yracnet / vite-plugin-api-routes

Create API routes from path directory like to Nextjs
MIT License
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vite-plugin-api-routes

License Build Status

Apology for Project Renaming

πŸ™ Dear Community,

We sincerely apologize for the recent project name changes. After careful consideration and feedback, we've settled on the name vite-plugin-api-routes. We understand that these changes might have caused confusion, and we appreciate your understanding.

Thank you for your continued support and flexibility.

Best regards,

Willyams Yujra

Additional Resources

For more detailed information and resources related to vite-plugin-api-routes, please refer to the following:

Vision

Enhance API routing in ViteJS based on directory structure for improved visibility and project structure in Node.js and Express.

See the tutorial

Motivation

Example Structure:

> tree src/api/
src/api/:
β”œβ”€β”€β”€admin
β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€β”€auth
β”‚   β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€β”€login.js
β”‚   β”‚   └───status.js
β”‚   └───user
β”‚       β”œβ”€β”€β”€index.js
β”‚       └───[userId]        //Remix Format
β”‚           β”œβ”€β”€β”€index.js
β”‚           └───detail.js
β”œβ”€β”€β”€site
β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€β”€article
β”‚   β”‚   β”œβ”€β”€β”€$articleId.js   //NextJS Format
β”‚   β”‚   └───new.js
β”‚   └───page
β”‚       β”œβ”€β”€β”€$pageId.js
β”‚       └───new.js
└───index.js

The directory tree is exported as router rules tree:

GET     /api/site/
GET     /api/routers
USE     /api/admin/user
GET     /api/admin/user
GET     /api/admin/user/
POST    /api/admin/user/
GET     /api/admin/auth/login
POST    /api/admin/auth/login
GET     /api/site/article/new
GET     /api/admin/auth/status
POST    /api/admin/auth/status
GET     /api/site/page/:pageId
GET     /api/admin/user/:userId/
PUT     /api/admin/user/:userId/
DELETE  /api/admin/user/:userId/
GET     /api/site/article/:articleId
GET     /api/admin/user/:userId/detail

For example, the src/api/admin/user/$userId.js file exports allowed request methods:

//file:src/api/admin/user/$userId.js
export const DELETE = (req, res, next) => {
  res.send("DELETE REQUEST");
};
export const PUT = async (req, res, next) => {
  res.send("PUT REQUEST");
};
// Support default, GET, HEAD, POST, PUT, DELETE by default
// For CONNECT, OPTIONS, TRACE, PATCH, and others, you need to add the mapping to the mapper attribute config

// If you need middlewares for a route, simply export an array containing all middlewares as the default
export default [authMiddleware, secondMiddleware /* ... */];

Similarly, the [userId].js or $userId.js file name is exported as a request parameter /user/:userId, following the Next.js/Remix framework.

How to Use

Install

yarn add vite-plugin-api-routes

Configuration

In vite.config.ts:

import { defineConfig } from "vite";
import { pluginAPIRoutes } from "vite-plugin-api-routes";

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [
    pluginAPIRoutes({
      // moduleId: "@api",  // Old version change to "virtual:vite-plugin-api-routes",
      // cacheDir: ".api",
      // server: "[cacheDir]/server.js",
      // handler: "[cacheDir]/handler.js",
      // configure: "[cacheDir]/configure.js",
      // routeBase: "api",
      // dirs: [{ dir: "src/api"; route: "", exclude?: ["*.txt", ".csv", "data/*.*"] }],
      // include: ["**/*.js", "**/*.ts"],
      // exclude: ["node_modules", ".git"],
      // mapper: { default: "use", GET: "get", ... },
    }),
  ],
});

Parameters

Mapper

Default Value

mapper: {
  //[Export Name]: [Http Verbose]
  default: "use",
  GET: "get",
  POST: "post",
  PUT: "put",
  PATCH: "patch",
  DELETE: "delete",
  // Overwrite
  ...mapper,
};

Custom Mapping

/vite.config.js

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [
    pluginAPIRoutes({
      mapper: {
        /**
         * export const PING = ()=>{...}
         * Will be mapped to express method
         * app.get('/path/dir', PING)
         */
        PING: "get",
        /**
         * export const OTHER_POST = ()=>{...}
         * Will be mapped to posible method
         * app.post2('/path/dir', OTHER_POST)
         */
        OTHER_POST: "post2",
        /**
         * export const PATCH = ()=>{...}
         * Will not be mapped
         */
        PATCH: false,
      },
    }),
  ],
});

You can disable a method by setting its value to false. In the example PATCH: false, the PATCH method is disabled. /src/api/index.js

export const PING = (req, res, next)=>{
    res.send({name:"Ping Service"});
}
export const OTHER_POST = (req, res, next)=>{
    res.send({name:"Other Service"});
}
export const PATCH = (req, res, next)=>{
    res.send({name:"Path Service"});
}

/src/handler.js or see handler.js

import express from "express";
import { applyRouters } from "@api/routers";
import * as configure from "@api/configure";

export const handler = express();

configure.handlerBefore?.(handler);

applyRouters(
  (props) => {
    const { method, route, path, cb } = props;
    if (handler[method]) {
      if(Array.isArray(cb)) {
        handler[method](route, ...cb);
      } else {
        handler[method](route, cb);
      }
    } else {
      console.log("Not Support", method, "for", route, "in", handler);
    }
  }
);

configure.handlerAfter?.(handler);

/src/server.ts or see server.ts

import { handler } from "@api/handler";
import { endpoints } from "@api/routers";
import * as configure from "@api/configure";
import express from "express";

const server = express();
configure.serverBefore?.(server);
const { PORT = 3000, PUBLIC_DIR = "import.meta.env.PUBLIC_DIR" } = process.env;
server.use("import.meta.env.BASE", express.static(PUBLIC_DIR));
server.use("import.meta.env.BASE_API", handler);
configure.serverAfter?.(server);
server.on("error", (error) => {
  console.error(`Error at http://localhost:${PORT}`, error);
  configure.serverError?.(server, error);
});
server.on("listening", () => {
  console.log(`Ready at http://localhost:${PORT}`);
  configure.serverListening?.(server, endpoints);
});
server.listen(PORT);

/src/configure.ts or see configure.ts

import express from "express";
import { CallbackHook, StatusHook, ServerHook, HandlerHook, ViteServerHook } from "vite-plugin-api-routes/model";

export const viteServerBefore: ViteServerHook = (server, viteServer) => {
    console.log("VITEJS SERVER");
    server.use(express.json());
    server.use(express.urlencoded({ extended: true }));
};

export const viteServerAfter: ViteServerHook = (server, viteServer) => {
};

export const serverBefore: ServerHook = (server) => {
    server.use(express.json());
    server.use(express.urlencoded({ extended: true }));
};

export const serverAfter: ServerHook = (server) => {
};

export const handlerBefore: HandlerHook = (handler) => {
};

export const handlerAfter: HandlerHook = (server) => {
};

export const callbackBefore: CallbackHook = (callback, route) => {
    return callback;
};

export const serverListening: StatusHook = (server) => {
};

export const serverError: StatusHook = (server, error) => {
};

TypeScript Support

To leverage TypeScript models within your Vite.js project, follow these steps:

Reference the TypeScript Definitions:

Add a reference to the TypeScript definitions file [moduleId]/types.d.ts within your vite-env.d.ts file.

src/vite-env.d.ts

/// <reference types="vite/client" />
/// <reference types="../.api/types.d.ts" />

Utilize the TypeScript Models in Your Code:

Once you've referenced the required TypeScript definitions, you can incorporate them directly into your TypeScript code.

Incorporating a ViteServerHook model from vite-plugin-api-routes:

import { ViteServerHook } from "vite-plugin-api-routes/model";

export const viteServerBefore: ViteServerHook = (server, viteServer) => {
    console.log("VITEJS SERVER");
    // Include ViteServer Config
};

NOTE:

In the server file, we do not explicitly declare the basic configuration. Instead, this responsibility is delegated to the configure file, ensuring a more modular and centralized approach to server setup and initialization.

WARNING:

Be cautious when configuring the viteServerBefore and viteServerAfter methods. These methods interact with viteServer, and if not configured correctly, they can lead to issues. Specifically, including a direct reference to the Vite.js library within these methods can cause problems during the build process. Although these methods themselves are not included in the final build output, any import references associated with the vitejs libraries can generate unexpected problems.

TO DO: