@hapipal/haute-couture
v4.3.1
Published
File-based hapi plugin composer
Downloads
5,350
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haute-couture
File-based hapi plugin composer
Lead Maintainer - Devin Ivy
Installation
npm install @hapipal/haute-couture
Introduction
This library will wire your hapi plugin together based simply upon where you place files and the contents of those files. It has the ability to call nearly every configuration-related method in the hapi plugin API. This means many good things! Here are a few:
- Route configurations placed in your
routes/
directory will be registered usingserver.route()
. - You can place your authentication scheme in
auth/schemes.js
rather than callingserver.auth.scheme()
. - You can provision a cache simply by placing its configuration in
caches/my-cache-name.js
, and forget aboutserver.cache.provision()
. - You can still write all the custom plugin code you desire.
- You can customize many aspects regarding how haute-couture composes your hapi plugin from files.
Haute-couture understands 19 hapi plugin methods: those for server methods, server/request decorations, request lifecycle extensions, route configuration, cookie definitions, vision view managers, schwifty models, schmervice services, and plenty more. And if that's not enough, you can always teach it about more through its flexible amendment system.
Usage
See also the API Reference
Haute-couture is intended for use with hapi v19+ and nodejs v12+, in addition to several optional peer hapi plugins noted in package.json (see v3 for lower support).
This library is not a hapi plugin: think of it instead as a useful subroutine of any hapi plugin. The full documentation of the files and directories it recognizes can be found in the API documentation.
Example
Here's an example of a very simple plugin that registers a single "pinger" route.
index.js
const HauteCouture = require('@hapipal/haute-couture');
module.exports = {
name: 'my-hapi-plugin',
register: async (server, options) => {
// Custom plugin code can go here
await HauteCouture.compose(server, options);
}
};
routes/pinger.js
module.exports = {
method: 'get',
path: '/',
options: {
handler(request) {
return { ping: 'pong' };
}
}
};