Highcharts Node.js Export Server
NOTE: This is currently in beta
The export server can be ran both as a CLI converter, and/or as an HTTP server.
Install
npm install highcharts-export-server -g
OR:
git clone https://github.com/highcharts/node-export-server
npm install
npm link
Running
highcharts-export-server <arguments>
Command Line Arguments
General options
--infile
: Specify the input file.--instr
: Specify the input as a string.--options
: Alias for --instr
--outfile
: Specify the output filename.--allowFileResources
: Allow injecting resources from the filesystem. Has no effect when running as a server. Defaults to true
.--type
: The type of the exported file. Valid options are jpg png pdf svg
.--scale
: The scale of the chart.--width
: Scale the chart to fit the width supplied - overrides --scale
.--constr
: The constructor to use. Either Chart
or StockChart
.--callback
: File containing JavaScript to call in the constructor of Highcharts.--resources
: Stringified JSON.--batch "input.json=output.png;input2.json=output2.png;.."
: Batch convert--logDest <path>
: Set path for log files, and enable file logging--logLevel <0..4>
: Set the log level. 0 = off, 1 = errors, 2 = warn, 3 = notice, 4 = verbose--fromFile "options.json"
: Read CLI options from JSON file--tmpdir
: The path to temporary output files.--workers
: Number of workers to spawn
Server related options
--enableServer <1|0>
: Enable the server (done also when supplying --host)--host
: The hostname to run the server on.--port
: The port to listen for incoming requests on.--sslPath
: The path to the SSL key/certificate. Indirectly enables SSL support.
-
and --
can be used interchangeably when using the CLI.
Setup: Injecting the Highcharts dependency
In order to use the export server, Highcharts.js needs to be injected
into the export template.
This is largely an automatic process. When running npm install
you will
be prompted to accept the license terms of Highcharts.js. Answering yes
will
pull the version of your choosing from the Highcharts CDN and put them where they need to be.
However, if you need to do this manually you can run node build.js
.
Using In Automated Deployments
If you're deploying an application/service that depend on the export server
as a node module, you can set the environment variable ACCEPT_HIGHCHARTS_LICENSE
to YES
on your server, and it will automatically agree to the licensing terms when running
npm install
. You can also use HIGHCHARTS_VERSION
and HIGHCHARTS_USE_STYLED
to bake with a specific Highcharts version, and to enable styled mode (requires
a Highcharts 5 license).
Note About Resources and the CLI
If --resources
is not set, and a file resources.json
exist in the folder
from which the cli tool was ran, it will use the resources.json
file.
HTTP Server
The server accepts the following arguments:
infile
: A string containing JSON or SVG for the chartoptions
: Aliast for infile
svg
: A string containing SVG to rendertype
: The format: png
, jpeg
, pdf
, svg
. Mimetypes can also be used.scale
: The scale factorwidth
: The chart width (overrides scale)callback
: Javascript to execute in the highcharts constructor.resources
: Additional resources.constr
: The constructor to use. Either Chart
or Stock
.b64
: Bool, set to true to get base64 back instead of binary.async
: Get a download link instead of the file datanoDownload
: Bool, set to true to not send attachment headers on the response.asyncRendering
: Wait for the included scripts to call highexp.done()
before rendering the chart.globalOptions
: A JSON object with options to be passed to Highcharts.setOptions
.dataOptions
: Passed to Highcharts.data(..)
customCode
: When dataOptions
is supplied, this is a function to be called with the after applying the data options. Its only argument is the complete options object which will be passed to the Highcharts constructor on return.
Note that the b64
option overrides the async
option.
It responds to application/json
, multipart/form-data
, and URL encoded requests.
CORS is enabled for the server.
It's recommended to run the server using forever unless running in a managed environment such as AWS Elastic Beanstalk.
SSL
To enable ssl support, drop your server.key
and server.crt
in the ssl folder,
or add --sslPath <path to key/crt>
when running the server.
Server Test
Run the below in a terminal after running highcharts-export-server --enableServer
.
# Generate a chart and save it to mychart.png
curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"infile":{"title": {"text": "Steep Chart"}, "xAxis": {"categories": ["Jan", "Feb", "Mar"]}, "series": [{"data": [29.9, 71.5, 106.4]}]}}' 127.0.0.1:7801 -o mychart.png
Using as a Node.js Module
The export server can also be used as a node module to simplify integrations:
//Include the exporter module
const exporter = require('highcharts-export-server');
//Export settings
var exportSettings = {
type: 'png',
options: {
title: {
text: 'My Chart'
},
xAxis: {
categories: ["Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "Mar", "Jun", "Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec"]
},
series: [
{
type: 'line',
data: [1, 3, 2, 4]
},
{
type: 'line',
data: [5, 3, 4, 2]
}
]
}
};
//Set up a pool of PhantomJS workers
exporter.initPool();
//Perform an export
/*
Export settings corresponds to the available CLI arguments described
above.
*/
exporter.export(exportSettings, function (err, res) {
...
//Kill the pool when we're done with it
exporter.killPool();
});
Node.js API Reference
highcharts-export-server module
Functions
log(level, ...)
: log something. Level is a number from 1-4. Args are joined by whitespace to form the message.logLevel(level)
: set the current log level: 0
: disabled, 1
: errors, 2
: warnings, 3
: notices, 4
: verboseenableFileLogging(path, name)
: enable logging to file. path
is the path to log to, name
is the filename to log toexport(exportOptions, fn)
: do an export. exportOptions
uses the same attribute names as the CLI switch names. fn
is called when the export is completed, with an object as the second argument containing the the filename attribute.startServer(port, sslPort, sslPath)
: start an http server on the given port. sslPath
is the path to the server key/certificate (must be named server.key/server.crt)server
- the server instance
enableRateLimiting(options)
- enable rate limiting on the POST path
max
- the maximum amount of requests before rate limiting kicks inwindow
- the time window in minutes for rate limiting. Example: setting window
to 1
and max
to 30
will allow a maximum of 30 requests within one minute.delay
- the amount to delay each successive request before hitting the maxtrustProxy
- set this to true if behind a load balancerskipKey
/skipToken
- key/token pair that allows bypassing the rate limiter. On requests, these should be sent as such: ?key=<key>&access_token=<token>
.
app()
- returns the express appexpress()
- return the express module instanceuseFilter(when, fn)
- attach a filter to the POST route. Returning false in the callback will terminate the request.
when
- either beforeRequest
or afterRequest
fn
- the function to call
req
- the request objectres
- the result objectdata
- the request dataid
- the request IDuniqueid
- the unique id for the request (used for temporary file names)
initPool(config)
: init the phantom pool - must be done prior to exporting. config
is an object as such:
maxWorkers
(default 25) - max count of worker processesinitialWorkers
(default 5) - initial worker process countworkLimit
(default 50) - how many task can be performed by a worker process before it's automatically restarted
killPool()
: kill the phantom processes
Using Ajax in Injected Resources
If you need to perform Ajax requests inside one of the resource scripts,
set asyncRendering
to true, and call highexp.done()
in the Ajax return to process the chart.
Example:
{
asyncRendering: true,
resources: {
files: 'myAjaxScript.js'
}
}
myAjaxScript.js:
jQuery.ajax({
url: 'example.com',
success: function (data) {
...
highexp.done();
},
error: function () {
highexp.done();
}
});
If the Ajax call doesn't call highexp.done()
within 60 seconds, the
rendering will time out.
Performance Notice
In cases of batch exports, it's faster to use the HTTP server than the CLI.
This is due to the overhead of starting PhantomJS for each job when using the CLI.
As a concrete example, running the CLI with testcharts/basic.json
as the input and converting to PNG averages about 449ms.
Posting the same configuration to the HTTP server averages less than 100ms.
So it's better to write a bash script that starts the server and then
performs a set of POSTS to it through e.g. curl if not wanting to host the
export server as a service.
Alternatively, you can use the --batch
switch if the output format is the same
for each of the input files to process:
highcharts-export-server --batch "infile1.json=outfile1.png;infile2.json=outfile2.png;.."
Other switches can be combined with this switch.
License
MIT.