express-beans
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    express-beans

    ExpressBeans

    ExpressBeans is the IoC Container (Inversion of Control Container) that you didn't know you needed. If you love Node.js and the Spring Boot way of code organization this lightweight framework is for you. ExpressBeans is an almost zero dependency framework (it wraps Express.js) to offer an easy-to-use way of building your next Express project.

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    Try ExpressBeans with the official generator:

    npm create express-beans-server
    

    API docs and types available in documentation.

    All you need is create an ExpressBeans application and provide your RouterBean classes:

    ExpressBeans.createApp({
    routerBeans: [
    ExampleRouter,
    ],
    });

    /* ======== OR ======== */

    const application = new ExpressBeans({
    routerBeans: [
    ExampleRouter,
    ],
    });

    If you need also direct access to express application:

    const application = new ExpressBeans({
    routerBeans: [
    ExampleRouter,
    ],
    });
    const expressApp = application.getApp();

    New decorators are here and ExpressBeans implements some simple decorators to achieve dependency injection and endpoint registration.

    import { Request, Response } from 'express';
    import { InjectBean, Route, RouterBean } from 'express-beans';
    import { ExampleService } from '../services/ExampleService';

    @RouterBean('/example')
    export class ExampleRouter {

    @InjectBean(ExampleService)
    private exampleService: ExampleService;

    @Route('GET', '/hello')
    getHello(_req: Request, res: Response) {
    res.end(this.exampleService.example());
    }
    }

    This will create a new router that expose an endpoint GET /example/hello and exampleService will be the instance of the class declared as it follow:

    import { Bean } from 'express-beans';

    @Bean
    export class ExampleService {

    private msg: string;

    constructor() {
    this.msg = 'hello world!';
    }

    example() {
    return this.msg;
    }
    }
    npm install express-beans
    

    The lifecycle of the beans is the following:

    • start: The application starts, and tasks registered for this phase are executed.
    • register: Beans and router beans are registered.
    • routing: Routes are registered.
    • init: The application is initialized, and tasks registered for this phase are executed.
    • run: The application is running, and tasks registered for this phase are executed.
    • exit: The application is shutting down, and tasks registered for this phase are executed.

    You can use the @Setup hook to add a function that will be executed right after the application is initialized.

    @Setup
    mySetupFunction() {
    // do something
    }

    Every request received will be served only after the application is initialized and @Setup functions are executed. process.emit('beforeExit', Number(code)

    You can use the @Shutdown hook to add a function that will be executed right before the application is shutdown.

    You can use the @Order hook to set the execution order of a hook. The default order is 0, negative orders are executed before positive ones in the same phase.

    @Shutdown
    myShutdownFunction() {
    // do something
    }

    If you want to use Springboot like annotations you can use the following aliases:

    • @PostConstruct -> @Setup
    • @PreDestroy -> @Shutdown
    • @Component -> @Bean
    • @Service -> @Bean
    • @Controller -> @RouterBean
    • @Mapping -> @Route
    • @Autowired -> @InjectBean

    Pull requests or issues/feature requests are welcome!

    MIT