protips

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This site lists the protips that we shared with eachother in the Slack-channel during the courses.

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json-server

Nested Routes

Say we have a database with Products and Carts. Now, say we want to add a Products as an Item to a cart by a POST request. You can achieve that with custom routes.

Set the stage

First we create our initial database with some products in a JSON file. Let’s call it db.json:

{
  "products": [
    {
      "id": "2f81a686-7531-11e8-86e5-f0d5bf731f68",
      "item": "Keychain Phone Charger",
      "price": "29.99",
      "description": "This keychain lightning charger comes with a plug so you’ll be able to charge anywhere with an outlet. Great for the traveller on the go who always needs their phone."
    },
    {
      "id": "39ac2118-7531-11e8-86e5-f0d5bf731f68",
      "item": "Coffee Mug",
      "price": "11.80",
      "description": "Classic white coffee mug."
    },
    {
      "id": "4262b2c2-7531-11e8-86e5-f0d5bf731f68",
      "item": "Coffee Mug",
      "price": "11.80",
      "description": "Classic red coffee mug."
    }
  ],
  "carts": [
  ],
  "items": [
  ]
}

Notice how I also created carts and items in the schema. This is, with some custom routing, is the key.

Now, let’s start the server and convince ourselves that the database is working. Start the server in one terminal npx json-server --watch db.json --port 8080. Then to a GET request to fetch all the products curl http://localhost:8080/products. You should now see a list of all the products in the response.

Create a new Cart

Creating a new cart is as easy as doing an empty POST request on the carts resource: curl -XPOST http://localhost:8080/carts

You should get the new cart (including) and id in the response. If you examine your database, it should look something like this

{
  "products": [
    {
      "id": "2f81a686-7531-11e8-86e5-f0d5bf731f68",
      "item": "Keychain Phone Charger",
      "price": "29.99",
      "description": "This keychain lightning charger comes with a plug so you’ll be able to charge anywhere with an outlet. Great for the traveller on the go who always needs their phone."
    },
    {
      "id": "39ac2118-7531-11e8-86e5-f0d5bf731f68",
      "item": "Coffee Mug",
      "price": "11.80",
      "description": "Classic white coffee mug."
    },
    {
      "id": "4262b2c2-7531-11e8-86e5-f0d5bf731f68",
      "item": "Coffee Mug",
      "price": "11.80",
      "description": "Classic red coffee mug."
    }
  ],
  "carts": [
    {
      "id": 1
    }
  ],
  "items": [
  ]
}

Custom routing

Json-server is only setting up routes 1 level deep by default. But you can go around this limitation with some clever custom routing.

Create a new JSON file for your routes. Let’s call it routes.json.

{
  "/carts/:cartId/items/:itemId": "/items/:itemId"
}

What we do here, is that we are setting up a proxy that redirects all items below the Carts resource to the Items resource. Json-server is clever enough to understand this and insert a reference id when you post on this resource.

Let’s restart our server like so npx json-server --watch db.json --routes routes.json --port 8080

Starting as node module

If you start your json-server as a node module instead, you can add custom routing by using the rewrite middleware that comes bundled with json-server.

// server.js
const jsonServer = require('json-server')
const server = jsonServer.create()
const router = jsonServer.router('db.json')
const middlewares = jsonServer.defaults()

server.use(middlewares)
server.use(router)
server.use(jsonServer.rewrite({"/carts/:cartId/items/:itemId": "/items/:itemId"}));
server.listen(3000, () => {
  console.log('JSON Server is running')
})

Add Products (Items) to the Cart

To add a couple of items to the cart, the most basic example would be two POST requests like so curl -XPOST http://localhost:8080/carts/1/items -H 'content-type: application/json' -d'{"item": {"id": "4262b2c2-7531-11e8-86e5-f0d5bf731f68"}}' curl -XPOST http://localhost:8080/carts/1/items -H 'content-type: application/json' -d'{"item": {"id": "39ac2118-7531-11e8-86e5-f0d5bf731f68"}}'

What’s in our Items resource now? Let’s find out! curl http://localhost:8080/carts/1/items

[
  {
    "item": {
      "id": "4262b2c2-7531-11e8-86e5-f0d5bf731f68"
    },
    "cartId": "1",
    "id": 1
  },
  {
    "item": {
      "id": "39ac2118-7531-11e8-86e5-f0d5bf731f68"
    },
    "cartId": "1",
    "id": 2
  }
]

Unfortunately, you will still only get the cartId when you query the carts resource, but hey… this will take you quite far for a few minutes of work!