express-mustache-overlays

0.5.3 • Public • Published

Express Mustache Overlays

Serves mustache templates and partials, checking each directory in turn for matches, and reloading on file changes.

Configuration

The components in this package make use of the app.locals.mustache namespace. The prepareMustache() function helps set up the data structure correctly.

Configuration environment variables for the example.

  • MUSTACHE_DIRS - A :-separated list of directories to check for templates e.g. mustache-overlay:mustache.

Any configuration from MUSTACHE_DIRS gets merged into existing configuration such that it is used in preference to it. Effectively, the MUSTACHE_DIRS settings override settings defined in code.

Additionally:

  • DEBUG - Include express-mustache-overlays to get debug output from the express-mustache-overlays library itself and express-mustache-overlays:server for messages from the example server. Also include express-public-files-overlays to get debug from the public files server in the example.

Internal Workings

Internally, the code is designed to work in these stages:

  • mustacheFromEnv(app) - Parses and returns the config from the MUSTACHE_DIRS environment variable
  • prepareMustache(app, userDirs) - Sets up the app.locals.mustache data structure with a userDir and a libDirs and makes app.locals.mustache.overlay() available (see next). userDirs is optional. You usually pass the output of mustacheFromEnv(app) as the userDirs variable. Any library directories (that should be used if a match can't be found in the userDirs) can be set up using overlay() described next.
  • app.locals.mustache.overlay(dirs) - A function other libraries can use to merge any overlays they need into the libDirs configuration. The userDirs configuration will always overlay over the libDirs configuration, even if it is set up earlier.
  • setupMustache(app) - Installs the middleware based on the settings in app.locals.mustache. This should always come last.

Internally a watch is set up using chokidar on any partials that are present so that the updated contents can be used by the templates. Since templates (but not partials) are read each time they are rendered, the watches are only added to the partials since the latest template content will be rendered anyway.

Accessing the Overlays Object

You can access the overlays object like this once prepareMustache() is called:

app.locals.mustache.overlaysPromise.then((overlays) => {
  // Use overlays here
})

Ordinarily you wouldn't need this, but the object can be useful if you want to use the template system outside of Express.

The overlays object from the promise has these methods:

  • findView(template) - async function (requires await when called) which resolves to the path on the filesystem of the view
  • renderView(template, options) - async function (requires await when called) which resolves to the template named template, rendered with options. E.g. const html = await renderView('content', {content: 'hello'})
  • renderFile(path, options) - async function (requires await when called) which resolves takes the path as the full path to the mustache template, and the same options as renderView().

Example

const express = require('express')
const path = require('path')
const { prepareMustache, setupMustache, mustacheFromEnv } = require('../index.js')

const app = express()
prepareMustache(app, mustacheFromEnv(app))

// Any other express setup can change app.locals.mustache.libDirs here to add
// additional library-defined public files directories to be served.  Any user
// defined directories will be prepended before any corresponding URL path in
// the library directories list. The safest way to add overlays is with the
// overlay() function demonstrated here.
app.locals.mustache.overlay([path.join(__dirname, 'mustache')])

// Add any routes here:
app.get('', (req, res) => {
  res.render('hello', {})
})

// Set up the engine
const mustacheEngine = setupMustache(app)
app.engine('mustache', mustacheEngine)
app.set('views', app.locals.mustache.dirs)
app.set('view engine', 'mustache')

app.listen(8000, () => console.log(`Example app listening on port 8000`))

The mustache directory contains a hello.mustache template.

See the ./example directory for an example.

cd example
npm install

Then follow the instructions in the README.md in the example directory.

Dev

npm run fix

Changelog

0.5.3 2019-02-15

  • Doc fixes
  • Changed prepareMustache = (app, userDirs, libDirs) -> prepareMustache = (app, userDirs)
  • Added a warning if directories don't exist

0.5.2 2019-02-07

  • Don't throw an error in the renderer, it creates an UnhandledPromiseRejectionWarning. Calling the callback with an error is enough?
  • Improved the Docker example
  • Improved logging

0.5.1 2019-02-07

  • Changed debug behaviour to use own debug(), not app.locals.debug().
  • Moved the example to ./example.

0.5.0 2019-02-06

  • Complete refactor. See old CHANGELOG.md for older changes. Removed all functionality apart from the overlays behaviour. See express-public-files-overlays for static file serving.

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npm i express-mustache-overlays

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0.5.3

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