generator-soa
v1.1.5
Published
Yeoman generator for creating fullstack applications Using GULP MongoDB | PostgreSql | NEO4J, Express | Sails, & AngularJS
Downloads
226
Maintainers
Readme
Gulp AngularJS Full-Stack generator
Yeoman generator for creating Service Oriented Applications using a multitude of technologies!!
The purpose of a generator for service oriented architecture (SOA), is to help teams immediatly set up their environment. Currently you are able to generator multiple servers by running yo soa:server [name], Which will generate a server in the servers/ directory. it will alos generate and angular.factory(), that makes the connection.
Coming Soon
- initialize a git repository every time a client or server is made
- create multiple clients - choices [ ionic, oxford, bootstrap ]
- allow options for databases [ MongoDB, MySQL, PostgresSql, Neo4j, Firebase ]
- allow for server framework of choice [ sails, express ]
- allow for ECMA Script 6 option
Example project
Source code: https://github.com/JoelCoxOKC/angular-soa-seed
Usage
Install generator-soa
:
npm install -g generator-soa
Make a new directory, and cd
into it:
mkdir my-new-project && cd $_
Run yo soa
, optionally passing an app name:
yo soa [app-name]
Run gulp
for building, gulp serve
for preview, and gulp dist
for a preview of the built app.
Prerequisites
- MongoDB - Download and Install MongoDB - If you plan on scaffolding your project with mongoose, you'll need mongoDB to be installed and have the
mongod
process running.
Supported Configurations
Client
- Scripts:
JavaScript
,CoffeeScript
- Markup:
HTML
,Jade
- Stylesheets:
CSS
,Stylus
,Sass
,Less
, - Angular Routers:
ngRoute
,ui-router
Server
- Database:
None
,MongoDB
- Database: coming soon -
PostgreSql
,MySql
,Neo4J
- Authentication boilerplate:
Yes
,No
- oAuth integrations:
Facebook
Twitter
Google
- Socket.io integration:
Yes
,No
Injection
A gulp task looks for new files in your client/app
and client/components
folder and automatically injects them in the appropriate places based on an injection block.
less
files intoclient/app.less
scss
files intoclient/app.scss
-- Currently has Bugs.stylus
files intoclient/app.styl
css
files intoclient/index.html
js
files intoclient/index.html
coffeescript
tempjs
files intoclient/index.html
Generators
Available generators:
- App
- Server Side
- Client Side
- Deployment
- soa:openshift <-- Coming Soon
- soa:heroku <-- Coming Soon
App
Sets up a new AngularJS + Express app, generating all the boilerplate you need to get started.
Example:
yo soa
Endpoint
Generates a new API endpoint.
Example:
yo soa:endpoint message
[?] What will the url of your endpoint to be? /api/messages
Produces:
servers/server/api/message/index.js
servers/server/api/message/message.spec.js
servers/server/api/message/message.controller.js
servers/server/api/message/message.model.js (optional)
servers/server/api/message/message.socket.js (optional)
Route
Generates a new route.
Example:
yo soa:route myroute
[?] Where would you like to create this route? client/app/
[?] What will the url of your route be? /myroute
Produces:
client/app/myroute/myroute.js
client/app/myroute/myroute.controller.js
client/app/myroute/myroute.controller.spec.js
client/app/myroute/myroute.html
client/app/myroute/myroute.scss
Controller
Generates a controller.
Example:
yo soa:controller user
[?] Where would you like to create this controller? client/app/
Produces:
client/app/user/user.controller.js
client/app/user/user.controller.spec.js
Directive
Generates a directive.
Example:
yo soa:directive myDirective
[?] Where would you like to create this directive? client/app/
[?] Does this directive need an external html file? Yes
Produces:
client/app/myDirective/myDirective.directive.js
client/app/myDirective/myDirective.directive.spec.js
client/app/myDirective/myDirective.html
client/app/myDirective/myDirective.scss
Simple directive without an html file
Example:
yo soa:directive simple
[?] Where would you like to create this directive? client/app/
[?] Does this directive need an external html file? No
Produces:
client/app/simple/simple.directive.js
client/app/simple/simple.directive.spec.js
Filter
Generates a filter.
Example:
yo soa:filter myFilter
[?] Where would you like to create this filter? client/app/
Produces:
client/app/myFilter/myFilter.filter.js
client/app/myFilter/myFilter.filter.spec.js
Service
Generates an AngularJS service.
Example:
yo soa:service myService
[?] Where would you like to create this service? client/app/
Produces:
client/app/myService/myService.service.js
client/app/myService/myService.service.spec.js
You can also do yo angular:factory
and yo angular:provider
for other types of services.
Decorator
Generates an AngularJS service decorator.
Example:
yo soa:decorator serviceName
[?] Where would you like to create this decorator? client/app/
Produces
client/app/serviceName/serviceName.decorator.js
###Openshift
Deploying to OpenShift can be done in just a few steps:
yo soa:openshift
A live application URL will be available in the output.
oAuth
If you're using any oAuth strategies, you must set environment variables for your selected oAuth. For example, if we're using Facebook oAuth we would do this :
rhc set-env FACEBOOK_ID=id -a my-openshift-app rhc set-env FACEBOOK_SECRET=secret -a my-openshift-app
You will also need to set
DOMAIN
environment variable:rhc config:set DOMAIN=<your-openshift-app-name>.rhcloud.com # or (if you're using it): rhc config:set DOMAIN=<your-custom-domain>
After you've set the required environment variables, restart the server:
rhc app-restart -a my-openshift-app
Heroku
Deploying to heroku only takes a few steps.
yo soa:heroku
To work with your new heroku app using the command line, you will need to run any heroku
commands from the dist
folder.
If you're using mongoDB you will need to add a database to your app:
heroku addons:add mongohq
Your app should now be live. To view it run heroku open
.
If you're using any oAuth strategies, you must set environment variables for your selected oAuth. For example, if we're using Facebook oAuth we would do this :
heroku config:set FACEBOOK_ID=id heroku config:set FACEBOOK_SECRET=secret
You will also need to set
DOMAIN
environment variable:heroku config:set DOMAIN=<your-heroku-app-name>.herokuapp.com # or (if you're using it): heroku config:set DOMAIN=<your-custom-domain>
Bower Components
The following packages are always installed by the app generator:
- angular
- angular-cookies
- angular-mocks
- angular-resource
- angular-sanitize
- angular-scenario
- es5-shim
- font-awesome
- json3
- jquery
- lodash
These packages are installed optionally depending on your configuration:
- angular-route
- angular-ui-router
- angular-socket-io
- angular-bootstrap
- bootstrap
All of these can be updated with bower update
as new versions are released.
Configuration
Yeoman generated projects can be further tweaked according to your needs by modifying project files appropriately.
A .yo-rc
file is generated for helping you copy configuration across projects, and to allow you to keep track of your settings. You can change this as you see fit.
Testing
Running gulp test
will run the client and server unit tests with karma and mocha.
Coming Soon -- Use gulp test:server
to only run server tests.
Coming Soon -- Use gulp test:client
to only run client tests.
Protractor tests
To setup protractor e2e tests, you must first run
npm run update-webdriver
Coming Soon -- Use gulp test:e2e
to have protractor go through tests located in the e2e
folder.
Environment Variables
Keeping your app secrets and other sensitive information in source control isn't a good idea. To have grunt launch your app with specific environment variables, add them to the git ignored environment config file: server/config/local.env.js
.
Project Structure
Overview
├── client
│ ├── app - All of our app specific components go in here
│ ├── assets - Custom assets: fonts, images, etc…
│ ├── components - Our reusable components, non-specific to to our app
│
├── e2e - Our protractor end to end tests
│
└── server
├── api - Our apps server api
├── auth - For handling authentication with different auth strategies
├── components - Our reusable or app-wide components
├── config - Where we do the bulk of our apps configuration
│ └── local.env.js - Keep our environment variables out of source control
│ └── environment - Configuration specific to the node environment
└── views - Server rendered views
An example client component in client/app
main
├── main.js - Routes
├── main.controller.js - Controller for our main route
├── main.controller.spec.js - Test
├── main.html - View
└── main.less - Styles
An example server component in server/api
thing
├── index.js - Routes
├── thing.controller.js - Controller for our `thing` endpoint
├── thing.model.js - Database model
├── thing.socket.js - Register socket events
└── thing.spec.js - Test
Contribute
See the contributing docs
This project has 2 main branches: master
and canary
. The master
branch is where the current stable code lives and should be used for production setups. The canary
branch is the main development branch, this is where PRs should be submitted to (backport fixes may be applied to master
).
By seperating the current stable code from the cutting-edge development we hope to provide a stable and efficient workflow for users and developers alike.
When submitting an issue, please follow the guidelines. Especially important is to make sure Yeoman is up-to-date, and providing the command or commands that cause the issue.
When submitting a PR, make sure that the commit messages match the AngularJS conventions.
When submitting a bugfix, try to write a test that exposes the bug and fails before applying your fix. Submit the test alongside the fix.
When submitting a new feature, add tests that cover the feature.
See the travis.yml
for configuration required to run tests.