Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
289 lines (254 loc) · 7.25 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

289 lines (254 loc) · 7.25 KB

hal-serializer

Build Status Coverage Status npm

A Node.js framework agnostic library for serializing your data to HAL compliant responses (a specification for building APIs in JSON).

Installation

npm install --save hal-serializer

Documentation

Register

var HALSerializer = require('hal-serializer');
var Serializer = new HALSerializer();
Serializer.register(type, options);

Available options :

  • blacklist (optional): An array of blacklisted attributes. Default = [].
  • whitelist (optional): An array of whitelisted attributes. Default = [].
  • links (optional): An object or a function that describes the links inside data. (If it is an object values can be string or function).
  • topLevelMeta (optional): An object or a function that describes the links inside data. (If it is an object values can be string or function).
  • topLevelLinks (optional): An object or a function that describes the links inside data. (If it is an object values can be string or function).
  • embedded (optional): An object defining some embedded resources
    • embedded: The property in data to use as an embedded resource
      • type: The type to use for serializing the embedded resource (type need to be register)
      • schema (optional): A custom schema for serializing the embedded resource. If no schema define, it use the default one.
      • links (optional): An object or a function that describes the links for the relationship. (If it is an object values can be string or function).
  • convertCase (optional): Case conversion for serializing data. Value can be : kebab-case, snake_case, camelCase

Usage

input data (can be a simple object or an array of objects)

// Data
var data = {
  id: "1",
  title: "HAL Hypertext Application Language",
  body: "The shortest article. Ever.",
  created: "2015-05-22T14:56:29.000Z",
  updated: "2015-05-22T14:56:28.000Z",
  author: {
    id: "1",
    firstName: "Kaley",
    lastName: "Maggio",
    email: "Kaley-Maggio@example.com",
    age: "80",
    gender: "male"
  },
  tags: ["1", "2"],
  photos: ["ed70cf44-9a34-4878-84e6-0c0e4a450cfe", "24ba3666-a593-498c-9f5d-55a4ee08c72e", "f386492d-df61-4573-b4e3-54f6f5d08acf"],
  comments: [{
    _id: "1",
    body: "First !",
    created: "2015-08-14T18:42:16.475Z"
  }, {
    _id: "2",
    body: "I Like !",
    created: "2015-09-14T18:42:12.475Z"
  }, {
    _id: "3",
    body: "Awesome",
    created: "2015-09-15T18:42:12.475Z"
  }]
}

Register your resources types :

var HALSerializer = require('hal-serializer');
var Serializer = new HALSerializer();

// Register 'article' type
Serializer.register('article', {
  blacklist: ['updated'], // An array of blacklisted attributes. Default = []
  links: function(data) { // An object or a function that describes links.
    return {
      self: {
        href: '/articles/' + data.id
      }
    }
  },
  embedded: { // An object defining some embedded resources.
    author: {
      type: 'people', // The type of the embedded resource
      links: function(data) {
        return {
          href: '/peoples/' + data.id
        }
      }
    },
    tags: {
      type: 'tag'
    },
    photos: {
      type: 'photo'
    },
    comments: {
      type: 'comment',
      schema: 'only-body' // A custom schema
    }
  },
  topLevelMeta: function(extraOptions) { // An object or a function that describes top level meta.
    return {
      count: extraOptions.count
    }
  },
  topLevelLinks: { // An object or a function that describes top level links.
    self: {
      href: '/articles'
    }
  }
});

// Register 'people' type
Serializer.register('people', {
  links: {
    self: function(data) {
      return {
        href: '/peoples/' + data.id
      };
    }
  }
});

// Register 'tag' type
Serializer.register('tag', {});

// Register 'photo' type
Serializer.register('photo', {});

// Register 'comment' type with a custom schema
Serializer.register('comment', 'only-body', {
  whitelist: ['body'],
});

Serialize it with the corresponding resource type, data and optional extra options :

// Synchronously (blocking)
Serializer.serialize('article', data, {count: 2});

// Asynchronously (non-blocking)
Serializer.serializeAsync('article', data, {count: 2})
  .then((result) => {
    ...
  });

The output data will be :

{
  "_links": {
    "self": {
      "href": "/articles/1"
    },
    "author": {
      "href": "/peoples/1"
    }
  },
  "count": 2,
  "id": "1",
  "title": "HAL Hypertext Application Language",
  "body": "The shortest article. Ever.",
  "created": "2015-05-22T14:56:29.000Z",
  "_embedded": {
    "author": {
      "_links": {
        "self": {
          "href": "/peoples/1"
        }
      },
      "id": "1",
      "firstName": "Kaley",
      "lastName": "Maggio",
      "email": "Kaley-Maggio@example.com",
      "age": "80",
      "gender": "male"
    },
    "comments": [
      {
        "body": "First !"
      },
      {
        "body": "I Like !"
      },
      {
        "body": "Awesome"
      }
    ]
  }
}

Deserialize

input data (can be an simple object or an array of objects)

var data = {
  _links: {
    self: {
      href: '/articles/1'
    },
    author: {
      href: '/peoples/1'
    }
  },
  id: '1',
  title: 'HAL Hypertext Application Language',
  body: 'The shortest article. Ever.',
  created: '2015-05-22T14:56:29.000Z',
  _embedded: {
    author: {
      _links: {
        self: {
          href: '/peoples/1'
        }
      },
      id: '1',
      firstName: 'Kaley',
      lastName: 'Maggio',
      email: 'Kaley-Maggio@example.com',
      age: '80',
      gender: 'male'
    }
  }
};

Serializer.deserialize('article', data);
{
  "id": "1",
  "title": "HAL Hypertext Application Language",
  "body": "The shortest article. Ever.",
  "created": "2015-05-22T14:56:29.000Z",
  "author": {
    "id": "1",
    "firstName": "Kaley",
    "lastName": "Maggio",
    "email": "Kaley-Maggio@example.com",
    "age": "80",
    "gender": "male"
  }
}

Custom schemas

It is possible to define multiple custom schemas for a resource type :

Serializer.register(type, 'customSchema', options);

If you want to apply this schema on the primary data :

Serializer.serialize('article', data, 'customSchema', {count: 2});

Or if you want to apply this schema on a embedded resource, define this schema on embedded resource options with the key schema :

Example :

embedded: {
  comments: {
    type: 'comment'
    schema: 'customSchema'
  }
}

Requirements

hal-serializer use ECMAScript 2015 (ES6) features supported natively by Node.js 4 and above (ECMAScript 2015 (ES6) | Node.js). Make sure that you have Node.js 4+ or above.

License

MIT