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Elasticsearch module for Nest based on the official @elastic/elasticsearch package.
$ npm i --save @nestjs/elasticsearch @elastic/elasticsearch
Import ElasticsearchModule
:
@Module({
imports: [ElasticsearchModule.register({
node: 'http://localhost:9200',
})],
providers: [...],
})
export class SearchModule {}
Inject ElasticsearchService
:
@Injectable()
export class SearchService {
constructor(private readonly elasticsearchService: ElasticsearchService) {}
}
Quite often you might want to asynchronously pass your module options instead of passing them beforehand. In such case, use registerAsync()
method, that provides a couple of various ways to deal with async data.
1. Use factory
ElasticsearchModule.registerAsync({
useFactory: () => ({
node: 'http://localhost:9200'
})
});
Obviously, our factory behaves like every other one (might be async
and is able to inject dependencies through inject
).
ElasticsearchModule.registerAsync({
imports: [ConfigModule],
useFactory: async (configService: ConfigService) => ({
node: configService.get('ELASTICSEARCH_NODE'),
}),
inject: [ConfigService],
}),
2. Use class
ElasticsearchModule.registerAsync({
useClass: ElasticsearchConfigService
});
Above construction will instantiate ElasticsearchConfigService
inside ElasticsearchModule
and will leverage it to create options object.
class ElasticsearchConfigService implements ElasticsearchOptionsFactory {
createElasticsearchOptions(): ElasticsearchModuleOptions {
return {
node: 'http://localhost:9200'
};
}
}
3. Use existing
ElasticsearchModule.registerAsync({
imports: [ConfigModule],
useExisting: ConfigService,
}),
It works the same as useClass
with one critical difference - ElasticsearchModule
will lookup imported modules to reuse already created ConfigService
, instead of instantiating it on its own.
The ElasticsearchService
wraps the Client
from the official @elastic/elasticsearch methods. The ElasticsearchModule.register()
takes options
object as an argument, read more.
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Nest is MIT licensed.