1.4.0 • Published 4 years ago

nanoms v1.4.0

Weekly downloads
3
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
4 years ago

NanoMS

v1.4.0 (Stable version)

NanoMS is a minimalistic http library for creating microservices.

(We recommend always using the latest version in order to take advantage of the all the latest features. Some of the older versions may contain bugs and unstable features.)

New in v1.2.0

  1. Added file serving functionality. Refer to API documentation below. The rest of the API should not be affected. This new API relies on mime-types as a dependency for content type detection.

    Here's an example on how to use the new file serving API: Edit restless-meadow-ib9pl

  2. Added named route parameters. Accessed via params property on req (http.IncomingMessage). Example:

nms.createService({
    path: '/users/:id',
    method: 'GET',
    func(req, res) {
        console.log(req.params.id);
        res.send();
    },
});

// GET /users/12345 => 12345

New in v.1.3.0

  1. Added a number of HttpExceptions. See full list below. Use one of the built in exceptions or, create a custom exception by using, or, by extending HttpException class:
// Built-in exception example:
const { NotFoundException } = require('nanoms');

nms.createService({
  path: '/users/:id',
  method: 'GET',
  async func(req, res) {
    try {
      const user = await User.findById(req.params.id);
    } catch(e) {
      throw new NotFoundException('User could not be found!');
    }
  }
})

//---
// Sending a custom http exception
const { HttpException } = require('nanoms');

nms.createService({
  path: '/error',
  method: 'GET',
  func(req, res) {
    throw new HttpException(/*message*/, /*status code*/):
  }
})

New in v1.4.0

We have refactored most of the request handling, and fixed all major bugs. 90% of the API should be stable.

  1. Added support for routing:
// Use nms.route() method to route services to a specified path.

/*
 * nms.route(serviceArray, optional[path, createService])
 * serviceArray: Service[]
 * path?: string
 * createService?: boolean
 *
 * returns an array with modified services
 * if createService is set to true NanoMS will create/register these endpoints
 */

const userService = [
    {
        path: '/new',
        method: 'POST',
        async func(req, req) {
            // Store user in db
        },
    },
    {
        path: '/all',
        method: 'GET',
        async func(req, req) {
            //Get all users from db
        },
    },
    {
        path: '/:id',
        method: 'POST',
        async func(req, req) {
            // Get user by id
        },
    },
];

const userRoute = nms.route(userService, '/users', true); // =>
/*
 * POST /users/new
 * GET /users/all
 * GET /users/:id
 */
  1. Added a static getInstance() method that returns an instance of NanoMS
// In index.js
const { NanoMS } = require('nanoms');
const nms = new NanoMS(3000);

//---

// In another file
const { NanoMS } = require('nanoms');
const nms = NanoMS.getInstance(); // Returns the instance created in index.js.

Get Started

Requirements

NodeJS V10 or higher

Here are six quick steps to get started

  1. Create e new directory. Move to your new directory and and initialize npm
> mkdir my-folder && cd my-folder && npm init -y
  1. Install NanoMS using npm
> npm install nanoms
  1. Create a server.js file and import NanoMS
> touch server.js
const { NanoMS } = require('nanoms');
  1. Create a new instance of NanoMS in server.js and pass a port number as an argument
const nms = new NanoMS(3000); // NanoMS accepts a port number
  1. Specify a body-parsing middleware to be used with the use() method
/*
  * NanoMS includes two built in middleware functions for parsing
  the request body to url-encoded or JSON format
  
  * You can define and add more built-in, or your own global middleware functions with the use() method
*/

nms.use(NanoMS.json); // or NanoMS.urlEncoded
  1. Lastly, start defining your service endpoints with the createService() method
/*
  * createService() takes an object as an argument and
  must include **two required properties (path and method, both of type 'string')
  and one method (func that takes two parameters req and res)** and one optional property
  (middleware of type object) for defining service specific middleware functions.
*/

nms.createService({
  path: '/', // url path
  method: 'GET', // url method
  middleware: {
    // optional: middleware functions. can be either synchronous or asynchronous
  }
  async func(req, res) { // can be either synchronous or asynchronous
    res.send('Hello NanoMS')
  }
})

Details

All NanoMS service and middleware functions receive req and res as arguments. req and res are direct references to http.IncomingMessage and http.ServerResponse. We recommend refering to the official NodeJS documentations Node JS.

NanoMS does however offer a few built-in methods, as well as shorthand properties and methods

API

// instance methods
nms.createService(/* { configuration } */); // method for creating services. (see example above)
nms.route(/*serviceArray, [options]*/); // method for routing services.
nms.setStatic(/* path */); // specify path for serving static files
nms.static(/* req, res */); // built-in middleware for serving static files from previously set path (see NanoMS.setStatic)
nms.use(/* middleware function */); // built-in method for specifying global middleware functions. passes on req and res as arguments

// static methods
NanoMS.getInstance(); // static method that returns an instance of NanoMS. Returns null if not instantiated
NanoMS.json(/* req, res */); // built-in body-parsing middleware function (Buffer to JSON)
NanoMS.urlEncoded(/* req, res */); // built-in body-parsing middleware function (Buffer to url-encoded)

req.app; // holds an instance of NanoMS
req.body; // holds the request body. retuns a Buffer if no parsing middleware is used
req.cookies; // holds an object with key value pairs
req.params; // holds an object with key value pairs representing named router parameters and their values.
req.getHeader(/* header */); // returns header or undefined if non-existent
req.query(/* query */); // returns url query. returns undefined in non-existent. returns an object of all url queries by default.
res.status(/* status-code */); // used to specify the status-code to be returned. returns res.
res.send(/* data to be sent */); // used to send back data with the response.
// data types accepted: string, number, object, Buffer...
res.render(/* fileName or path within static folder. Filename extention can be omitted*/); // used inside of service functions for rendering html files
res.redirect(/* url, (optional: status-code) */);

List of http exceptions:

  • BadRequestException
  • UnauthorizedException
  • NotFoundException
  • ForbiddenException
  • NotAcceptableException
  • RequestTimeoutException
  • ConflictException
  • GoneException
  • HttpVersionNotSupportedException
  • PayloadTooLargeException
  • UnsupportedMediaTypeException
  • UnprocessableEntityException
  • InternalServerErrorException
  • NotImplementedException
  • ImATeapotException
  • MethodNotAllowedException
  • BadGatewayException
  • ServiceUnavailableException
  • GatewayTimeoutException
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