
Security News
New Website “Is It Really FOSS?” Tracks Transparency in Open Source Distribution Models
A new site reviews software projects to reveal if they’re truly FOSS, making complex licensing and distribution models easy to understand.
A tiny (200B) utility to sort route patterns by specificity.
This module is available in three formats:
dist/rsort.mjs
dist/rsort.js
dist/rsort.min.js
$ npm install --save route-sort
import rsort from 'route-sort';
// We have multiple Author-based routes
// Note: These are currently an unsorted mess
const routes = ['/authors', '/authors/*', '/authors/:username/posts', '/authors/:username'];
const output = rsort(routes);
// Now, our routes are sorted correctly!
console.log(routes);
//=> [ '/authors', '/authors/:username', '/authors/:username/posts', '/authors/*' ]
// The original input was mutated, but it's also returned
console.log(routes === output);
//=> true
Returns: Array<String>
Returns the same patterns
you provide, sorted by specificity.
Important: Your original array is mutated!
Type: Array<String>
A list of route pattern strings.
The supported route pattern types are:
/users
/users/:id
/users/:id/books/:title
/users/:id?/books/:title?
/movies/:title.mp4
, /movies/:title.(mp4|mov)
/users/*
While this working definition may not apply completely across the board, route-sort
is meant to sort Express-like routing patterns in a safe manner, such that a serial traversal of the sorted array will always give you the most specific match.
You may use regexparam
to convert the patterns into RegExp
instances, and then use those to test an incoming URL against the patterns. We'll do that in the example below:
import rsort from 'route-sort';
import toRegExp from 'regexparam';
// We have multiple Author-based routes
// Note: These are currently an unsorted mess
const routes = ['/authors', '/authors/*', '/authors/:username/posts', '/authors/:username'];
rsort(routes);
// Now, our routes are sorted correctly!
//=> [ '/authors', '/authors/:username', '/authors/:username/posts', '/authors/*' ]
// Let's make an inefficent DEMO function to:
// 1) loop thru the `routes` array
// 2) convert each pattern to a RegExp (repetitive)
// 3) test the RegExp to see if we had a match
function find(path) {
for (let i=0; i < routes.length; i++) {
let { pattern } = toRegExp(routes[i]);
if (pattern.test(path)) return routes[i];
}
return false; // no match
}
find('/authors'); //=> "/authors"
find('/authors/lukeed'); //=> "/authors/:username"
find('/authors/foo/bar/baz'); //=> "/authors/*"
find('/authors/lukeed/posts'); //=> "/authors/:username/posts"
find('/hello/moto'); //=> false
// Sorting was important here, but otherwise our
// original `routes` list would have matched "/authors/*"
// against every path except `/hello/moto` and `/authors`.
// Cya!
RegExp
instancesMIT © Luke Edwards
FAQs
A tiny (200B) utility to sort route patterns by specificity
The npm package route-sort receives a total of 14,923 weekly downloads. As such, route-sort popularity was classified as popular.
We found that route-sort demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer 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.
Security News
A new site reviews software projects to reveal if they’re truly FOSS, making complex licensing and distribution models easy to understand.
Security News
Astral unveils pyx, a Python-native package registry in beta, designed to speed installs, enhance security, and integrate deeply with uv.
Security News
The Latio podcast explores how static and runtime reachability help teams prioritize exploitable vulnerabilities and streamline AppSec workflows.