subdomain-handler
v0.0.2
Published
Node.JS Subdomain Middleware
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##Intro
Thanks for the inspiration @WilsonPage for express-subdomain-handler. I Just want to skip checking on specific file extentions like .css, .js, .html, .jpg, .png, .svg, .gif,.woff, .ttf
subdomain-handler takes the headache out of dynamic subdomain routing in Express. It captures the contents of any subdomain and writes them into the Express req.url. This means you can write specific route handlers for subdomain urls. As you can see below, express-subdomain-handler can manage single or multiple subdomains.
##Examples
http://mysubdomain.example.com
=> '/subdomain/mysubdomain/'
http://myexcellentsubdom.example.com/homepage
=> '/subdomain/myexcellentsubdom/homepage'
http://first.second.example.com
=> '/subdomain/first/second/'
http://first.second.example.com/another/page
=> '/subdomain/first/second/another/page'
##Installation
npm install express-subdomain-handler
##Usage
Add express-subdomain-handler to your express middleware stack (before your routes are specified). You need to specify what the base url of your site is ('example.com', 'example.local', etc), what you what subdomain urls to be prefixed with ('subdomain' by default) and whether you want logging turned on (false by default)
app.use( require('express-subdomain-handler')({ baseUrl: 'example.com', prefix: 'myprefix', logger: true }) );
Setup routes to catch subdomain urls so for http://mysubdomain.example.com/homepage
I would write my route
handler to look like this.
app.get('/myprefix/:thesubdomain/thepage', function(req, res, next){
// for the example url this will print 'mysubdomain'
res.send(req.params.thesubdomain);
});
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