mei-long
REST Framework for Deno Standard HTTP Library
Introduction
mei-long is a wrapper around the Deno Standard HTTP Library. The goal of this framework is to create a small overhead while providing convenience for the developer by making it as easy as possible to create a REST-conform HTTP/HTTPS server. This is a open-source project and MIT licensed. Any serious participation is welcome.
Getting started
To create your first server you can simply run the following code:
import {
Application,
Routes,
RouteGroup,
HttpMethods,
} from "https://deno.land/x/mei_long/mei-long.ts";
const apiV1Routes: Routes = [{
method: HttpMethods.GET,
path: "/",
callback: (req) => {
req.respond({ body: "HelloWorld" });
},
}];
const apiV1: RouteGroup = {
urlPrefix: "api/v1",
routes: apiV1Routes,
};
const app = new Application(
{
port: 3003,
routeGroups: [apiV1],
},
);
app.start();
console.log("Server started");Usage
As already told, the main idea was simplicity and keep the overhead as small as possible. Like the Deno Standard HTTP Library.
Application
To start the server:
const app = new Application(
{
port: 3003,
routeGroups: [...],
},
);
app.start();should do the job. Where you define the following config:
interface ApplicationConfig {
port: number;
routeGroups: RouteGroup[];
hostname?: string;
}RouteGroups and Routes
But what are RouteGroups? The idea of a RouteGroup is that you can group separate routes that belong together. For example because of same functionality, API version, etc. . Especially if you are working on an updated version (V2) of your API, you can just create a new group, define the urlPrefix property (e.g. api/v2) and add it to your application.
type RouteGroup = {
routes: Routes;
urlPrefix: string;
middlewares?: Middleware[];
};Each RouteGroup has a different set of Routes. Routes are defined as an Array of Route objects. With Routes being an array you can easily define multiple arrays of Route objects (e.g. sorted by main, login, user, etc.) and then spread them to one big array ([...mainRoutes, ...loginRoutes, ...userRoutes]). This allows you to better manage your routes.
A Route is simple what you would expect in any REST environment.
- It got a
method, that must be a valid HTTP method (You can also just use a string here, but using theHttpMethodsenum is recommended) - An
path(e.g. “/customer/123/”) - A
callbackfunction that will simple pass through thereq(“ServerRequest”) object from the Deno Standard HTTP Library, while providingparams(“Map”) - And
middlewareswhich are also just passthrough functions like thecallback
type Route = {
method: HttpMethods | string;
path: string;
callback: RouteCallback;
middlewares?: Middleware[];
};RouteCallback
The RouteCallback is the function where your code (database operations, static data servings, etc.) will be written. You have access to the ServerRequest object of the Deno Standard HTTP Library. A little goody is, that you also have access to params which is an object with path and url as maps of Map<string,string>. All path and url parameters are stored there.
For example:
- The defined route
/user/:id/will with a call of/user/123will give you123as value of the keyid
...
callback: (req, params) => {
req.respond({ body: `The user id is: ${params.path.get("id")}` });
}
...- The defined route
/user/receives an url parameteridlike the followinghttp://localhost:3003/user?id=123orhttp://localhost:3003/user/?id=123
...
callback: (req, params) => {
req.respond({ body: `The user id is: ${params.url.get("id")}` });
}
...JsonBody
Since this is a JSON-based http router you will find a jsonBody object in your callback parameters, when you work with a POST, PUT or PATCH (more to follow).
...
callback: (req, jsonBody, _params) => {
req.respond({ body: `The cool json prop is: ${jsonBody.myCoolJsonProp}` });
}
...Middlewares
As you might have noticed by now, you can define middlewares for Routes and/or for RouteGroups. This allows you to have for example a authentication for a group of routes while giving you the option to write code that should be executed before the RouteCallback of a single route.
Middlewares have acces to the ServerRequest object.
{
...
myCoolMiddleware: (req) => {
doSomethingCool();
req.headers.get("Authorization");
...
}
}License
This project is created with a MIT license.
Acknowledgements
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