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  • License MIT

Opinionated route loader for hapi

Package Exports

  • hapi-router

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (hapi-router) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

hapi-router

Build Status Code Climate Test Coverage Version Downloads

Route loader for hapi.

Install

$ npm install hapi-router

Usage

server.register({
  register: require('hapi-router'),
  options: {
    routes: 'src/**/*Route.js' // uses glob to include files
  }
}, function (err) {
  if (err) throw err;
});

Options

routes

Required
Type: string / array

The glob pattern you would like to include

ignore

Type: string / array

The pattern or an array of patterns to exclude

cwd

Type: string

The current working directory in which to search (defaults to process.cwd())

Specifying Routes

Any files that match your routes glob will be loaded

Example route file:

module.exports = [
  {
    path: '/test1',
    method: 'GET',
    handler: function (request, reply) {
      reply('hello');
    }
  },
  {
    path: '/test2',
    method: 'GET',
    handler: function (request, reply) {
      reply('hello');
    }
  }
]

Glob Primer

Example globs:

'routes/*.js'    // match all js files in the routes directory
'routes/**/*.js' // recursively match all js files in the routes directory
'**/*Route.js'   // match all js files that end with 'Route'

From isaacs:

"Globs" are the patterns you type when you do stuff like ls *.js on the command line, or put build/* in a .gitignore file.

The following characters have special magic meaning when used in a path portion:

  • * Matches 0 or more characters in a single path portion
  • ? Matches 1 character
  • [...] Matches a range of characters, similar to a RegExp range. If the first character of the range is ! or ^ then it matches any character not in the range.
  • !(pattern|pattern|pattern) Matches anything that does not match any of the patterns provided.
  • ?(pattern|pattern|pattern) Matches zero or one occurrence of the patterns provided.
  • +(pattern|pattern|pattern) Matches one or more occurrences of the patterns provided.
  • *(a|b|c) Matches zero or more occurrences of the patterns provided
  • @(pattern|pat*|pat?erN) Matches exactly one of the patterns provided
  • ** If a "globstar" is alone in a path portion, then it matches zero or more directories and subdirectories searching for matches. It does not crawl symlinked directories.