Docs for version v0.13.x
Nodecaf is a light framework for developing RESTful Apps in a quick and convenient manner.
Highlights
Get Started
- Install the cli utilities:
npm i -P -g nodecaf-cli
.
- Create a skelleton project with:
nodecaf init my-project
.
- Add your globals in
lib/main.js
const Nodecaf = require('nodecaf');
const routes = require('./routes');
module.exports = () => new Nodecaf({
conf: { port: 80 },
routes,
async startup({ conf, log, call }){
},
async shutdown({ conf, log, call }){
}
});
- Add your routes in
lib/routes.js
const { post, get, del, head, patch, put, all } = require('nodecaf');
module.exports = [
get('/foo/:f/bar/:b', FooBar.read),
post('/foo/:f/bar', FooBar.write),
all(Foo.atLast)
];
- In your app root directory run with:
nodecaf run .
How to Run my App
There are a few supported ways of running your app dependng on the type of
environment you are targeting.
Running on development machine
- You should use the CLI (
npm i -P -g nodecaf-cli
)
- Run:
nodecaf run path/to/your/app
- Optionally pass config files with
-c path/to/config
- Optionally enable live reload with
-r
Running on Docker for development
- Build the auto-generated
Dockerfile
- Bind the port you are going to listen to
- Create a bind mount to your config files
- Reference your config files in the
command
- Create a bind mount to your app directory targeting
/app
inside the container
- Run the container
Or use this example compose configuration:
my-app:
build: ./my-app
command: -c /my-conf.toml
ports:
- 80:8080
volumes:
- ./my-conf.toml:/my-conf.toml
- ./my-app:/app
environment:
NODE_ENV: ''
Running on Docker for production
- Build and run the auto-generated
Dockerfile
in the same fashion as development
- You should NOT setup a volume in production so you just use the source code baked in the image
- Ensure all configuration files referenced in the
command
are accessible inside the container
- Run the container
Running as a node module
Your Nodecaf app is exported as a regular node module, so it can run as a dependency in another project
let myApp = require('my-app');
(async function(){
let app = myApp();
await app.start();
let res = await app.trigger('/');
await app.stop();
})();
Reporting Bugs or Vulnerabilities
If you have found any problems with Nodecaf, please:
- Open an issue.
- Describe what happened and how.
- Also in the issue text, reference the label
~bug
or ~security
.
We will make sure to take a look when time allows us.
Proposing Features
If you wish to get that awesome feature or have some advice for us, please:
- Open an issue.
- Describe your ideas.
- Also in the issue text, reference the label
~proposal
.
Contributing
If you have spotted any enhancements to be made and is willing to get your hands
dirty about it, fork us and
submit your merge request
so we can collaborate effectively.
- For coding style, we provide an ESLint configuration
file in the root of the repository.
- All commits are submit to SAST and Dependency Scanning as well as Code Quality
analisys, so expect to be boarded on your MRs.
Manual
Formerly based on Express, Nodecaf has a simpler approach to defining routes, offloading much of the complexity to the already existing code partitioning idioms (i.e. functions). Check out how to use all the awesome goodies Nodecaf introduces.
Handler Args
In this manual we address as handler args the keys in the object passed as
the only argument of any route handler function. The code below shows all
handler args exposed by Nodecaf:
function({ method, path, res, query, params, body, conf, log, headers, call, websocket }){
}
Quick reference:
res
: An object containing the functions to send a response to the client.
path
, method
, query
, params
, body
, headers
: Properties of the request.
They contain respectively the requested path, HTTP method, query string, the URL parameters, and the request body data.
conf
: This object contains the entire
application configuration data.
log
: A logger instance. Use it to log events of
your application.
call
: Calls any user function passing the handler args as the first argument.
Signature: call(userFunc, ...extraArgs)
.
- Also all keys of the globally exposed object are available
as handler args for all routes.
Settings File
Nodecaf allow you to read a configuration file and use it's data in all routes
and server configuration.
Use this feature to manage:
- external services data such as database credentials
- Nodecaf settings such as cors and logging
- Your own server application settings for your users
Suported config formats: TOML, YAML, JSON, CSON
Check out how to generate a project with configuration file already plugged in
To load a config file in your app, use the -c
flag through the CLI pointing
to your conf file path: nodecaf run -c my/conf/path.toml my/app
You can use the config data through it's handler arg in
all route handlers as follows:
post('/foo', function({ conf }){
console.log(conf.key);
})
Config data can also be passed as an object to the app constructor in lib/main.js
:
module.exports = () => new Nodecaf({ conf: { key: 'value' } });
Or a file path if you want to have a fixed config file for setting defaults or any other reason:
module.exports = () => new Nodecaf({ conf: __dirname + '/default.toml' });
Layered Configs
You can also use the app.setup
to add a given configuration
file or object on top of the current one as follows:
app.setup('/path/to/settings.toml');
app.setup('/path/to/settings.yaml');
app.setup({ key: 'value' });
app.setup({ key: 'new-value', foo: 'bar' });
Layering is useful, for example, to keep a default settings file in your server
source code to be overwritten by your user's.
Logging
Nodecaf logs events to stdout by default where each line of the ouput is a JSON object.
The log entries will have some default predefined values like pid, hostname etc...
In your route handlers, use the functions available in the log
object as follows:
function({ log }){
log.info('hi');
log.warn({ lang: 'fr' }, 'au revoir');
log.fatal({ err: new Error() }, 'The error code is %d', 1234);
}
Below is described the signature of the available logging methods.
- Method Name: one of the available log levels (
debug
, info
, warn
, error
, fatal
)
- First argument (optional): An object whose keys will be injected in the final entry.
- Second argument: A message to be the main line of the log. May contain printf-like replacements (%d, %s...)
- Remaning arguments: Will be inserted into the message (printf-like)
Nodecaf will automatically log some useful server events as described in the
table below:
error after headers sent | warn | An error happened inside a route after the headers were already sent |
route | error | An error happened inside a route and was not caught |
crash | fatal | An error happened that crashed the server process |
request | debug | A request has arrived |
response | debug | A response has been sent |
app | debug | The application is starting up |
app | info | The application has started |
app | info | The application has stopped |
app | info | The application configuration has been reloaded |
event | warn | Called res.end() after response was already finished |
Additionally, you can filter log entries by level and type with the following
settings:
[log]
level = 'warn'
type = 'my-type'
You can disable logging entirely for a given app by setting it to false
in the config
log = false
Async Handlers
Nodecaf accepts async functions as well as regular functions as route handlers.
All rejections/error within your async handler will be gracefully handled.
You will be able to avoid callback hell without creating bogus adapters for your promises.
get('/my/thing', function({ res }){
res.end('My regular function works!');
})
get('/my/other/thing', async function({ res }){
await myAsyncThing();
res.end('My async function works too!');s
})
Error Handling
In Nodecaf, any uncaught synchronous error happening inside route handler will be
automatically converted into a harmless RESTful 500.
post('/my/thing', function(){
throw new Error('Should respond with a 500');
})
To support the callback error pattern, use the res.error()
function arg.
const fs = require('fs');
post('/my/thing', function({ res }){
fs.readFile('./my/file', 'utf8', function(err, contents){
if(err)
return res.error(err);
res.end(contents);
});
})
To use other HTTP status codes you can send an integer in the first parameter of
res.error()
.
post('/my/thing', function({ error }){
try{
doThing();
}
catch(e){
error(404, 'Optional message for the response');
}
})
REST Assertions
Nodecaf provides you with an assertion module containing functions to generate
the most common REST outputs based on some condition. Check an example to
trigger a 404 in case a database record doesn't exist.
get('/my/thing/:id', function({ params, db, res }){
let thing = await db.getById(params.id);
res.notFound(!thing, 'thing not found');
doStuff();
})
If the record is not found, the res.notfound()
call will stop the route execution right
away and generate a RESTful NotFound
error.
Along with notFound
, the following assertions with similar behavior are provided:
badRequest | 400 |
unauthorized | 401 |
forbidden | 403 |
notFound | 404 |
conflict | 409 |
gone | 410 |
badType | 415 |
Expose Globals
Nodecaf makes it simple to share global objects (eg.: database connections,
instanced libraries) across all route handlers. In your lib/main.js
you can
expose an object of which all keys will become handler args.
module.exports = () => new Nodecaf({
startup({ global }){
global.db = myDbConnection;
global.libX = new LibXInstance();
}
});
Then in all routes you can:
get('/my/thing', function({ db, libX }){
})
CORS
Nodecaf provides a setting to enable permissive CORS on all routes. Defaults to
disabled. In your conf file:
cors = true
cors = 'my://origin'
cors = [ 'my://origin1', 'my://origin2' ]
Setup the cors according to the popular CORS Express middleware.
Handling Websocket
Use the websocket
handler argument to expect a Websocket upgrade.
get('/my/ws/endpoint', async ({ websocket }) => {
const ws = await websocket();
ws.on('message', m => {
ws.send('Hello World!');
ws.close();
});
})
Other Settings
app.conf.delay | Integer | Milliseconds to wait before actually starting the app | 0 |
app.conf.port | Integer | Port for the web server to listen (also exposed as user conf) | 80 or 443 |
app.conf.cookie.secret | String | A secure random string to be used for signing cookies | none |
opts.name | String | Manually set application name used in various places | package.json s |
opts.version | String | Manually set application version | package.json s |
opts.shouldParseBody | Boolean | Wether supported request body types should be parsed | true |