@edcarroll/koa-router-decorators
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1.0.0 • Public • Published

Koa Router Decorators

Convenience decorators for koa-router. Adds concept of controller classes, with route methods on the class.

Installation

$ npm install --save @edcarroll/koa-router-decorators

Quickstart

Import the necessary decorators and the useController helper function from the library:

import * as Koa from "koa";
import * as KoaRouter from "koa-router";
import {Controller, Get, IMiddleware, useController} from "@edcarroll/koa-router-decorators";

const app = new Koa();
const router = new KoaRouter();

Create your first controller:

@Controller('/')
class RootController {
    @Get('/')
    public helloWorld:IMiddleware[] = [
        async ctx => {
            ctx.body = "hello, world!";
        }];
}

Connect the controller to the root router and you're good to go!

useController(router, new RootController());

app.use(router.routes());
app.use(router.allowedMethods());

app.listen(20000);

Decorators

@Controller(pathPrefix:string, ...middleware?:IMiddleware[])

Marks class as router controller. To make use of the controller either connect it directly to a KoaRouter instance with useController or nest it within an existing controller using @NestedController.

Routes are defined on the controller itself, as properties, decorated with @Route or its equivalent convenience decorators. The pathPrefix property is used to prefix each route within the controller's path with a specified string. The middleware property is a spread array of middleware that when set are applied to all of the child routes of the controller and its nested controllers.

Path Prefix Usage

@Controller('/demo')
class DemoController {
    @Get('/')
    public demo:IMiddleware[] = [async ctx => ctx.body = "demo"];
}

// GET /demo/ : 200 : "demo"

Middleware Usage

import {Controller, Get, Post} from "@edcarroll/koa-router-decorators";
import {loggingMiddleware, authMiddleware} from "...";

@Controller('/demo', loggingMiddleware, authMiddleware)
class DemoController {
    @Get('/')
    public demo:IMiddleware[] = [async ctx => ctx.body = "demo"];

    @Post('/')
    public example:IMiddleware[] = [async ctx => ctx.body = "example"];
}

// GET  : /demo : 401
// POST : /demo : 401

@NestedController()

Nested controllers are how complex controllers can be built up from a single root controller. When you have defined your 'sub-controller' class and decorated it with @Controller, place an of it instance within the parent controller with the @NestedController decorator.

Usage

import {Controller, NestedController, Get} from "@edcarroll/koa-router-decorators";

@Controller('/nested')
class SubController {
    @Get('/route')
    public nested:IMiddleware[] = [async ctx => ctx.body = "nested"];
}

@Controller('/demo')
class DemoController {
    @NestedController()
    public nestedController = new SubController();
}

// GET : /demo/nested/route : 200 : "nested"

@Route(method:RequestMethod, path:string)

Defines a route on the controller. To set up a route, use this to decorate an array of IMiddleware. The array of middleware will be attached to the controller, using the provided method and path, and are executed in order.

Route parameters work as expected, e.g. /people/:id will set ctx.params.id.

Usage

import {Controller, Route, RequestMethod} from "@edcarroll/koa-router-decorators";

@Controller('/')
class RootController {
    @Route(RequestMethod.Get, '/example')
    public exampleRoute:IMiddleware[] = [
        async (ctx, next) => {
            // 1. This middleware is called first
            ctx.status == 204; // false

            await next(); // 2. We then await downstream

            // 4. Control flows back upstream
            ctx.status == 204; // true
        },
        async ctx => {
            ctx.status = 204; // 3. This middleware is called, changing the status then returning
        }];
}

// GET : /example : 204

@Get(path:string), @Put(...), @Post(...)...

These are convenience decorators, and are each shorthand for @Route(RequestMethod.[Get|Put|Post|...], path)

Usage

@Controller('/')
class DemoController {
    @Get('/example')
    @Post('/example')
    public example:IMiddleware[] = [async ctx => ctx.body = "hello, world!"];
}

API

useController(router:KoaRouter, controller:any):void

Helper function that connects a controller to a KoaRouter instance. Usually you will only call this function once, when your application starts up.

Usage

import * as KoaRouter from "koa-router";
import {Controller} from "@edcarroll/koa-router-decorators";

const router = new KoaRouter();

@Controller('/')
class RootController {}

useController(router, new RootController());

app.use(router.routes());
app.use(router.allowedMethods());

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Install

npm i @edcarroll/koa-router-decorators

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Version

1.0.0

License

MIT

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Collaborators

  • edcarroll