@libstack/server
The Libstack Server will help you create NodeJS services using the power of Typescript.
Installing
npm install @libstack/server --save
Architecture
First let's understand the architecture then we will jump in to the code.
There are 3 core components on the libstack
architecture, which are: Config, Routers and the Server.
Config
This component will help reading config data either from file or from Environment Variables. We usually have some properties that is tied to a specific environment: tests, dev, staging, production, etc.
So, you can create multiple files, one for each environment NODE_ENV
. Take a look on the folder described bellow.
└ config/
├ default.json
├ test.json
├ development.json
├ staging.json
└ production.json
We can see there's a default.json
file, this one will have properties that are common to most environments, but all of those properties can be overriden either by file or by Environment Variable.
The rest or the files will be resolved based on the proccess.env.NODE_ENV
. You can have as many environment as you want.
Using the config
To use the config variables, you don't need to explicity use process.env
. Instead, there's a module to use.
import { config } from '@libstack/server';
// for booleans "true" will be resolved to true and "false" will be resolved to false
const booleanVar: boolean = config.getBoolean('MY_BOOLEAN_ENV_VARIABLE');
const stringVar: string = config.get('MY_STRING_ENV_VARIABLE', 'my-optional-default-value');
const numberVar: number = config.getNumber('MY_NUMBER_ENV_VARIABLE', 1);
Routers
Now we need to write the entrance point for our server. It's always good to take a look on the @libstack/router
documentation.
The @libstack/router
is part of the @libstack/server
architecture but can be used standalone.
Take a look on the code bellow. As you can see, there's a decorator @RestController
that will instantiate the router automatically, so you don't need to call or even assign it to the express instance.
import { RestController, GET } from '@libstack/server';
import { Request } from 'express';
// This annotation will automatically create the proper express router
@RestController('/sample')
export default class SampleRouter {
@GET('/')
async getSample(req: Request): Promise<{ text: string }> {
return { text: 'Sample Router' };
}
}
But the file isn't resolved automatically, you need to explicitly import the router on your server.js
file, in the next session you can see the code to it.
Server
The server is the bootstrap, you can configure some startup scripts to be executed before the Server is booted.
import { Server } from '@libstack/server';
import './routers/SampleRouter'; // just import the router and it will create the express routes
const server = new Server();
server.beforeStartup(async () => {
// put your async process to run on startup
});
export default server;
For example: Using @libstack/server
with @libstack/sequel
import { Server } from '@libstack/server';
import { database } from '@libstack/sequel';
import { join } from 'path';
import './routers/PersonRouter';
const server = new Server();
// this will load all migrations from the migration folder
database.loadMigrations({ dir: join(__dirname, '..', 'db') });
server.beforeStartup(database.sync);
export default server;
Then all you will need is to create a startpoint file.
import server from './server';
(async() => server.start())();