This project uses the following environment variables:
Name | Description | Default Value |
---|---|---|
CORS | Cors accepted values | "*" |
- Install Node.js version 8.0.0
- Clone the repository
git clone <git lab template url> <project_name>
- Install dependencies
cd <project_name>
npm install
- Build and run the project
npm start
Navigate to http://localhost:8001
-
API Document endpoints
swagger Spec Endpoint : http://localhost:8001/api-docs
swagger-ui Endpoint : http://localhost:8001/docs
The main purpose of this repository is to show a project setup and workflow for writing microservice. The Rest APIs will be using the Swagger (OpenAPI) Specification.
Add Typescript to project npm
.
npm install -D typescript
The folder structure of this app is explained below:
Name | Description |
---|---|
dist | Contains the distributable (or output) from your TypeScript build. |
node_modules | Contains all npm dependencies |
src | Contains source code that will be compiled to the dist dir |
configuration | Application configuration including environment-specific configs |
src/controllers | Controllers define functions to serve various express routes. |
src/lib | Common libraries to be used across your app. |
src/middlewares | Express middlewares which process the incoming requests before handling them down to the routes |
src/routes | Contain all express routes, separated by module/area of application |
src/models | Models define schemas that will be used in storing and retrieving data from Application database |
src/monitoring | Prometheus metrics |
src/index.ts | Entry point to express app |
package.json | Contains npm dependencies as well as build scripts |
tslint.json | Config settings for TSLint code style checking |
{
"compilerOptions": {
"target": "es5",
"module": "commonjs",
"outDir": "dist",
"sourceMap": true
},
"include": [
"src/**/*.ts"
],
"exclude": [
"src/**/*.spec.ts",
"test",
"node_modules"
]
}
All the different build steps are orchestrated via npm scripts. Npm scripts basically allow us to call (and chain) terminal commands via npm.
Npm Script | Description |
---|---|
start |
Runs full build and runs node on dist/index.js. Can be invoked with npm start |
build:copy |
copy the *.yaml file to dist/ folder |
build:live |
Full build. Runs ALL build tasks |
build:dev |
Full build. Runs ALL build tasks with all watch tasks |
dev |
Runs full build before starting all watch tasks. Can be invoked with npm dev |
test |
Runs build and run tests using mocha |
lint |
Runs TSLint on project files |
Node.js debugging in VS Code is easy to setup and even easier to use.
Press F5
in VS Code, it looks for a top level .vscode
folder with a launch.json
file.
{
"version": "0.2.0",
"configurations": [
{
"type": "node",
"request": "launch",
"name": "Launch Program",
"program": "${workspaceFolder}/dist/index.js",
"preLaunchTask": "tsc: build - tsconfig.json",
"outFiles": [
"${workspaceFolder}/dist/*js"
]
},
{
// Name of configuration; appears in the launch configuration drop down menu.
"name": "Run mocha",
"request":"launch",
// Type of configuration. Possible values: "node", "mono".
"type": "node",
// Workspace relative or absolute path to the program.
"program": "${workspaceRoot}/node_modules/mocha/bin/_mocha",
// Automatically stop program after launch.
"stopOnEntry": false,
// Command line arguments passed to the program.
"args": ["--no-timeouts", "--compilers", "ts:ts-node/register", "${workspaceRoot}/test/*"],
// Workspace relative or absolute path to the working directory of the program being debugged. Default is the current workspace.
// Workspace relative or absolute path to the runtime executable to be used. Default is the runtime executable on the PATH.
"runtimeExecutable": null,
// Environment variables passed to the program.
"env": { "NODE_ENV": "test"}
}
]
}
The tests are written in Mocha and the assertions done using Chai
"mocha": "3.4.2",
"chai": "4.1.2",
"chai-http": "3.0.0",
import chaiHttp = require("chai-http")
import * as chai from "chai"
import app from './application'
const expect = chai.expect;
chai.use(chaiHttp);
describe('App', () => {
it('works', (done:Function): void => {
chai.request(app)
.get('/api/hello?greeting=world')
.send({})
.end((err:Error, res: any): void => {
expect(res.statusCode).to.be.equal(200);
expect(res.body.msg).to.be.equal("hello world");
done();
});
});
});
npm run test
Test files are created under test folder.
The swagger specification file is named as swagger.yaml. The file is located under definition folder. Example:
paths:
/hello:
get:
x-swagger-router-controller: helloWorldRoute
operationId: helloWorldGet
tags:
- /hello
description: >-
Returns the current weather for the requested location using the
requested unit.
parameters:
- name: greeting
in: query
description: Name of greeting
required: true
type: string
responses:
'200':
description: Successful request.
schema:
$ref: '#/definitions/Hello'
default:
description: Invalid request.
schema:
$ref: '#/definitions/Error'
definitions:
Hello:
properties:
msg:
type: string
required:
- msg
Error:
properties:
message:
type: string
required:
- message
-
/hello:
Specifies how users should be routed when they make a request to this endpoint.
-
x-swagger-router-controller: helloWorldRoute
Specifies which code file acts as the controller for this endpoint.
-
get:
Specifies the method being requested (GET, PUT, POST, etc.).
-
operationId: hello
Specifies the direct method to invoke for this endpoint within the controller/router
-
parameters:
This section defines the parameters of your endpoint. They can be defined as path, query, header, formData, or body.
-
definitions:
This section defines the structure of objects used in responses or as parameters.
The project is using npm module swagger-tools
that provides middleware functions for metadata, security, validation and routing, and bundles Swagger UI into Express.
swaggerTools.initializeMiddleware(swaggerDoc, function (middleware) {
// Interpret Swagger resources and attach metadata to request - must be first in swagger-tools middleware chain
app.use(middleware.swaggerMetadata());
// Validate Swagger requests
app.use(middleware.swaggerValidator({}));
// Route validated requests to appropriate controller
app.use(middleware.swaggerRouter(options));
// Serve the Swagger documents and Swagger UI
app.use(middleware.swaggerUi());
cb();
})
-
Metadata
Swagger extends the Express request object, so that each route handler has access to incoming parameters that have been parsed based on the spec, as well as additional Swagger-generated information from the client.
Any incoming parameters for the API call will be available in
req.swagger
regardless of whether they were transmitted using query, body, header, etc. -
Validator
Validation middleware will only route requests that match paths in Swagger specification exactly in terms of endpoint path, request mime type, required and optional parameters, and their declared types.
-
Swagger Router
The Swagger Router connects the Express route handlers found in the controller files on the path specified, with the paths defined in the Swagger specification (swagger.yaml). The routing looks up the correct controller file and exported function based on parameters added to the Swagger spec for each path.
Here is an example for a hello world endpoint:
paths: /hello: get: x-swagger-router-controller: helloWorldRoute operationId: helloWorldGet tags: - /hello description: >- Returns the current weather for the requested location using the requested unit. parameters: - name: greeting in: query description: Name of greeting required: true type: string responses: '200': description: Successful request. schema: $ref: '#/definitions/Hello' default: description: Invalid request. schema: $ref: '#/definitions/Error'
The fields x-swagger-router-controller
will point the middleware to a helloWorldRoute.ts
file in the route's directory, while the operationId
names the handler function to be invoked.
-
Swagger UI
The final piece of middleware enables serving of the swagger-ui interface direct from the Express server. It also serves the raw Swagger schema (.json) that clients can consume. Paths for both are configurable. The swagger-ui endpoint is acessible at /docs endpoint.
TSLint is a code linter that helps catch minor code quality and style issues.
All rules are configured through tslint.json
.
To run TSLint you can call the main build script or just the TSLint task.
npm run build:live // runs full build including TSLint
npm run lint // runs only TSLint
The current solution has an example for using a private npm repository. if you want to use the public npm repository, remove the .npmrc file.