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Boot up your app in wee little modules with the help of glob.
microboot([
'boot/databases',
'boot/logging',
'api/**',
'listeners'
], function () {
console.log('App booted!')
})
microboot is a small helper designed to facilitate booting up complex applications that we all have. Database connections need to be made, logging services initialised and it all ends up happening nastily at the top of the file.
Using microboot helps you organise your start-up by initialising your app step-by-step, reading file structures to grab everything you need.
In your main file, use microboot as it's used above, specifying the paths of files you want to run in the order you want them to run in. Each element in the given array is a different "phase" and files within each are sorted alphabetically to run. Here's our example:
var microboot = require('microboot')
microboot([
'boot/databases',
'utils/logging.js',
'lib/endpoints/**'
], function () {
console.log('Ready!')
})
In the files you choose to run, ensure they export a function that will be triggered when microboot iterates through. You can optionally map the done
argument make the step asynchronous. Here are two examples:
// boot/databases/mongodb.js
module.exports = function mongodb (callback) {
connectToMongoDb(function () {
callback()
})
}
// lib/endpoints/post/login.js
module.exports = function post_login () {
newAppEndpoint('post', '/login')
}
You're set! microboot will now first run all JS files found in the boot/databases
folder (recursively) including our mongodb.js
, then specifically utils/logging.js
, then all JS files found in the lib/endpoints
folder (recursively) including our login.js
.
If you want to know more about the syntax used for specifying recursiveness and the like, take a look at glob; it's what's behind microboot's loader.
Yay examples! These all assume the following directory tree, the root representing your project's current working directory.
.
├── bin
│ └── example
├── boot
│ ├── 01_logging
│ │ ├── bunyan.js
│ │ └── postal.js
│ ├── 02_amqp.js
│ └── 03_database.js
├── index.js
├── lib
│ ├── types
│ │ ├── adding.js
│ │ ├── dividing.js
│ │ ├── multiplying.js
│ │ └── subtracting.js
│ └── utils
│ ├── 404.png
│ ├── deleteFile.js
│ ├── doNothing.js
│ ├── getFile.js
│ └── hugFile.js
├── package.json
└── test
└── test.js
7 directories, 17 files
boot
Runs in order:
bunyan.js
,postal.js
,amqp.js
,database.js
microboot(['boot'])
boot
, then all utils
Runs in order:
bunyan.js
,postal.js
,amqp.js
,database.js
,deleteFile.js
,doNothing.js
,getFile.js
,hugFile.js
microboot(['boot', 'lib/utils'])
01_logging
after 02_amqp.js
and 03_database.js
Runs in order:
02_amqp.js
,03_database.js
,bunyan.js
,postal.js
microboot(['boot/*', 'boot/logging'])
If microboot doesn't seem to be behaving properly, set the DEBUG=microboot*
environment variable, run your app and create a new issue with those logs.
FAQs
Boot up your app in wee little modules with the help of glob.
The npm package microboot receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, microboot popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that microboot demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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.
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