This module contains a set of utilities that make our life easier while writing express apps. The minimum supported node version for this lib is v8.6.0.
$ yarn add expressjs-utils
$ npm install expressjs-utils
const utils = require("expressjs-utils");
start(app, port, env)
starts the express server unless you're in the test env
// starts your app on port 8082 with environment set to 'test'
utils.start(app, 8082, "test");
static(app, path)
mounts the static, /public
folder
// assuminc your public folder is located at '/../../public'
utils.static(app);
// if it is located somewhere else, just pass the path, relative to the current file.
utils.static(app, "/../public");
getRouter(app, prefix)
returns a router that prefixes all routes at /prefix
& /prefix/vX
or /vX
, where X
is a specific version of your api. Use it for API versioning & when you need a common prefix.
If no API version is passed, that is vX
is not present in the url, it will be set to 0 by default. You can access the API Version using req.apiVersion
.
let express = require('express');
// You can also pass express to getRouter function
let router = utils.getRouter(app, 'api', express);
//OR use the default express from the library to create the router
let router = utils.getRouter(app, 'api');
router.get('/cars', (req, res, next) => {
return res.json({...});
});
// Possible endpoint formats
/api/v1/cars //req.apiVersion will be 1 here
/api/cars //req.apiVersion will be 0 here
let router = utils.getRouter(app, '');
router.get('/people', (req, res, next) => {
return res.json({...});
});
// Possible endpoint formats
/v1/people //req.apiVersion will be 1 here
/people
//req.apiVersion will be 0 here
errorHandler(app, logger)
provides a generic error handler that can be used at the "end" of your app
logger
is optional. If you want to use a logger that will give you a bit more details, you should just get our open-source logger and pass it to the error handler and we will use it, instead of console.error
, to log the error.
// Add this after all your routes
utils.errorHandler(app);
// Then in any route you can simply call next(err) whenever an error occurs
router.post("/cars", async (req, res, next) => {
try {
let result = await getCars();
} catch (err) {
next(err);
}
});
httpError(code=500, message='Internal Server Error')
Throws an error that has an HTTP status code. These errors are public-friendly, therefore their message can be displayed on the API.
The message parameter can either be a string or an object. For example,
let err = utils.httpError(404, { userMessage: "This product was not found. Please try other products" });
Then, on the client you will be able to do err.userMessage
providing that you use our errorHandler()
. Otherwise, you'll need to access your custom object via the data
attribute of the error object: err.data.userMessage
// if you are using the error handler above, you can do something like this in
// any of your API endpoint
router.get("/users/:id", async (req, res, next) => {
try {
let user = await getUser(req.params.id);
if (!user) {
return next(utils.httpError(404, "Not found"));
}
} catch (err) {
next(err);
}
});
serveCSV(res, filename, rows)
returns a downloadable csv file built from "rows" which is an array of objects.
router.get("/data", async (req, res, next) => {
let data = [{ name: "Test 0", age: 3 }, { name: "Test 1", age: 4 }];
return utils.serveCSV(res, "data.csv", data);
});
hc(app)
installs a health check route (/public/hc)
utils.hc(app);