express-routes-mapper
A simple package to map your routes for your expressjs application
here.
IMPORTANT: v1.0.2 fixed a security vulnerability. Every version up to v1.0.1 is not safe for production. Update your current version to v1.0.2 or higher. You can find more informationGetting started
Install
$ npm i -S express-routes-mapper
or
$ yarn add express-routes-mapper
Use
After the installation you can import the package to your express project.
Routes
Create your routes file:
const routes = 'POST /user': 'UserController.create'; ; // module.exports = routes;
Every post request to your server to route '/user' will call the function 'create' on the 'UserController'.
Controller
Create a file named UserController.js
// es6 class syntax { res; };; // object factory patternconst UserController = { const create = { res; }; return create ;}; ; // module.exports = UserController;
Middlewares
Middlewares allow you perform any set of operation on a particular route. They are executed from top-to-bottom, as they are arranged in the middlewares
array.
To proceed to the next middleware or the controller, never forget to call the next()
function.
For more examples, See Middleware Example.
Grouped Routes Middlewares
Middlewares can be added to a general set of routes. Such middlewares would be executed before any of the controller methods are called.
const groupedMiddleware1 = (req, res, next) => { next();}; const groupedMiddleware2 = (req, res, next) => { next();}; const router = mapRoutes(routes, 'test/fixtures/controllers/', [groupedMiddleware1, groupedMiddleware2]);
Middlewares On Routes
Middlewares can also be added to just a single route path.
const checkIfAutheticated = (req, res, next) => { console.log('authenticated'); next();}; const verifyFacebookAuth = (req, res, next) => { console.log('unverified'); return res .status(400) .json({status: false, message: 'Sorry, you aren\'t authorized on facebook'});}; const routes = { 'GET /user:id': { path: 'UserController.get', middlewares: [ checkIfAutheticated, verifyFacebookAuth, ], }, 'POST /user': 'UserController.create'};
Express with mapped Routes
I assume you have a folder structure like this, but it can be adapted to any folder structure.
.+-- src| +-- config| | +-- routes.js| || +-- controllers| | +-- UserController.js| || +-- models| || app.js|package.json
Your app.js could look a bit like this:
The magic happens here:
import routes from './config/routes';
the file where all the routes are mappedimport mapRoutes from 'express-routes-mapper';
the package that makes the mapping possibleconst mappedRoutes = mapRoutes(routes, 'src/controllers/');
tell router to use your routesapp.use('/', mappedRoutes);
tell express to use the mapped routes
; // const express = require('express');; // const http = require('http'); ; // const mapRoutes = require('express-routes-mapper');; // const routes = require('./config/routes'); const app = ;const server = http;const port = 4444;// mapRoutes takes two arguments// - 1. the routes// - 2. the path to your controllers from process.cwd();const mappedRoutes = ; app; server;
Supported methods
All routes supported by the express framework is natively supported by this library (e.g. GET
, PUT
, POST
, DELETE
etc.).
const routes = 'GET /someroute' : 'SomeController.somefunction' 'POST /someroute' : 'SomeController.somefunction' 'PUT /someroute' : 'SomeController.somefunction' 'DELETE /someroute' : 'SomeController.somefunction' // etc.;
Dynamic Routes
Simply use a colon :
for defining dynamic routes.
const routes = 'GET /someroute/:id' : 'SomeController.someFunction';
If you make a get request to http://localhost/someroute/1
the number 1
(:id) is now in the SomeController
accessible.
// object factory patternconst SomeController = { const someFunction = { const id = reqparamsid; // do some fency stuff with the id }; return someFunction ;}; ; // module.exports = SomeController;
Contribution
- Fork it!
- Create your feature branch:
git checkout -b feature-name
- Commit your changes:
git commit -am 'Some commit message'
- Push to the branch:
git push origin feature-name
- Submit a pull request 😉😉
License
MIT © Lukas Aichbauer