Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

ft-next-express

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
7
Versions
260
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

ft-next-express

next-express [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/Financial-Times/next-express.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/Financial-Times/next-express) ============

  • 15.7.2
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
4
decreased by-42.86%
Maintainers
7
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

next-express Build Status

Slightly enhanced Express.

npm install -S ft-next-express

Comes with:-

  • Handlebars (with added support for loading partials from bower_components)

  • Origami Image Service integration

  • Sensible error handling (configurable via environment variables)

  • Full Next Flags integration

  • Next Metrics integration

    • measures sytem performance
    • measures performance of service dependencies (if called using the fetch api)
    • measures request and response performance
    • exposes the configured metrics instance as express.metrics
  • Anti-search engine GET /robots.txt (possibly might need to change in the future)

  • (Isomorphic) Fetch polyfill

  • Exposes everything in the app's ./public folder via ./{{name-of-app}} (only in non-production environments, please use next-assets or hashed-assets in production)

  • Exposes app name via __name to templates and in a data-next-app attribute on the html tag in templates

  • Adds a /{{name-of-app}}/__about endpoint, which exposes information about the current version of the application running

  • By default the application's templates are outputted unchanged, but ft-next-express provides 2 inheritable layouts

  • Exposes express.Router

  • Provides NODE_ENV to templates via __environment

  • __isProduction is true if NODE_ENV equals PRODUCTION (exposed as data-next-is-production on the <html> tag in templates)

  • __version is set to the same value as that used by next-build-tools/about (exposed as data-next-version on the <html> tag in templates)

  • Provides a range of handlebars helpers, including template inheritance and layouts

  • instruments fetch to send data about server-to-server requests to graphite. See main.js for a list of services already instrumented. To add more services extend the list or, for services specific to a particular app, pass in a 'serviceDependencies' option (see examples below)

  • Provides a solution for implementing app health checks in adherence to the FT Health Check Standard

  • Logging (Next logger), exposed via express.logger

Installation

npm install --save ft-next-express

When using the default layout there is also a hard dependency on some bower components. To install them (and add to your app's bower.json) run the following on your local machine. It's assumed you will have bower installed globally.

$ ./path/to/ft-next-express/bower-install.sh

Example app

main.js

var express = require('ft-next-express');

var app = express({

	// Optional.  If name is not provided, next-express will try to infer it from package.json
	name: "xian",

	// Optional
	helpers: {
		uppercase: function(options) {
			return options.fn(this).toUpperCase();
		}
	},
	serviceDependencies: {
		// service dependencies should be listed with a regex that matches urls for that service.
		// regexes can be whatever you like so it's possible to treat paths within a given service
		// as separate services
		'youtube': /https?:\/\/youtube\.com/
	},
	// the following default to true but should normally be set to false if your app is an api
	withFlags: false, // disable feature flag middleware
	withHandlebars: false // disable handlebars middleware
	withBackendAuthentication: false // disable authentication which only allows requests in via fastly

	// Optional
	healthChecks: []
});

app.get('/', function(req, res, next) {
	res.render('main', {
		title: "FT",
		image: "https://avatars0.githubusercontent.com/u/3502508?v=3",
		date: new Date(),
		text : "<p>This wont be shown</p><p>This will be shown</p><p>This wont be shown</p>"
	});
});

app.listen(process.env.PORT, function() {
	console.log("Listening on " + process.env.PORT);
});

views/main.html

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
	<meta charset="utf-8">
	<title>{{title}}</title>
	<!-- this will be output as <link rel="stylesheet" href="/xian/main.css"> -->
	<link rel="stylesheet" href="/{{__name}}/main.css">
</head>
<body>
	<h1>{{title}}</h1>
	{{#uppercase}}this text will be uppercase{{/uppercase}}
	<h2>An image resized to 150px wide</h2>
	<img src="{{#resize 150}}{{image}}{{/resize}}" />

	{{#flags.myFlag}}
	The 'myFlag' flag is switched on
	{{/flags.myFlag}}

	<time data-o-component="o-date" class="o-date" datetime="{{#dateformat}}{{date}}{{/dateformat}}">
		{{#dateformat "dddd, d mmmm, yyyy"}}{{date}}{{/dateformat}}
	</time>

	{{paragraphs text start=1 end=2}}

	{{#removeImageTags}}
	Image<img src="someimage.jpg" alt="This wont be shown"/>EndImage
	{{/removeImageTags}}
</body>
</html>

Testing flags

If you’re using flags and testing with mocha, you’ll need to expose listen in your app:

module.exports.listen = app.listen(port);

And in your tests, add this:

before(function() {
	return app.listen;
});

This’ll make sure your tests wait for flags to be ready.

Health checks

For an example set of health check results, see next.ft.com/__health. For testing health checks, the Health Status Formatter extension for Google Chrome is recommended.

Health checks can be tested for failures of a specific degree of severity by appending the severity number to the health check URL. This is particularly useful for setting up fine-grained alerting. For example, if on next.ft.com a severity level 2 health check were failing:

https://next.ft.com/__health.1 would return HTTP status 200 https://next.ft.com/__health.2 would return HTTP status 500 https://next.ft.com/__health.3 would return HTTP status 500

Each health check must have a getStatus() property, which returns an object meeting the specifications of the FT Health Check Standard and the [FT Check Standard] (https://docs.google.com/document/edit?id=1ftlkDj1SUXvKvKJGvoMoF1GnSUInCNPnNGomqTpJaFk#). This might look roughly like the following example:

var exampleHealthCheck = {
	getStatus: () => {
		return {
			name: 'Some health check',
			ok: true,
			checkOutput: 'Everything is fine',
			lastUpdated: new Date(),
			panicGuide: 'Don\'t panic',
			severity: 3,
			businessImpact: "Some specific feature will fail",
			technicalSummary: "Doesn\'t actually check anything, just an example"
		};
	}
}

FAQs

Package last updated on 05 Jan 2016

Did you know?

Socket

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.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc