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@fabrix/spool-hapi

v1.6.1

Published

Spool - Hapi.js. This spool binds the routes compiled in spool-router to a Hapi Server.

Downloads

91

Readme

spool-hapi

Gitter NPM version Build Status Test Coverage Dependency Status Follow @FabrixApp on Twitter

Hapi spool. This pack binds the routes compiled in spool-router to a Hapi Server.

Install

$ npm install @fabrix/spool-hapi --save

Usage

Load in your spool config.

// config/main.js
export const main = {
  // ...
  spools: [
    require('@fabrix/spool-router').RouterSpool,
    require('@fabix/spool-hapi').HapiSpool
  ]
}

View Config

Choose a template engine.

// config/views.js
export const views = {
  engine: 'handlebars'
}

Then simply write your views in a directory called 'templates'! This feature has been tested with Jade and Handlebars.

Configuration

See config/web.js for an example.

port

The port to listen on. 3000 by default. Can also be set via the PORT environment variable.

Server configuration

Configure your Hapi.Server by adding options property to the web.js config in typical Hapi.server format. See: http://hapijs.com/api#new-serveroptions


// config/web.js
module.exports = {
  options: {
    routes: {
      cors: true
    }
  }
}

Hapi Plugins

Register your hapi plugins by adding them to the config/web.js config in typical Hapi plugin format. See: http://hapijs.com/tutorials/plugins#loading-a-plugin

// config/web.js
module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    {
      plugin: require('vision'),
      options: { }
    },
    {
      plugin: require('inert'),
      options: { }
    },
    {
      plugin: require('hapi-auth-hawk'),
      options: { }
    }
    // ...
  ],

  onPluginsLoaded: function (err) {
    // Note that `this` is fabrix `app` instance
    this.spools.hapi.server.auth.strategy('default', 'hawk', { getCredentialsFunc: getCredentials });
  }
}

Hapi Views

// config/web.js
module.exports = {
  views: {
    engines: {
      html: require('some-view-engine')
    },
    path: 'views'
  }
}

Static Assets

// config/main.js
module.exports = {
  paths: {
    ...
    www: path.resolve(__dirname, '..', 'static')
    ...
  }
}

This allows static files such as js or images to be served in the /static directory. If you prefer, feel free to use a name other than 'static'!

Multiple Static Assets

// config/main.js
module.exports = {
  paths: {
    ...
    www: [
      {
        path: path.resolve(__dirname, '..', 'static'),
        humanUrl: '/admin'
      },
      {
        path: path.resolve(__dirname, '..', 'uploads', 'pictures', 'cats'),
        humanUrl: '/cats'
      }
    ]
    ...
  }
}

Also you can make multiple static assets with human url. For example your static files in /uploads/pictures/cats with humanUrl you url look like http://example.com/cats humanUrl - not require

Contributing

We love contributions! Please check out our Contributor's Guide for more information on how our projects are organized and how to get started.

License

MIT