1.0.0 • Published 6 years ago

subdomain-router-middleware v1.0.0

Weekly downloads
2
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
6 years ago

subdomain-router-middleware

Middleware for handling subdomains using Express.

subdomain-router-middleware provides validation on express routes so that they are only accessible via the correct subdomain.

Installation

npm install subdomain-router-middleware

Dependencies

  • Express JS
  • property-validator

Usage

1) In the router file of your express project, require the package as follows.

var subdomain = require("subdomain-router-middleware");

Certain initialisation parameters need to be declared in order for the middleware to function correctly.

2) Create an object with the following parameters and pass it into the init function.

subdomain.init({
  asyncLoad: false,
  asyncFunc: null,
  error: {
    success: false,
    message: "Invalid subdomain"
  }
});
ParameterTypeDescription
asyncLoadboolBoolean to specify if valid subdomains should be asynchronously loaded.
asyncFuncFunctionSpecify a promise function to asynchronously load a list of valid subdomains.
errorJSONJSON that is returned when a subdomain is invalid.

In your express routes, add the middleware.

router.get("/test", subdomain.route("subdomain"), function(req, res) {}

Validate individual subdomain

To specifiy a route that is only accessible with a certain subdomain, add the middleware and pass a string that contains the valid subdomain.

subdomain.route("mysubdomain")

Load valid subdomains asyncronously

In many web applications, users can specify their own subdomain linked to their account.

You may need to asyncronously load a list of valid subdomains where the route is accessible.

To do so, we first need to modify the setup object we passed into the subdomain.init() function.

1) Change the boolean parameter asyncLoad to true.

2) Add a function to the asyncFunc parameter.

asyncFunc: function() {
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
      // Server call to retrieve subdomains
      const array = [];
      resolve(array);
    });
  },

The middleware expects a javascript promise that returns an array containing all of the subdomains that are valid for the route.

Invalid routes with subdomain

If you want certain routes to be completely inaccessible via a subdomain, you can use the alternative subdomain middleware function called root.

In your route, add the function.

router.get("/test", subdomain.root(), function(req, res) {}

This route will no longer be valid when accessed through a subdomain.

Subdomains in development mode

If you need to test and develop locally, it is still possible to use this package.

When NODE_ENV is set to development, an alternative regex is used that handles subdomains on localhost. More complex regex is used on production environments to determine the correct subdomain.

Set the NODE_ENV environment to development.

process.env.NODE_ENV = "development"

The chrome web browser supports using subdomains on localhost. You can test locally as follows:

http://subdomain.localhost:8080/

Router Example

var express = require("express");
var path = require("path");
var subdomain = require("subdomain-router-middleware");

// Define our express router object
let router = express.Router();

// Initialise default subdomain parameters
subdomain.init({
  asyncLoad: true,
  asyncFunc: function() {
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
      // Server call to retrieve subdomain for security token
      const array = ["subdomain1", "subdomain2", "subdomain3"];
      resolve(array);
    });
  },
  error: {
    success: false,
    message: "Invalid subdomain"
  }
});

// Express Route
router.get("/test", subdomain.route(), function(req, res) {
  res.json({
    success: true,
    message: "Endpoint loaded successfully"
  });
});

module.exports = router;