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routing-controllers

Allows to use class-based controllers with express.js in Typescript

  • 0.5.1
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routing-controllers

Allows to create controller classes with methods as actions that handle requests.

Right now it works only with express.js. If you are interested to make it work with other frameworks, feel free to contribute and implement integrations with other frameworks.

Release notes

0.5.0

  • renamed package from controllers.ts to routing-controllers
  • added integration with constructor-utils for serialization and deserialization

Installation

  1. Install module:

    npm install routing-controllers --save

  2. Use typings to install all required definition dependencies.

    typings install

  3. ES6 features are used, so you may want to install es6-shim too:

    npm install es6-shim --save

    if you are building nodejs app, you may want to require("es6-shim"); in your app. or if you are building web app, you man want to add <script src="path-to-shim/es6-shim.js"> on your page.

Simple usage

  1. Create a file UserController.ts

    import {Request, Response} from "express";
    import {Controller} from "routing-controllers/decorator/Controllers";
    import {Get, Post, Put, Patch, Delete} from "routing-controllers/decorator/Methods";
    import {Req, Res} from "routing-controllers/decorator/Params";
    
    @Controller()
    export class UserController {
    
        @Get("/users")
        getAll() {
            return "Hello all users";
        }
    
        @Get("/users/:id")
        getOne(@Req() request: Request, @Res() response: Response) {
            response.send("Hello user #" + request.param("id"));
        }
    
        @Post("/users")
        post(@Req() request: Request, @Res() response: Response) {
            // implement saving here
            // use request and response like you always do with express.js ...
        }
    
        @Put("/users/:id")
        put(@Req() request: Request, @Res() response: Response) {
            // implement saving here
            // use request and response like you always do with express.js ...
        }
    
        @Patch("/users/:id")
        patch(@Req() request: Request, @Res() response: Response) {
            // implement saving here
            // use request and response like you always do with express.js ...
        }
    
        @Delete("/users/:id")
        remove(@Req() request: Request, @Res() response: Response) {
            // implement removing here
            // use request and response like you always do with express.js ...
        }
    
    }
    

    This class will register routes specified in method decorators in your server framework (express.js).

  2. Create a file app.ts

    import * as express from "express";
    import {registerActionsInExpressApp} from "routing-controllers/routing-controllers";
    import "./UserController";  // we need to "load" our controller
    
    let app = express(); // create express application
    registerActionsInExpressApp(app); // register controllers routes in our express application
    app.listen(3000); // now we can run your express application.
    
  3. Open browser on http://localhost:3000/users. You should see Hello all users in your browser. If you open http://localhost:3000/users/1 you should see Hello user #1 in your browser.

More usage examples

Load all controllers from the given directory

You probably don't want to require every controller in your app, and instead want to load all controllers from specific directory. To do it you can install require-all package and use it like this:

import * as express from "express";
import {registerActionsInExpressApp} from "routing-controllers/routing-controllers";

let app = express(); // create express application
registerActionsInExpressApp(app, [__dirname + "/controllers"]); // register controllers routes in our express application
app.listen(3000); // now we can run your express application.
Set response body value returned by a controller action

To return a response body you usually do response.send("Hello world!"). But there is alternative way of doing it. You can also return result right from the controller, and this result will be pushed via response.send()

@Get("/users")
getAll() {
    return "Hello World!";
}

// its the same as:
// request.send("Hello World!");

You can also return a Promise (object that contains .then method), and its result will be pushed to response.send after promise is resolved.

@Get("/users")
getAll() {
    return Database.loadUsers();
}

// its the same as Database.loadUsers().then(
//     result => request.send(result),
//     error  => { request.status(500); request.send(error) }
// );
Output JSON instead of regular text content

If you are designing a REST API where your endpoints always return JSON you can use @JsonController decorator instead of @Controller. This will guarantee you that data returned by your controller actions always be transformed to JSON objects and Content-Type header will be always set to application/json:

    @JsonController()
    export class UserController {
        // ...
    }
Inject parameters

You can inject some common params you may need right into the controller action method using proper decorators:

@Get("/users/:id")
getAll( @Req() request: Request,
        @Res() response: Response,
        @Body() requestBody: any,
        @Param("id") id: number,
        @QueryParam("name") name: string) {
    // now you can use your parameters
}

// its the same as: 
// let requestBody = response.body;
// let id = response.params.id;
// let name = response.query.name; 
Inject body and transform it to object

If you want to have response body and wish it to be automatically converted to object you need to use @Body parameter decorator and specify extra parameters to it:

@Post("/users")
save(@Body({ parseJson: true }) user: any) {
    // now you can use user as object
}

// its the same as:
// let user: any = JSON.parse(response.body);

There is also simplified way of doing it: save(@Body(true) user: any)

Make body required

If you want to have response body and wish it to be automatically converted to object you need to use @Body parameter decorator and specify extra parameters to it:

@Post("/users")
save(@Body({ required: true }) user: any) {
    // your method will not be executed if user is not sent in a request
}

Same you can do with all other parameter inectors: @Param, @QueryParam, @BodyParam and others.

Inject parameters and transform them to objects

You can inject some common params you may need right into the controller action method using proper decorators:

@Get("/users")
getAll(@QueryParam("filter", { required: true }) filter: UserFilter) {
    // now you can use your filter, for example
    if (filter.showAll === true)
        return "all users";

    return "not all users";
}

// you can send a request to http://localhost:3000/users?filter={"showAll": true}
// and it will show you "all users"

Decorators Documentation

Controller Decorators
SignatureExampleDescription
Controller(baseRoute: string)@Controller("/users") class SomeControllerClass that is marked with this decorator is registered as controller and its annotated methods are registered as actions. Base route is used to concatenate it to all controller action routes.
JsonController(baseRoute: string)@JsonController("/users") class SomeJsonControllerClass that is marked with this decorator is registered as controller and its annotated methods are registered as actions. Difference between @JsonController and @Controller is that @JsonController automatically converts results returned by controller to json objects (using JSON.parse) and response being sent to a client is sent with application/json content-type. Base route is used to concatenate it to all controller action routes.
Controller Method Decorators
SignatureExampleDescriptionexpress.js analogue
`Get(route: stringRegExp, options?: ActionOptions)`@Get("/users") all()Methods marked with this decorator will register a request made with GET HTTP Method to a given route. In action options you can specify if action should response json or regular text response.
`Post(route: stringRegExp, options?: ActionOptions)`@Post("/users") save()Methods marked with this decorator will register a request made with POST HTTP Method to a given route. In action options you can specify if action should response json or regular text response.
`Put(route: stringRegExp, options?: ActionOptions)`@Put("/users/:id") update()Methods marked with this decorator will register a request made with PUT HTTP Method to a given route. In action options you can specify if action should response json or regular text response.
`Patch(route: stringRegExp, options?: ActionOptions)`@Patch("/users/:id") patch()Methods marked with this decorator will register a request made with PATCH HTTP Method to a given route. In action options you can specify if action should response json or regular text response.
`Delete(route: stringRegExp, options?: ActionOptions)`@Delete("/users/:id") delete()Methods marked with this decorator will register a request made with DELETE HTTP Method to a given route. In action options you can specify if action should response json or regular text response.
`Head(route: stringRegExp, options?: ActionOptions)`@Head("/users/:id") head()Methods marked with this decorator will register a request made with HEAD HTTP Method to a given route. In action options you can specify if action should response json or regular text response.
`Options(route: stringRegExp, options?: ActionOptions)`@Options("/users/:id") head()Methods marked with this decorator will register a request made with OPTIONS HTTP Method to a given route. In action options you can specify if action should response json or regular text response.
`Method(methodName: string, route: stringRegExp, options?: ActionOptions)`@Method("move", "/users/:id") move()Methods marked with this decorator will register a request made with given methodName HTTP Method to a given route. In action options you can specify if action should response json or regular text response.
Method Parameter Decorators
SignatureExampleDescriptionexpress.js analogue
Req()getAll(@Req() request: Request)Injects a Request object to a controller action parameter valuefunction (request, response)
Res()getAll(@Res() response: Response)Injects a Reponse object to a controller action parameter valuefunction (request, response)
Body(options: ParamOptions)save(@Body() body: any)Injects a body to a controller action parameter value. In options you can specify if body should be parsed into a json object or not. Also you can specify there if body is required and action cannot work without body being specified.request.body
Param(name: string, options?: ParamOptions)get(@Param("id") id: number)Injects a parameter to a controller action parameter value. In options you can specify if parameter should be parsed into a json object or not. Also you can specify there if parameter is required and action cannot work with empty parameter.request.params.id
QueryParam(name: string, options?: ParamOptions)get(@QueryParam("id") id: number)Injects a query string parameter to a controller action parameter value. In options you can specify if parameter should be parsed into a json object or not. Also you can specify there if query parameter is required and action cannot work with empty parameter.request.query.id
BodyParam(name: string, options?: ParamOptions)post(@BodyParam("name") name: string)Injects a body parameter to a controller action parameter value. In options you can specify if parameter should be parsed into a json object or not. Also you can specify there if body parameter is required and action cannot work with empty parameter.request.body.name
CookieParam(name: string, options?: ParamOptions)get(@CookieParam("username") username: string)Injects a cookie parameter to a controller action parameter value. In options you can specify if parameter should be parsed into a json object or not. Also you can specify there if cookie parameter is required and action cannot work with empty parameter.request.cookie("username")

Samples

Take a look on samples in ./sample for more examples of usage.

Todos

  • cover with tests
  • make interceptors to work with response.send method too
  • add reversed error override map
  • handle server framework errors (param parse, body parse errors, etc.)
  • integration with other frameworks (other then express.js) can be easily added, so PRs are welcomed

FAQs

Package last updated on 21 Apr 2016

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