azure-rest-adventure

0.1.1 • Public • Published

azure-rest-adventure

go on a RESTful adventure to create a service on azure

What

A learning adventure that teaches how to write restful services and how to deploy those services to azure.

Goals

The goal of this adventure is to teach you how to build a RESTful service that runs on azure and works like a key-value store. That is, it supports storing data that matches the following format:

{
    name: "unique name",
    value: "any value"
}

It will support creating new items, listing items, querying specific items, and removing items.

Getting started

  • First, make sure you have node installed.
  • Then npm install -g azure-rest-adventure
  • Then azure-rest-adventure or azradv for short

Main screen

This is what you see when you run azradv

Main screen

The list shows all the different segments of the lesson, listed in the order they should be completed. Selecting an entry (by hitting enter with it highlighted) outputs a description of the problem you'll need to solve for that portion of the lesson, as well as a description of how to verify that you've successfully completed it.

After a lesson is completed, run azradv again to select the next lesson.

Lessons

Setup

The setup lesson is where we configure our nodejs project. You'll be asked to setup a directory for the project, configure the project (by creating a package.json file) and install dependencies.

To verify completion, we'll ask you to pass the directory name (yes, you can pass . as the path) that your project lives in, so we can check for the following things:

  • package.json file exists
  • package.json#main entry exists
  • the file referenced by package.json#main exists
  • package.json#dependencies contains express
  • node_modules\express directory exists

Scaffolded

The scaffolded lesson is where we define our core logic for the project. You'll be asked to create an entrypoint (this is the file referenced in the above step in package.json#main) that creates an express app and starts listening on port 3000.

To verify completion, we'll ask you to pass the entrypoint file path so we can start your application and check for the following things:

  • your entrypoint loads without issue
  • your entrypoint outputs "listening on ... 3000" where "..." may be anything

Todo: we should also validate that the application is actually listening

Postone

The postone lesson is where we define our first RESTful endpoint for the project. You'll be asked to create an endpoint at /items that's capable of receiving the following in the request body:

{
    name: "some string",
    value: "some string"
}

And responds with a 200 on success, a 400 when the request is malformed, and a 500 when an internal error occurs.

To verify completion, we'll ask you to pass the entrypoint file path so we can start your application and check for the following things:

  • your entrypoint loads without issue
  • your entrypoint outputs "listening on ... 3000" where "..." may be anything
  • your project supports HTTP POST /items with a valid body

Postmany

The postmany lesson is where we define a new RESTful endpoint for the project. You'll be asked to create an endpoint at /items that's capable of receiving the following in the request body:

Where ... indicates 0-N additional objects that match that format.

[{
    name: "some string",
    value: "some string"
}, ...]

And responds with a 200 on success, a 400 when the request is malformed, and a 500 when an internal error occurs.

To verify completion, we'll ask you to pass the entrypoint file path so we can start your application and check for the following things:

  • your entrypoint loads without issue
  • your entrypoint outputs "listening on ... 3000" where "..." may be anything
  • your project supports HTTP POST /items with a valid body

Getone

The getone lesson is where we define a new RESTful endpoint for the project. You'll be asked to create an endpoint at /items/:name that's capable of responding with a given item if that item exists.

It responds with a 200 and the following body on success:

{
    name: "the passed name value",
    value: "some value"
}

a 400 when the request is malformed, a 404 when no such item is found, and finally a 500 when an internal error occurs.

To verify completion, we'll ask you to pass the entrypoint file path so we can start your application and check for the following things:

  • your entrypoint loads without issue
  • your entrypoint outputs "listening on ... 3000" where "..." may be anything
  • your project supports HTTP GET /items/item-name and returns a valid response body
  • your project supports HTTP GET /items/no-such-item and returns a 404 status code

Getmany

The getmany lesson is where we define a new RESTful endpoint for the project. You'll be asked to create an endpoint at /items that's capable of responding with a given item if that item exists.

It responds with a 200 and the following body on success:

Where ... indicates 0-N additional objects that match that format.

[{
    name: "the passed name value",
    value: "some value"
}, ...]

a 400 when the request is malformed, and finally a 500 when an internal error occurs.

To verify completion, we'll ask you to pass the entrypoint file path so we can start your application and check for the following things:

  • your entrypoint loads without issue
  • your entrypoint outputs "listening on ... 3000" where "..." may be anything
  • your project supports HTTP GET /items and returns a valid response body
  • your project supports HTTP POST /items to create an item, followed by HTTP GET /items to enumerate all items, including the newly created one.

Deleteone

The deleteone lesson is where we define a new RESTful endpoint for the project. You'll be asked to create an endpoint at /items/:name that's capable of removing that item if it exists.

It responds with a 200 on success, a 400 when the request is malformed, a 404 when no such item is found, and finally a 500 when an internal error occurs.

To verify completion, we'll ask you to pass the entrypoint file path so we can start your application and check for the following things:

  • your entrypoint loads without issue
  • your entrypoint outputs "listening on ... 3000" where "..." may be anything
  • your project supports HTTP DELETE /items/item-name and returns a valid response body
  • your project supports HTTP POST /items to create an item, followed by HTTP DELETE /items/item-name to create and then delete an item.

Deletemany

The deletemany lesson is where we define a new RESTful endpoint for the project. You'll be asked to create an endpoint at /items that's capable of removing all items.

It responds with a 200 when items are removed, a 400 when the request is malformed, a 404 when no items exists, and finally a 500 when an internal error occurs.

To verify completion, we'll ask you to pass the entrypoint file path so we can start your application and check for the following things:

  • your entrypoint loads without issue
  • your entrypoint outputs "listening on ... 3000" where "..." may be anything
  • your project supports HTTP DELETE /items and returns a valid response
  • your project supports HTTP POST /items to create a few items, followed by HTTP DELETE /items to create and then delete items.

Azure

The azure lesson is where we deploy the service to azure and validate it's functioning there. You'll be asked to deploy to azure.

To verify completion, we'll ask you to pass the url to your azure service (including protocol, like http://) and test the following requests:

  • HTTP DELETE /items
  • HTTP POST /items <one item>
  • HTTP POST /items <many items>
  • HTTP GET /items
  • HTTP GET /items/specific-item
  • HTTP DELETE /items/specific-item
  • HTTP DELETE /items

License

MIT

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npm i azure-rest-adventure

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Version

0.1.1

License

MIT

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