parse-server-multi-files-adapter
v1.0.1
Published
Allows multiple file adapters to be used at the same time by specifying the adapter in the filename.
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parse-server-multi-files-adapter
Allows multiple file adapters to be used at the same time by specifying the adapter in the filename.
Installation
yarn add parse-server-multi-files-adapter
or
npm install --save parse-server-multi-files-adapter
Usage
Server
For now, must be passed as an instance to the parse-server constructor:
const MultiFilesAdapter = require('parse-server-multi-files-adapter')
const FSFilesAdapter = require('parse-server-fs-adapter')
const S3Adapter = require('parse-server-s3-adapter')
const GCSAdapter = require('parse-server-gcs-adapter')
const multiAdapter = new MultiFilesAdapter({
// Delimiter used to retrieve adapter key
// Never change this
id: 'unique',
// Dictionary of file adapters
adapters: {
local: new FSFilesAdapter(),
s3: new S3Adapter({
// options...
}),
gcs1: new GCSAdapter({
// options...
}),
gcs2: new GCSAdapter({
// options...
})
},
// The key of the file adapter to use if none specified
// Never change this
defaultAdapter: 's3'
})
const api = new ParseServer({
appId: 'app_id',
masterKey: 'master_key',
filesAdapter: multiAdapter
})
Client
The adapter key (corresponding to a key in the adapters
object above) must be embedded in the filename.
This uses subsume-limited to parse the filename and determine the adapter key.
If writing a JS app you could do something like this to help create files:
// Utils
const Subsume = require('subsume-limited')
const subsume = new Subsume('unique') // same id that was passed to constructor on server
function composeFileName (adapterKey, filename) {
return subsume.compose(adapterKey) + filename
}
function getOriginalFileName (filename) {
return subsume.parse(filename).rest
}
function createParseFile (adapterKey, filename, data, type) {
return new Parse.File(composeFileName(adapterKey, filename), data, type)
}
// Usage
const file = createParseFile('local', 'foobar.txt', { base64: "TG9yZW0gSXBzdW0gRG9sb3I=" })
file.save()
.then(function () {
const foo = new Parse.Object('Foo')
foo.set('file', file)
return foo.save()
})
.then(function () {
console.log('Saved')
})
The saved file name in the example above would be Qq-unique-qQlocalZz-unique-zZfoobar.txt
.
If not using JS, you can replicate that functionality:
ID = Delimiter you chose
AdapterKey = Key of adapter to use
prefix = "Qq-" + ID + "-qQ"
suffix = "Zz-" + ID + "-zZ"
composed = prefix + AdapterKey + suffix
filename = composed + original file name