0.0.2 • Published 11 months ago

@perigress/core v0.0.2

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
11 months ago

@perigress/core

A medium for contract based development.

Data maintenance, contract testing and data generation without boilerplate using a series of validators (JSON Schema(.spec.schema.js) by default) to represent the structure of the API URLs(which you are probably already writing).

The ultimate goal of this library is to generate fully functional and tested backends, mocks, seeds and migrations from nothing more than a set of schema.

uses standard json-schema but with the addition of the private and protected fields on the root object (corresponding to no client access and only expanded access) and link on the member fields to point linkages to the correct object.

Background

This library was originally designed as a fake data conduit which would be replaced with direct data access once you started hooking up an actual database. This worked really well, but the first major use of the library was with an org that had fuzzy requirements and both wouldn't give direct access to the DBs (as was originally agreed upon) and had a new team on the backend that was unfamiliar with the code and the data structures... to make things even more fun there were a variety of vestigial fields which had been replaced or repurposed.

The result was requirements coming in piecemeal and frequent restructuring of the data structure which accelerated throughout the project and well past the delivery deadline. Reworking this test stub API to be a dynamic delivery API configured by validators allowed us to stay 2-3 weeks behind the requirements in the face of a situation which would otherwise be ruinous. This success led me to reevaluate and reapproach the design with this as a core functionality rather than as bolted on emergency triage, adding to versatility and efficiency as well as migrating away from legacy formats to concentrate on json-schema (which almost all validators can be converted to).

Now it's more modular, with less inactive code paths and is designed to be a configuration driven API from the start. The core is also executable in the browser laying the path for cascading data sources or distributed browser data.

Usage

There are a variety of scenarios where this can be useful:

1) Building a UI against an API that doesn't exist

2) Build a deterministic, functional API from only a set of data definitions

3) Build on the client and server while the wire format is being adjusted

4) Converting schema migrations into DB migrations

Setup a new project with:

peri init --validator=<type> --transfer=<format>

Create a new data type foo with (built interactively):

peri new foo
#peri edit foo

Then use in your project like:

import { 
    Perigress, 
    JSendFormat, 
    MemorySource, 
    JsonSchemaData, 
    HttpTransit
} from '@perigress/core';
import { HttpLocalAuth } from '@perigress/core/http-local-auth';
import audit from './data/audit.schema.json' assert { type: 'json' };

const apiService = new Perigress.API({
    // local login + jwt token in auth header
    auth: new HttpLocalAuth({ 
        id : ['user.handle', 'user.email'],
        password : ['user.password'],
        issuer: 'server.domain.tld',
        audience: 'domain.tld',
        secret: 'a-test-secret'
    }),
    id:{
        field: 'id',
        postfix: '_id',
        type: 'string'
    },
    audit: {
        data: audit,
        set: (object, context)=>{
            const user = context.currentUser();
            const now = Date.now();
            if(!object.createdBy_id) object.createdBy_id = user.id;
            if(!object.createdAt) object.createdAt = now;
            object.modifiedBy_id = user.id;
            object.modifiedAt = now;
        }
    },
    schema: [
        './data/schema/apikey.schema.json',
        './data/schema/message.schema.json',
        './data/schema/user.schema.json'
    ],
    data: [ JsonSchemaData ],
    format: new JSendFormat(),
    transit: new HttpTransit(),
    source: new MemorySource()
});

with the definitions you include

Testing

Run the es module tests to test the root modules

npm run import-test

to run the same test inside the browser:

npm run browser-test

to run the same test headless in chrome:

npm run headless-browser-test

to run the same test inside docker:

npm run container-test

Run the commonjs tests against the /dist commonjs source (generated with the build-commonjs target).

npm run require-test

Development

All work is done in the .mjs files and will be transpiled on commit to commonjs and tested.

If the above tests pass, then attempt a commit which will generate .d.ts files alongside the src files and commonjs classes in dist