This helper library originally came about after about a year of slowly improving how we structure our NodeJS and ultimately me being fed up of having to continuously type out app.get('/blah', blah_handler)
and wondering where different paths are being constructed.
I also subscribe to the idea of convention over configuration because we developers have enough to think about. Also for something like NodeJS where there are so many people trying it out for the first time and fewer people blogging about best practices, sometimes its better to just follow convention and learn good ways to structure your app and write re-usable code.
npm install express-autoroute
First things first you need to enable the autorouter and pass it your express app.
var autoroute = require('express-autoroute');
autoroute(app,options); //where app is an express app;
For express-autoroute to start working you need to have a routes/
folder that contains specially formatted javascript files that expose an autoroute object that contains the public route api. The best way to describe it is with an example.
###Options Passed as a JS object to the autoroute initialisation funciton
//defaults
autoroute(app, {
throwErrors: false,
logger: require('winston'), //autoroute requires winston internally if you don't pass an instance to it
routesDir: 'routes'
})
throwErrors: Boolean
will throw all errors found while loading routes
logger: winston instance
as a default it will use the internal default winston object. If you wish to use custom settings then pass in an instance defined within your app.
routesDir: String
sets the directory to search for autoroute files
routeFile: String
allows loading of one file instead of a directory, useful for testing
###Example autoroute File
This is the contents of a file routes/blacklists.js
. Note that the name of the file has nothing to do with the resulting endpoint so you can structure your files however you like.
module.exports.autoroute = {
get: {
'/blacklists' : get_all,
'/blacklists/:id' : get
},
post: {
'/blacklists/:id' : update,
'/blacklists' : create
},
delete: {
'/blacklists/:id' : del
}
};
function get_all(req, res){
//do something
}
...
As you can see the file is exposing a structured object. This object will be used later to decide what endpoints to create for the express application and will ultimately result in the following commands being executed
app.get('/blacklists/', get_all);
app.get('/blacklists/:id', get_all);
app.post('/blacklists/:id', update);
app.post('/blacklists', create);
app.detete('/blacklists/:id' : del);
And thats it! A nicely declarative way to load your routes.
express-autoroute also supports routes being separated into folders. The folder name will be added as a prefix to the express endpoints. For example, if you use the same blacklists.js
file from before but move it to the folder routes/api/blacklists.js
the resulting express commands will look like this
app.get('/api/blacklists/', get_all);
app.get('/api/blacklists/:id', get_all);
app.post('/api/blacklists/:id', update);
app.post('/api/blacklists', create);
app.detete('/api/blacklists/:id' : del);
A nifty feature in express is the ability to have route specific middlewares, and if they are used correctly they can really reduce the amount of code you write and always keep things DRY. express-autoroute supports the use of route middlewares by just adding an array to the autoroute object. Here is a silly little example but at least it explains the idea:
module.exports.autoroute = {
get: {
'/blacklists' : [authentication, get_all]
}
};
function get_all(req, res){
//use the user object to get something
var myBlacklists = db.getMyBlacklists(req.user.id)
res.send(myBlacklists);
}
function authentication(req, res, next){
//get the user object or whatever
req.user = dbUser;
next();
}
Copyright (c) 2013, Chris Manson [email protected], Stone Circle Design LTD [email protected]
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