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Waste Export Controls Tool

You can use this service to find out what controls apply to exporting your waste from England, Wales, Scotland, or Northern Ireland to the country it’s destined for.

Environment variables

(Be sure to describe any environment variables here by maintaining a list like this)

name description required default valid notes
NODE_ENV Node environment no development,test,production
PORT Port number no 3000

Prerequisites

Node v8+

Running the application

First build the application using:

$ npm install

Currently this will install the required packages and build the govuk-frontend sass.

Now the application is ready to run:

$ npm start or $ node index.js

Getting started

Clone this repo and run through the checklist above.

Check the server is running by pointing your browser to http://localhost:3000

Project structure

Here's the default structure of the project files.

  • bin (build tasks)
  • client (client js/sass code)
  • server
    • plugins
    • public (This folder is publicly served)
      • static (Put all static assets in here)
      • build (This contains the build output files (js/css etc.) and is not checked-in)
    • routes
    • views
    • config.js
    • index.js (Exports a function that creates a server)
  • test
  • README.md
  • index.js (startup server)

Config

The configuration file for the server is found at server/config.js. This is where to put any config and all config should be read from the environment. The final config object should be validated using joi and the application should not start otherwise.

A table of environment variables should be maintained in this README.

Plugins

Hapi has a powerful plugin system and all server code should be loaded in a plugin.

Plugins live in the server/plugins directory.

Logging

The good and good-console plugins are included and configured in server/plugins/logging

The logging plugin is only registered in when NODE_ENV=development.

Error logging for production should use errbit.

Views

The vison plugin is used for template rendering support.

The template engine used in nunjucks inline with the GDS Design System with support for view caching, layouts, partials and helpers.

Static files

The Inert plugin is used for static file and directory handling in hapi.js. Put all static assets in server/public/static.

Any build output should write to server/public/build. This path is in the .gitignore and is therefore not checked into source control.

Routes

Incoming requests are handled by the server via routes. Each route describes an HTTP endpoint with a path, method, and other properties.

Routes are found in the server/routes directory and loaded using the server/plugins/router.js plugin.

Hapi supports registering routes individually or in a batch. Each route file can therefore export a single route object or an array of route objects.

A single route looks like this:

{
  method: 'GET',
  path: '/hello-world',
  options: {
    handler: (request, h) => {
      return 'hello world'
    }
  }
}

There are lots of route options, here's the documentation on hapi routes

Testing

lab and code are used for unit testing.

See the /test folder for more information.

Linting

standard.js is used to lint both the server-side and client-side javascript code.

It's defined as a build task and can be run using npm run lint.

License

THIS INFORMATION IS LICENSED UNDER THE CONDITIONS OF THE OPEN GOVERNMENT LICENCE found at:

http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3

The following attribution statement MUST be cited in your products and applications when using this information.

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government license v3

About the license

The Open Government Licence (OGL) was developed by the Controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office (HMSO) to enable information providers in the public sector to license the use and re-use of their information under a common open licence.

It is designed to encourage use and re-use of information freely and flexibly, with only a few conditions.

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You can use this service to find out what controls apply to exporting your waste from England, Wales, Scotland, or Northern Ireland to the country it’s destined for.

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