1.1.1 • Published 8 years ago

json-api-ify v1.1.1

Weekly downloads
262
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
8 years ago

json-api-ify

Build Status

a node.js library for serializing your data to JSON API v1.0 compliant documents, inspired by jsonapi-serializer. this library makes no assumptions regarding your choice of ORM/ODM, or the structure of your data. simply define your types and how their related and let this library do the heavy lifting.

Installing

npm install --save json-api-ify

Getting Started

Create a new reusable serializer.

var Serializer = require('json-api-ify');

let serializer = new Serializer({
    baseUrl: 'https://www.example.com/api',
    topLevelMeta: {
        'api-version': 'v1.0.0'
    }
});

Define a type. (read more about options below)

serializer.define('users', {
    id: '_id',
    blacklist: [
        'password',
        'phone.mobile'
    ],
    links: {
        self(resource, options, cb) {
            let link = options.baseUrl + '/users/' + resource.id;
            cb(null, link);
        }
    },
    meta: {
        nickname(resource, options, cb) {
            let nickname = 'lil ' + resource.attributes.first;
            cb(null, nickname);
        }
    },
    processResource(resource, cb) {
        return cb(null, resource.toObject());
    },
    topLevelLinks: {
        self(options, cb) {
            let link = options.baseUrl + '/users';
            cb(null, link);
        },
        next(options, cb) {
            let link = options.baseUrl + '/users';
            if (options.nextPage) {
                link += '?page=' + options.nextPage;
            }
            cb(null, link);
        }
    },
    topLevelMeta: {
        total(options, cb) {
            cb(null, options.total);
        }
    }
}, function(err) {
    // check for definition errors
})

Get a hold of some data that needs to be serialized.

let data = [new User({
    first: 'Kendrick',
    last: 'Lamar',
    email: 'klamar@example.com',
    password: 'elkjqe0920oqhvrophepohiwveproihgqp398yr9pq8gehpqe9rf9q8er',
    phone: {
        home: '+18001234567',
        mobile: '+180045678910'
    },
    address: {
        addressLine1: '406 Madison Court',
        zipCode: '49426',
        country: 'USA'
    }
}), new User({
    first: 'Kanye',
    last: 'West',
    email: 'kwest@example.com',
    password: 'asdlkj2430r3r0ghubwf9u3rbg9u3rbgi2q3oubgoubeqfnpviquberpibq',
    phone: {
        home: '+18002345678',
        mobile: '+18007890123'
    },
    address: {
        addressLine1: '361 Shady Lane',
        zipCode: '23185',
        country: 'USA'
    }
})];

Serialize it

serializer.serialize('users', data, function(err, payload) {
    console.log(payload);
});

Or, use it in a route

function(req, res) {
    async.auto({
        users: function findUsers(fn) {
            User.find({})
                .limit(10)
                .skip(parseInt(req.query.page || 0) * 10)
                .exec(fn);
        },

        count: function countUsers(fn) {
            User.count({}).exec(fn);
        },

        payload: ['users', 'count', function serialize(fn, results) {
            serializer.serialize('users', results.users, {
                total: results.count,
                nextPage: (req.query.page || 1) + 1
            }, fn);
        }]
    }, function(err, payload) {
        if (err) {
            return res.json(500, {errors: [{
                status: 500,
                detail: err.message
            }]});
        }
        res.json(200, payload);
    });
}

Response body:

{
    "links": {
        "self": "https://www.example.com/api/users",
        "next": "https://www.example.com/api/users?page=2"
    },
    "data": [
        {
            "type": "users",
            "id": "54735750e16638ba1eee59cb",
            "attributes": {
                "first": "Kendrick",
                "last": "Lamar",
                "email": "klamar@example.com",
                "phone": {
                    "home": "+18001234567"
                },
                "address": {
                    "addressLine1": "406 Madison Court",
                    "zipCode": "49426",
                    "country": "USA"
                }
            },
            "relationships": {},
            "links": {
                "self": "https://www.example.com/api/users/54735750e16638ba1eee59cb"
            },
            "meta": {
                "nickname": "lil Kendrick"
            }
        },
        {
            "type": "users",
            "id": "5490143e69e49d0c8f9fc6bc",
            "attributes": {
                "first": "Kanye",
                "last": "West",
                "email": "kwest@example.com",
                "phone": {
                    "home": "+18002345678"
                },
                "address": {
                    "addressLine1": "361 Shady Lane",
                    "zipCode": "23185",
                    "country": "USA"
                }
            },
            "relationships": {},
            "links": {
                "self": "https://www.example.com/api/users/5490143e69e49d0c8f9fc6bc"
            },
            "meta": {
                "nickname": "lil Kanye"
            }
        }
    ],
    "included": [],
    "meta": {
        "api-version": "v1.0.0",
        "total": 2
    }
}

Schemas

A type can have multiple serialization schemas, which you can create by calling define with a schema name. Any schema options provided will augment the default schema.

serializer.define('users', 'names-only', {
    whitelist: [
        'first',
        'last'
    ]
}, callback);
serializer.serialize('users', 'names-only', data, function(err, payload) {
    console.log(payload);
});
{
    "links": {
        "self": "https://www.example.com/api/users"
    },
    "data": [
        {
            "type": "users",
            "id": "54735750e16638ba1eee59cb",
            "attributes": {
                "first": "Kendrick",
                "last": "Lamar"
            },
            "relationships": {},
            "links": {
                "self": "https://www.example.com/api/users/54735750e16638ba1eee59cb"
            },
            "meta": {
                "nickname": "lil Kendrick"
            }
        },
        {
            "type": "users",
            "id": "5490143e69e49d0c8f9fc6bc",
            "attributes": {
                "first": "Kanye",
                "last": "West"
            },
            "relationships": {},
            "links": {
                "self": "https://www.example.com/api/users/5490143e69e49d0c8f9fc6bc"
            },
            "meta": {
                "nickname": "lil Kanye"
            }
        }
    ],
    "included": [],
    "meta": {
        "api-version": "v1.0.0"
    }
}

Relationships

Relationships are easy as well. First, include a relationship map in your type/schema options.

serializer.define('users', {
    // ..
    relationships: {
        groups: {
            type: 'groups',
            include: true,
            links: {
                self(resource, options, cb) {
                    let link = options.baseUrl + '/users/' + resource.id + '/relationships/groups';
                    cb(null, link);
                },
                related(resource, options, cb) {
                    let link = options.baseUrl + '/users/' + resource.id + '/groups';
                    cb(null, link);
                }
            }
        }
    }
    // ..
}, callback);

Lastly, define the related type.

serializer.define('groups', {
    // ..
    relationships: {
        users: {
            type: 'users',
            include: true,
            schema: 'names-only',
            links: {
                self(resource, options, cb) {
                    let link = options.baseUrl + '/groups/' + resource.id + '/relationships/users';
                    cb(null, link);
                },
                related(resource, options, cb) {
                    let link = options.baseUrl + '/groups/' + resource.id + '/users';
                    cb(null, link);
                }
            }
        }
    }
    // ..
}, callback);

Deserialize

extract the data from a payload in a slightly more usable fashion

let payload = {
    data: {
        type: 'user',
        attributes: {
            first: 'a$ap',
            last: 'ferg',
            email: 'aferg@example.com',
            phone: {
                home: '1-111-111-1111'
            }
        },
        relationships: {
            groups: {
                data: [{
                    type: 'group',
                    id: '56cd74546033f8d420bc1c11'
                },{
                    type: 'group',
                    id: '56cd74546033f8d420bc1c12'
                }]
            }
        }
    }
};
serializer.deserialize(payload, function(err, data) { /* .. */ });

here, data would look like:

{
    "user": {
        "first": "a$ap",
        "last": "ferg",
        "email": "aferg@example.com",
        "phone": {
            "home": "1-111-111-1111"
        },
        "groups": [{
            "_id": "56cd74546033f8d420bc1c11"
        },{
            "_id": "56cd74546033f8d420bc1c12"
        }]
    },
    "groups": [{
        "_id": "56cd74546033f8d420bc1c11"
    },{
        "_id": "56cd74546033f8d420bc1c12"
    }]
}

API

Constructor Summary

Serializer(options)

constructs a new serializer instance

Arguments
ParamTypeDescription
[options]{Object}global options. see serialize() options for more detail

Method Summary

define(type, schema, options, callback)

defines a type serialization schema

Arguments
ParamTypeDescription
type{String}the resource type
[schema]{String}the serialization schema to use. defaults to default
options{Object}schema options
callback(err){Function}a function that receives any definition error.

deserialize(payload, callback)

deserializes the data attribute of the payload

Arguments
ParamTypeDescription
payload{Object}a valid JSON API payload
callback(err, data){Function}a function that receives any deserialization error and the extracted data.

serialize(type, schema, data, options, callback)

serializes data into a JSON API v1.0 compliant document

Arguments
ParamTypeDescription
type{String}the resource type
[schema]{String}the serialization schema to use. defaults to default
data{*}the data to serialize
[options]{Object}single use options. these options will be merged with the global options, default schema options, and any applicable non-default schema options
callback(err, payload){Function}a function that receives any serialization error and JSON API document.
Options
{
    // an array of string paths to omit from the resource, this option
    // includes relationships that you may wish to omit
    blacklist: [],

     // the path to the primary key on the resource
    id: 'id',

    // a map of resource links
    links: {
        // asynchronous
        self(resource, options, cb) {
            // each key can be a value to set, or asynchronous function that
            // receives the processed resource, serialization options, and
            // a callback that should pass any error and the link value
            cb(null, link);
        },
        // synchronous
        self(resource, options) {
            return options.baseUrl + '/api/users/'  + resource.id;
        }
    },

    // a map of meta members
    meta: {
        // asynchronous
        self(resource, options, cb) {
            // each key can be a value to set, or asynchronous function that
            // receives the processed resource, serialization options, and
            // a callback that should pass any error and the meta value
            cb(null, meta);
        },
        // synchronous
        self(resource, options) {
            return meta;
        }
    },

    // preprocess your resources
    // all resources must be objects, otherwise they're assumed to be
    // unpopulated ids. NOTE!! If you're working with mongoose models,
    // unpopulated ids can be objects, so you will need to convert them
    // to strings
    processResource(resource, /* cb */) {
        if (typeof resource.toJSON === 'function') {
            resource = resource.toJSON();
        } else if (resource instanceof mongoose.Types.ObjectId) {
            resource = resource.toString();
        }
        return resource;
    },

    // relationship configuration
    relationships: {
        // each key represents a resource path that points to a
        // nested resource or collection of nested resources
        'groups': {
            // the type of resource
            type: 'groups',

            // whether or not to include the nested resource(s)
            include: true,

            // optionally specify a non-default schema to use
            schema: 'my-schema',

            // a map of links to define on the relationship object
            links: {
                self(resource, options, cb) {

                },
                related(resource, options, cb) {

                }
            }
        }
    },

    // a map of top-level links
    topLevelLinks: {
        self(options, cb) {

        }
    },

    // a map of top-level meta members
    meta: {
        total(options, cb) {

        }
    },

    // an array of string paths to pick from the resource. this option
    // overrides any specified blacklist and also includes relationships
    whitelist: [],
}

serializeError(error, meta, defaultStatusCode) => {object} document

serializes any error into a JSON API v1.0 compliant error document. error can be anything, this method will attempt to intelligently construct a valid JSON API error object. the return document will contain a top level meta member with a status attribute that represents the status code with the greatest frequency.

Arguments
ParamTypeDescription
error{*}the error data to serialize
[meta]{Object}any top level meta information
[defaultStatusCode]{Number|String}a default status code to apply to any error object(s) without a specified status
Example
function(req, res) {
    async.waterfall([
        // ..
    ], function(err, payload) {
        let status = 200;
        if (err) {
            payload = serializer.serializeError(err);
            status = payload.meta.status;
        }
        res.json(status, payload);
    });
}

Events

The serializer inherits from node's EventEmitter. Below is a summary of the events exposed by this library.

error

The global error event.

Arguments
ParamTypeDescription
error{Object}the error object
Example
serializer.on('error', function(error) {
    bugsnag.notify(error);
});

To Do

  • implement jsonapi top-level member
  • implement deserialize method
  • implement support for unpopulated relationships (an id, or array of ids)
  • implement templates
  • ADD MORE TESTS!

Testing

run tests

npm test

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

License

Copyright (c) 2016 Chris Ludden.
Licensed under the MIT license.

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