different folders:
plugins
: the folder where you will place all your custom pluginsroutes
: the folder where you will declare all your endpointstest
: the folder where you will declare all your testFinally, there will be an app.js
file, which is your entry point.
It is a standard Fastify plugin and you will not need to add the listen
method to run the server, just run it with one of the scripts above.
If the target directory exists fastify generate
will fail unless the target directory is .
, as in the current directory.
If the target directory is the current directory (.
) and it already contains a package.json
file, fastify generate
will fail. This can
be overidden with the --integrate
flag:
fastify generate . --integrate
This will add or alter the main
, scripts
, dependencies
and devDependencies
fields on the package.json
. In cases of file name collisions
for any files being added, the file will be overwritten with the new file added by fastify generate
. If there is an existing app.js
in this scenario,
it will be overwritten. Use the --integrate
flag with care.
Description | Full command |
---|---|
Use the TypeScript template | --lang=ts , --lang=typescript |
Overwrite it when the target directory is the current directory (. ) | --integrate |
For JavaScript template, optionally includes Standard linter to fix code style issues | --standardlint |
fastify-cli
can help you improve your plugin development by generating a scaffolding project:
fastify generate-plugin <yourplugin>
cd yourplugin
npm install
The boilerplate provides some useful npm scripts:
npm run unit
: runs all unit testsnpm run lint
: to check your project's code stylenpm run test:typescript
: runs types testsnpm test
: runs all the checks at oncefastify-cli
can also help with generating a concise and informative readme for your plugin. If no package.json
is provided a new one is generated automatically.
To use it:
cd yourplugin
fastify readme <path-to-your-plugin-file>
Finally, there will be a new README.md
file, which provides internal information about your plugin e.g:
fastify-cli
is unopinionated on the choice of linter. We recommend you to add a linter, like so:
"devDependencies": {
+ "standard": "^11.0.1",
}
"scripts": {
+ "pretest": "standard",
"test": "tap test/**/*.test.js",
"start": "fastify start -l info app.js",
"dev": "fastify start -l info -P app.js",
+ "lint": "standard --fix"
},
When you use fastify-cli
to run your project you need a way to load your application because you can run the CLI command.
To do so, you can use the this module to load your application and give you the control to write your assertions.
These utilities are async functions that you may use with the node-tap
testing framework.
There are two utilities provided:
build
: builds your application and returns the fastify
instance without calling the listen
method.listen
: starts your application and returns the fastify
instance listening on the configured port.Both of these utilities have the function(arg, pluginOptions)
parameters:
cliArgs
: is a string or a string array within the same arguments passed to the fastify-cli
command.pluginOptions
: is an object containing the options provided to the started plugin (eg: app.js
).// load the utility helper functions
const { build, listen } = require('fastify-cli/helper')
// write a test
const { test } = require('tap')
test('test my application', async t => {
const argv = ['app.js']
const app = await build(argv, {
extraParam: 'foo'
})
t.teardown(() => app.close())
// test your application here:
const res = await app.inject('/')
t.same(res.json(), { hello: 'one' })
})
If you feel you can help in any way, be it with examples, extra testing, or new features please open a pull request or open an issue.
Instead of using the fastify
keyword before each command, use node cli.js
Example: replace fastify start
with node cli.js start
FAQs
Run a fastify route with one command!
The npm package fastify-cli receives a total of 39,914 weekly downloads. As such, fastify-cli popularity was classified as popular.
We found that fastify-cli 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.
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