route-mappings

0.7.4 • Public • Published

RouteMappings

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Function factory to create nested definitions of routes, with namespaces and resources support.

var RouteMappings = require('route-mappings');

// create a new RouteMappings instance
var routeMappings = RouteMappings()
  .get('/', { to: 'home_handler' })
  .get('/login', { to: 'login_handler' })
  .delete('/logout', { to: 'logout_handler' })
  .resources('/articles')
  .namespace('/account', function() {
    return RouteMappings()
      .get('/', { to: 'show_account_handler' })
      .put('/', { to: 'update_account_handler' })
      .get('/edit', { to: 'edit_account_handler' });
  });

// print all registered routes
routeMappings.routes.forEach(function(route) {
  // 1) the "to" option is not used internally, but this demonstrate you can pass whatever you want
  // 2) all routes have a "handler" property which holds its namespace,
  // which is useful on resource definitions since they can't be named directly
  console.log(route.verb.toUpperCase(), route.path, route.to || route.handler.join('_'));
});

// access url() helper for building routes
console.log(routeMappings.mappings.root.url());
console.log(routeMappings.mappings.login.url());
console.log(routeMappings.mappings.logout.url());
console.log(routeMappings.mappings.account.url());
console.log(routeMappings.mappings.account.edit.url());
console.log(routeMappings.mappings.articles.edit.url(42));

Instance settings

RouteMappings(options: Object) — Create a new function factory from given options:

  • RESOURCE_KEY: String — Used on resources to name the /<id> segment (default is :id)

    On nested resources it becomes from :id to :resource_id automatically, so you'll end up with something like this /posts/:post_id/comments/:id

  • PARAMS_PATTERN: RegExp — Used for match-and-replace params from given routes (default is /[:*](\w+)/g)

    Note the global g flag and the first capture (\w+) on the regular expression, don't forget it, otherwise all stuff related with urls won't work as expected.

  • SUPPORTED_ACTIONS: Object — Settings for translating resource actions to routes (defaults are in ./lib/index.js#L8-L16)

    If you provide your own options don't forget to use :id as the RESOURCE_KEY is defined, otherwise replacements won't occur.

More options?

Any additional option found will be copied and stored within the RouteMappings instance, then all options will be merged through any defined route on compilation time.

To create another RouteMappings instance with all its parent's options you can use the following:

var $ = RouteMappings({ use: ['root'] })
  .get('/', { as: 'home' })
  // all factories will receive the same instance
  .namespace('/admin', function(RouteMappings) {
    return RouteMappings({ use: ['auth'] })
      .resources('/posts');
  })
  // using the original factory will not inherit anything
  .namespace('/articles', function() {
    return RouteMappings()
      // resources shall be RouteMappings instances too!
      .resources('/comments', { use: ['other'] });
  }).mappings;

$.home.use; // ['root']
$.admin.posts.use; // ['root', 'auth']
$.articles.comments.use; // ['other']

Methods

  • <http-verb>(path: String, params: Object) — Basic method for call any HTTP method, e.g. get('/', { as: 'root' })

The as option is used for named routes, if missing it will be constructed from the route name and handler.

Internally it will add a handler option containing all parent handlers (if present) from a single route, all other values will be passed as is.

  • namespace(path: String, factory: <Function|Object>) — This method allows to mount other route mappings (instances) into the current instance.

The factory can be also a function which returns a new RouteMappings instance when called.

  • resources(...path: <String|Array>, params: Object, factory: <Function|Object>) — Shortcut for creating route mappings from resources

In fact, a resource is a new RouteMappings instance mounted within the given namespace.

Nesting support

Consider the following example:

var $ = RouteMappings()
  .resources('/Parent', function () {
    return RouteMappings()
      .get('/Section')
      .resources('/Children');
  })
  .namespace('/Section', function () {
    return RouteMappings()
      .resources('/Parent', function () {
        return RouteMappings()
          .resources('/Children');
      });
  }).mappings;

Where:

  • $.Parent.Children.path will be /parent/:parent_id/children
  • $.Parent.Children.handler will be ['Children']
  • $.Parent.Section.path will be /parent/section
  • $.Section.Parent.Children.path will be /section/parent/:parent_id/children
  • $.Section.Parent.Children.handler will be ['Section', 'Children']

As you can see, nested resources will not carry their parent details when building handlers, only namespaces are taken into account for that.

Paths are normalized to be human friendly, all PascalCase segments will be mapped as pascal-case.

URL mappings support

All http-verbs can define its own alias name with as, e.g:

var $ = RouteMappings()
  .get('/', { as: 'myUrl' })
  .namespace('/Section', function() {
    return RouteMappings()
      .get('/:slug')
      .resources('/Top');
  }).mappings;

[$.myUrl.verb, $.myUrl.path];
// ['get', '/']

[$.Section.verb, $.myUrl.path];
// ['get', '/section/:slug']

[$.Section.Top.verb, $.Section.Top.path];
// ['get', '/section/top']

[$.Section.Top.update.verb, $.Section.Top.update.path];
// ['put', '/section/top/:id']

You can access to any defined route through routeMappings.mappings property.

When a route has no alias defined, or, when the route is created automatically (e.g. resources) the alias name will be generated from the its path.

Casing is preserved from this conversion, e.g. /SubSection/Page would map to /sub-section/page and $.SubSection.Page respectively.

Properties

  • tree: Array — Read-only property containing all the route definitions

  • routes: Array — Read-only property containing all the route definitions as a flattened list

    Each route will have, at least:

    • as — The computed name for accesing this route through mappings, if missing it will be computed from the route details
    • verb — The specified HTTP verb uses from <http-verb>() calls, if missing you can assume the route is GET
    • path — The provided path from any call, as is, without modifications
    • handler — The computed handler for each single route as array
  • mappings: Object — Read-only property containing a tree of all named routes namespaced

    Each route hold the same data as accesing routes but with an extra url() function, useful for generating routes from given paths.

    Given /foo/:bar you can use url(123) to produce /foo/123, if you pass an object it should be called as url({ bar: 123 }) to produce the same url.

Integration example

// example modules
var path = require('path'),
    express = require('express');

var expressRouter = express.Router();

// iterate all compiled routes
routeMappings.routes.forEach(function(route) {
  // append custom "to" handler
  if (route.to) {
    route.handler.push(route.to);
  }

  // hipotetical modules as controllers
  var controller = path.join(__dirname, 'controllers', route.handler.join('/') + '.js');

  // load the resolved module
  var handler = require(controller);

  // specific action/function from module?
  if (route.action) {
    handler = handler[route.action];
  }

  // finally, we can register the route and handler
  expressRouter.route(route.path)[route.verb](handler);
});

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