Skip to content

orkestra-energy/node-export-server

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Highcharts Node.js Export Server

Convert Highcharts.JS charts to static image files.

Current Status

We are currently working on a refactor which amongst other things replaces PhantomJS with Puppeteer. Until then, maintainance of the PhantomJS based application is limited.

Planned release for the new version (V3.0.0) is Q2 2022.

The work can be followed in the enhancement/puppeteer branch, but do note the branch is in constant flux (and thus not stable), and is not fully tested yet. There are also slightly worse performance in terms of latency currently which along with compatibility and general stability is our current focus. In addition to replacing PhantomJS, the next version also contains a slew of bugfixes and general enhancements, the latter especially to the error handling, configuration and setup systems, which should make installing, configuring, and running the server much more pleasant.

Breaking changes in v2.1.0

Version 2.1.0 has a couple of breaking changes:

  • Log destinations must now exist before starting file logging
  • The following options are now disabled by default:
    • callback
    • resources
    • customCode

Disabled options can be enabled by adding the --allowCodeExecution flag when starting the server/CLI. Using this flag is not recommended, and should not be done unless the server is sandboxed and not reachable on the public internet, or if only using the CLI in a controlled manner (e.g. it's not possible for a user to change the configuration sent to it through a different system).

What & Why

This is a node.js application/service that converts Highcharts.JS charts to static image files. It supports PNG, JPEG, SVG, and PDF output; and the input can be either SVG, or JSON-formatted chart options.

The application can be used either as a CLI (Command Line Interface), as an HTTP server, or as a node.js module.

Use Cases

The main use case for the export server is situations where headless conversion of charts are required. Common use cases include automatic report generation, static caching, and for including charts in e.g. presentations, or other documents.

In addition, the HTTP mode can be used to run your own export server for your users, rather than relying on the public export.highcharts.com server which is rate limited.

The HTTP server can either be ran stand-alone and integrate with your other applications and services, or it can be ran in such a way that the export buttons on your charts route to your own server.

To do latter, add:

{
  exporting: {
    url: "<IP to the self-hosted export server>"
  }
}

to the chart options when creating your charts.

For systems that generate automatic reports, using the export server as a node.js module is a great fit - especially if your report generator is also written in node. See here for examples.

Install

First, make sure you have node.js installed. Go to nodejs.org and download/install node for your platform.

After node.js is installed, install the export server by opening a terminal and typing:

npm install highcharts-export-server -g

OR:

git clone https://github.com/highcharts/node-export-server
npm install
npm link

Note: depending on how you installed Node, you may have to create a symlink from nodejs to node. Example on Linux:

ln -s `which nodejs` /usr/bin/node

Running

highcharts-export-server <arguments>

Command Line Arguments

General options

  • --infile: Specify the input file.
  • --instr: Specify the input as a string.
  • --options: Alias for --instr
  • --outfile: Specify the output filename.
  • --allowFileResources: Allow injecting resources from the filesystem. Has no effect when running as a server. Defaults to true.
  • --type: The type of the exported file. Valid options are jpg png pdf svg.
  • --scale: The scale of the chart. Use it to improve resolution in PNG and JPG, for example setting scale to 2 on a 600px chart will result in a 1200px output.
  • --width: Scale the chart to fit the width supplied - overrides --scale.
  • --constr: The constructor to use. Either Chart, Map (requires that the server was installed with maps support), or StockChart.
  • --callback: File containing JavaScript to call in the constructor of Highcharts.
  • --resources: Stringified JSON.
  • --batch "input.json=output.png;input2.json=output2.png;..": Batch convert
  • --logDest <path>: Set path for log files, and enable file logging
  • --logFile <filename>: Set the name of the log file (without the path). Defaults to highcharts-export-server.log. Note that --logDest also needs to be set to enable file logging.
  • --logLevel <0..4>: Set the log level. 0 = off, 1 = errors, 2 = warn, 3 = notice, 4 = verbose
  • --fromFile "options.json": Read CLI options from JSON file
  • --tmpdir: The path to temporary output files.
  • --workers: Number of workers to spawn
  • --workLimit: the pieces of work that can be performed before restarting a phantom process
  • --queueSize: how many request can be stored in overflow count when there are not enough
  • --listenToProcessExits: set to 0 to skip attaching process.exit handlers. Note that disabling this may cause zombie processes!
  • --globalOptions: A JSON string with options to be passed to Highcharts.setOptions
  • --allowCodeExecution: Set to 1 to allow execution of arbitrary code when exporting. Defaults to 0, and is required for callback, resources, and customCode export settings. Turning this on is not recommended unless running on a sandboxed server without access to the general internet, or if running well-defined exports using the CLI

Server related options

  • --enableServer <1|0>: Enable the server (done also when supplying --host)
  • --host: The hostname to run the server on.
  • --port: The port to listen for incoming requests on. Defaults to 7801.
  • --sslPath: The path to the SSL key/certificate. Indirectly enables SSL support.
  • --sslPort: Port on which to run the HTTPS server. Defaults to 443.
  • --sslOnly: Set to true to only serve over HTTPS
  • --rateLimit: Argument is the max requests allowed in one minute. Disabled by default.
  • --skipKey and --skipToken: Key/token pair that allows bypassing the rate limiter. On requests, these should be sent as such: ?key=<key>&access_token=<token>.

- and -- can be used interchangeably when using the CLI.

Note about chart size

The width argument is mostly to set a zoom factor rather than an absolute width.

If you need to set the height of the chart, it can be done in two ways:

The latter is prefered, as it lets you set a separate sizing when exporting and when displaying the chart in your web page.

Setup: Injecting the Highcharts dependency

In order to use the export server, Highcharts.js needs to be injected into the export template.

This is largely an automatic process. When running npm install you will be prompted to accept the license terms of Highcharts.js. Answering yes will pull the version of your choosing from the Highcharts CDN and put them where they need to be.

However, if you need to do this manually you can run node build.js.

Using In Automated Deployments

If you're deploying an application/service that depend on the export server as a node module, you can set the environment variable ACCEPT_HIGHCHARTS_LICENSE to YES on your server, and it will automatically agree to the licensing terms when running npm install. You can also use HIGHCHARTS_VERSION and HIGHCHARTS_USE_STYLED to bake with a specific Highcharts version, and to enable styled mode (requires a Highcharts 5 license).

If you're using the export server as a dependency in your own app, depending on your setup, it may be possible to set the env variable in your package.json file:

{
  "scripts": {
    "preinstall": "export ACCEPT_HIGHCHARTS_LICENSE=1"
  }
}

Library fetches

When fetching the built Highcharts library, the default behaviour is to fetch them from code.highcharts.com.

In automated deployments, it's also possible to fetch using NPM instead.

This is done by setting HIGHCHARTS_VERSION to npm in addition to setting the afformentioned ACCEPT_HIGHCHARTS_LICENSE to YES.

Including Maps and/or Gantt support in automated deployments

Use the environment variables HIGHCHARTS_USE_MAPS and HIGHCHARTS_USE_GANTT to enable support of either.

Note about process.exit listeners

The export server attaches event listeners to process.exit. This is to make sure that all the phantom processes are properly killed off when the application is terminated.

Listeners are also attached to uncaught exceptions - if one appears, the entire pool is killed, and the application terminated.

If you do not want this behavior, start the server with --listenToProcessExits 0.

Be aware though - if you disable this and you don't take great care to manually kill the pool, your server will bleed memory when the app is terminated.

Note About Resources and the CLI

If --resources is not set, and a file resources.json exist in the folder from which the cli tool was ran, it will use the resources.json file.

HTTP Server

The server accepts the following arguments:

  • infile: A string containing JSON or SVG for the chart
  • options: Alias for infile
  • svg: A string containing SVG to render
  • type: The format: png, jpeg, pdf, svg. Mimetypes can also be used.
  • scale: The scale factor. Use it to improve resolution in PNG and JPG, for example setting scale to 2 on a 600px chart will result in a 1200px output.
  • width: The chart width (overrides scale)
  • callback: Javascript to execute in the highcharts constructor.
  • resources: Additional resources.
  • constr: The constructor to use. Either Chart or Stock.
  • b64: Bool, set to true to get base64 back instead of binary.
  • async: Get a download link instead of the file data. Note that the b64 option overrides the async option. This option is deprecated and will be removed as of Desember 1st 2021. Read the announcement article on how to replace async.
  • noDownload: Bool, set to true to not send attachment headers on the response.
  • asyncRendering: Wait for the included scripts to call highexp.done() before rendering the chart.
  • globalOptions: A JSON object with options to be passed to Highcharts.setOptions.
  • dataOptions: Passed to Highcharts.data(..)
  • customCode: When dataOptions is supplied, this is a function to be called with the after applying the data options. Its only argument is the complete options object which will be passed to the Highcharts constructor on return.

It responds to application/json, multipart/form-data, and URL encoded requests.

CORS is enabled for the server.

It's recommended to run the server using pm2 unless running in a managed environment such as AWS Elastic Beanstalk. Please refer to the pm2 documentation for details on how to set this up.

AWS Lamba

See this issue.

SSL

To enable ssl support, add --sslPath <path to key/crt> when running the server. Note that the certificate files needs to be named as such:

  • server.crt
  • server.key

Worker Count & Work Limit

The export server utilizes a pool of workers, where one worker is a PhantomJS process responsible for converting charts. The pool size can be set with the --workers switch, and should be tweaked to fit the hardware on which you're running the server. It's recommended that you start with the default (8), and work your way up (or down if 8 is too many for your setup, and things are unstable) gradually. The tests/http/stress-test.js script can be used to test the server. It fires batches of 10 requests every 10ms, and expects the server to be running on port 8081.

PhantomJS becomes somewhat unstable the more export requests it has historically handled. To work around this, each of the workers has a maximum number of requests it can handle before it restarts itself. This number is 60 by default, and can be tweaked with --workLimit. As with --workers, this number should also be tweaked to fit your use case.

System Requirements

The system requirements largely depend on your use case.

It's largely CPU and memory bound, so when using in heavy-traffic situations, it needs a fairly beefy server. It's recommended that the server has at least 1GB of memory regardless of traffic, and more than one core.

Installing Fonts

Does your Linux server not have Arial or Calibri? PhantomJS uses the system installed fonts to render pages. Therefore the Highcharts Export Server requires fonts to be properly installed on the system in order to use them to render charts.

Note that the default font-family config in Highcharts is "Lucida Grande", "Lucida Sans Unicode", Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif".

Fonts are installed differently depending on your system. Please follow the below guides for font installation on most common systems.

OS X

Install your desired fonts with the Font Book app, or place it in /Library/Fonts/ (system) or ~/Library/Fonts/ (user)

Linux

Copy or move the TTF file to the /usr/share/fonts/truetype (may require sudo privileges):

mkdir -p /usr/share/fonts/truetype
cp yourFont.ttf /usr/share/fonts/truetype/
fc-cache -fv

Windows

Copy or move the TTF file to C:\Windows\Fonts\:

copy yourFont.ttf C:\Windows\Fonts\yourFont.ttf

Google fonts

If you need Google Fonts in your custom installation, they can be had here: https://github.com/google/fonts

Download them, and follow the above instructions for your OS.

Server Test

Run the below in a terminal after running highcharts-export-server --enableServer 1.

# Generate a chart and save it to mychart.png
curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"infile":{"title": {"text": "Steep Chart"}, "xAxis": {"categories": ["Jan", "Feb", "Mar"]}, "series": [{"data": [29.9, 71.5, 106.4]}]}}' 127.0.0.1:7801 -o mychart.png

Using as a Node.js Module

The export server can also be used as a node module to simplify integrations:

//Include the exporter module
const exporter = require('highcharts-export-server');

//Export settings
var exportSettings = {
    type: 'png',
    options: {
        title: {
            text: 'My Chart'
        },
        xAxis: {
            categories: ["Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "Mar", "Jun", "Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec"]
        },
        series: [
            {
                type: 'line',
                data: [1, 3, 2, 4]
            },
            {
                type: 'line',
                data: [5, 3, 4, 2]
            }
        ]
    }
};

//Set up a pool of PhantomJS workers
exporter.initPool();

//Perform an export
/*
    Export settings corresponds to the available CLI arguments described
    above.
*/
exporter.export(exportSettings, function (err, res) {
    //The export result is now in res.
    //If the output is not PDF or SVG, it will be base64 encoded (res.data).
    //If the output is a PDF or SVG, it will contain a filename (res.filename).

    //Kill the pool when we're done with it, and exit the application
    exporter.killPool();
    process.exit(1);
});

Node.js API Reference

highcharts-export-server module

Functions

  • log(level, ...): log something. Level is a number from 1-4. Args are joined by whitespace to form the message.
  • logLevel(level): set the current log level: 0: disabled, 1: errors, 2: warnings, 3: notices, 4: verbose
  • enableFileLogging(path, name): enable logging to file. path is the path to log to, name is the filename to log to
  • export(exportOptions, fn): do an export. exportOptions uses the same attribute names as the CLI switch names. fn is called when the export is completed, with an object as the second argument containing the the filename attribute.
  • startServer(port, sslPort, sslPath): start an http server on the given port. sslPath is the path to the server key/certificate (must be named server.key/server.crt)
  • server - the server instance
    • enableRateLimiting(options) - enable rate limiting on the POST path
      • max - the maximum amount of requests before rate limiting kicks in
      • window - the time window in minutes for rate limiting. Example: setting window to 1 and max to 30 will allow a maximum of 30 requests within one minute.
      • delay - the amount to delay each successive request before hitting the max
      • trustProxy - set this to true if behind a load balancer
      • skipKey/skipToken - key/token pair that allows bypassing the rate limiter. On requests, these should be sent as such: ?key=<key>&access_token=<token>.
    • app() - returns the express app
    • express() - return the express module instance
    • useFilter(when, fn) - attach a filter to the POST route. Returning false in the callback will terminate the request.
      • when - either beforeRequest or afterRequest
      • fn - the function to call
        • req - the request object
        • res - the result object
        • data - the request data
        • id - the request ID
        • uniqueid - the unique id for the request (used for temporary file names)
  • initPool(config): init the phantom pool - must be done prior to exporting. config is an object as such:
    • maxWorkers (default 25) - max count of worker processes
    • initialWorkers (default 5) - initial worker process count
    • workLimit (default 50) - how many task can be performed by a worker process before it's automatically restarted
    • queueSize (default 5) - how many request can be stored in overflow count when there are not enough workers to handle all requests
    • timeoutThreshold (default 3500) - the maximum allowed time for each export job execution, in milliseconds. If a worker has been executing a job for longer than this period, it will be restarted
  • killPool(): kill the phantom processes

Using Ajax in Injected Resources

If you need to perform Ajax requests inside one of the resource scripts, set asyncRendering to true, and call highexp.done() in the Ajax return to process the chart.

Example:

{
  asyncRendering: true,
  resources: {
    files: 'myAjaxScript.js'
  }
}

myAjaxScript.js:

jQuery.ajax({
  url: 'example.com',
  success: function (data) {
    ...
    highexp.done();
  },
  error: function () {
    highexp.done();
  }
});

If the Ajax call doesn't call highexp.done() within 60 seconds, the rendering will time out.

Performance Notice

In cases of batch exports, it's faster to use the HTTP server than the CLI. This is due to the overhead of starting PhantomJS for each job when using the CLI.

As a concrete example, running the CLI with testcharts/basic.json as the input and converting to PNG averages about 449ms. Posting the same configuration to the HTTP server averages less than 100ms.

So it's better to write a bash script that starts the server and then performs a set of POSTS to it through e.g. curl if not wanting to host the export server as a service.

Alternatively, you can use the --batch switch if the output format is the same for each of the input files to process:

highcharts-export-server --batch "infile1.json=outfile1.png;infile2.json=outfile2.png;.."

Other switches can be combined with this switch.

License

MIT.

About

Highcharts Node.js export server

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 97.3%
  • HTML 2.7%