luvi ♡
Dev server with simple config and API.
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$ cd /path/to/your/project
$ luvi
luvi listening on 4444
By default, luvi
acts as a static server, serving the files in cwd
.
On launch, luvi
will open a tab in your default browser pointing to your
defined root (you can pass a -n
flag to disable this).
Originally forked from freddie.
Changes
- 5.2.0: Switch back to MIT license
- 5.1.0: Add Markdown support
- 5.0.0: Remove support for Node 8
- 4.0.0: Switch to LGPL-3.0
- 3.2.0: Un-deprecate, and add
.htm
and .xhtml
support. - 3.0.0: Removed
lv
shorthand. Use a shell alias. - 2.1.1: Deprecated
lv
shorthand. This will still work until it's removed in
3.0.0. Please update any scripts using lv
to use luvi
. - 2.0.0: Switched to MIT license.
- 0.8.6:
luvi
no longer has a proxying utility. - 0.9.13:
src/util
is now src/lib
. - 0.9.19:
src/
is now project root (src/lib
is now /lib
) - 0.9.20:
package.json
is fixed so luvi
works as a module again. Sorry about that! - 0.9.21: Please
npm rm -g luvi
and then npm i -g luvi
to upgrade!
Installation and Usage
$ npm i -g luvi
$ luvi [server, ...] [options]
luvi
looks inside cwd
for a .luvi.json
config file.
If there is no config file, the default static server is launched.
If you'd rather not install globally, you can use npx
:
npx luvi [server, ...] [options]
.
[server, ...]
$ luvi foo bar
foo listening on port 4444
bar listening on port 8888
List of named servers to launch. Only names matching the ones in config file
will be launched.
[options]
Command-line arguments take priority over config files and defaults.
In a path with a .luvi.json
file, running luvi
will follow the options in
the file, unless any options are passed; if there are multiple servers in the
.luvi.json
file, every server's options will be overridden. Project root is
cwd
by default.
♡ luvi (a server)
------------------
usage:
♡ luvi # launch default server
♡ luvi foo bar # start servers 'foo' & 'bar'
♡ luvi -p 1337 # listen on specified port
♡ luvi -r /path # serve from specified dir
♡ luvi -n # don't open the browser after start
♡ luvi -m # auto-render markdown files
♡ luvi -v # luvi version
♡ luvi -h # this help
--------------------
see the readme for config options and api usage
.luvi.json
To configure a single server: { "root": "public", "port": 9090 }
.
The object will be passed directly to luvi
.
For multiple servers, simply use an array of single-server configs.
Use the name
option to keep track of servers in logs.
[
{
"name": "drafts",
"root": "src",
"port": 1337
},
{
"name": "testing",
"root": "build",
"noOpen": true,
"markdown": true
},
{
"name": "todo",
"root": "doc",
"port": 6565,
"notFound": "/var/www/404.html"
}
]
API
You can pass an object to luvi()
for custom settings; otherwise, these
defaults are applied:
const luvi = require('luvi')
luvi({
name: 'luvi',
root: process.cwd(),
port: 4444
})
This is exactly the same as just calling luvi()
, with no config object.
These defaults are merged with whatever you pass, so if, for example, you only
pass in a custom server name, luvi
will still run on port 4444 and use cwd
as the root to serve.
Multiple servers can be launched from the same script, with different configs,
by calling luvi()
again with different options.
Options
-
root: string
(default: process.cwd()
)
- Path where your static files are placed. Server only allows access to files in this directory.
Usually where you'd have
index.html
. Can be absolute or relative. - Example:
root: '/path/to/document/root'
-
port: number
(default: 4444
)
- Port on which to listen. If specified port is busy,
luvi
will look for a free port. - Example:
port: 3000
-
name: string
(default: luvi
)
- Server name. Useful for launching multiple servers, and for keeping track in logs.
- Example:
name: 'foo'
-
markdown: bool
(default: false
)
- Auto-render markdown files without extension.
- Example:
markdown: true
-
onListen: (name: string, port: number): void
(Default: console.log ; open
)
- Called when
luvi
starts listening. - Example:
onListen: (name, port) => { console.log(name, 'is listening on', port) }
-
notFound: string
(default: undefined
)
- Path to a custom 404 page.
- Example:
notFound: '/path/to/404.html'
-
noOpen: bool
(default: undefined
)
- Will not open the browser on server start.
- Example:
noOpen: true
Contributing
Please do, if you'd like! Any issue reports/fixes are welcome. I am not
considering adding any features.
LICENSE