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plisplas

Light and simple DDD framework for making modules, GraphQL, REST that does not get in your way, and just help you wire up your exports, resolvers and controllers.

Introduction.

It is a pain to have to set everything up and to maintain huge domainless files that look like monoliths, where you need to import all the resolvers, controllers, etc.

It would be nice to have a bit of convention over configuration, so you can drop your controllers and resolvers files with obvious names in obvious directories, and to have a build tool taking care of the rest.

This is what plisplas is about.

Quick start

npm init plisplas your-project-name
cd your-project-name
npm run dev

Peer Dependencies

If you want to use HTTP endpoints, you need to install the following dependencies

npm i cors deepmerge express

If you intend to use GraphQL endpoints, you have to install all the following dependencies

npm i apollo cors deepmerge express graphql

npm scripts

npm run dev

It watches changes on the source, build it, and start a server (if needed).

npm run build

It builds the human-readable source code version of plisplas at ./plisplas and then it transpile all the source code to ./dist

It also updates your package.json to set the exports if needed`

npm start

It starts the server.

domains directory

This is the only directory plisplas will look for exports, REST endpoints, and GraphQL schemas, types, fields, queries and mutations.

Suit yourself, organizing your files however you want.

You just need to follow some suffix conventions to allow plisplas to do the tedious and boring stuff for you.

`.get.js` HTTP GET  endpoint
`.post.js` HTTP POST endpoint
`.delete.js` HTTP DELETE endpoint
`.put.js` HTTP PUT endpoint
`.path.js` HTTP PATCH endpoint
`.all.js` catch all method for HTTP endpoint
`.query.js` GraphQL Query
`.mutation.js` GraphQL Mutation
`.type.js` GraphQL Type
`.field.js` GraphQL field for a type
`.export.js` JavaScript module export

Module exports

Any file inside the domain that matches \.export\.m?[tj]s will be transpiled and exported.

The path of the file will determine the path of the export.

  • the file /domains/foo/bar/baz.export.js will be exported like [package-name]/foo/bar/baz
  • the file /domains/foo/index.export.js will be exported like `[package-name]/foo

And all then will also be exported in a combined object as [package-name] so the importer can do introspection.

Import examples

import baz from '[package-name]/foo/bar/baz'

const foo = require('[package-name]/foo')

import packageName from 'package-name`
//  packageName.foo.bar.baz

REST endpoints

Any file that matches /(get|post|put|patch|all).m?[tj]s$/i will be handling a REST endpoint.

Path-to-route rules:

Basic routing:

The route of the endpoint will be determined by the file path of the file inside domains.

The file /domains/foo/bar/baz.get.js will be handling the GET requests to the route /foo/bar/baz

index files

The filename of the index files will not be considered for the route.

The file /domains/foo/bar/index.get.js will be handling the GET requests to the route /foo/bar

Root:

if the path includes _root_ this will be taken as the root of the route.

The file /domains/foo/_root_/bar/baz.post.js will be handling the POST requests to the route /bar/baz

Route parameters:

if any path segment is surrounded by brackets, it will be a named route parameter.

The file /domains/foo/[bar]/baz.PUT.ts will be handling the PUT requests to the express route /foo/bar/baz

express configuration

To modify the middlewares, that are added to the express app before the routes, you can add more items to the config.express.use array; or override the default ones,

You can change the port, IP

You can add more items to config.express.routes array, or override the default ones, to modify the routes.

GraphQL

The files matching /(query|mutation|type|field)\.m?[tj]s$/i will be handled as resolvers. The files matching /\graphql will be handled as schema definition.

path to resolver rules:

There are no specific rules for the .graphql files.

Those files are just appended together in a single schema.graphql file.

Query, Mutation and Type naming.

The name of the type, query or mutation, will be determined by the filename, unless the filename is an index, in which case the name will be the parent directory name.

field naming

The name of the field will be determined by the filename, and the name of the type it belongs to will be determined by the directory name.

If the field’s file is an index file, the name of the field will be index.

configuration

configuration.apollo will be passed as the parameter to the Apollo Server constructor, so you can do whatever you want.

configuration

A plisplas service can be configured with a plisplas.config.js file.at the root of the project.

This file is transpiled by tsc, so any syntax it supports can be used.

It can default-export a configuration object, or a function that accepts the default configuration object and returns the desired configuration object, or its promise.

In the case of exporting an object, it will be merged with the default configuration object.

default configuration

export default {
  express: {
    ip: '0.0.0.0',
    port: 5000,
    use: [
      express.json(),
    ],
    routes // array with the parsed routes,
  },
  apollo: {
    csrfPrevention: true,
    resolvers // object with the parsed resolvers,
    typeDefs // string with the parsed typeDefs,
    plugins: [
      process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production'
      ? ApolloServerPluginLandingPageDisabled()
      : ApolloServerPluginLandingPageGraphQLPlayground(),
    ],
  }
}

Custom server

If you need further customizations, you can create your own custom server.

You might want to use the files plisplas/routes.js and maybe plisplas/useRouters.js to add the routes to your express application.

You might want to use the files plisplas/schema.graphql and plisplas/resolvers.js to add the schema to your Apollo Server

and you will need to change your package.json/scripts/start to point to your custom server entry point.

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Simple graphql and REST framework, that does not get in your way.

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