The ultimate boilerplate to build REST APIs, Monolithic Modular and Microservice applications with Typescript.
Applications built with this boilerplate aims to run Anywhere, Anytime, Anyhow. Dedicated servers, virtual machines, containers, EC2, ECS or lambdas, with Express, Fastify, Hyper-Express and serverless.
| Security scan status | Tests in Main | Tests in Dev | Coverage in Main | Coverage in Dev |
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Overall Code Coverage
See it running as a Fastify application at:
It is built over a simplistic interpretation of Hexagonal Architecture, the Domain Driven Design and Event Driven Architecture philosophies.
It aims to be as much agnostic as possible, avoiding to add any frameworks or libraries to the stack.
It can be used as boilerplate to create modular monolithor microservice applications.
It implements incoming data validation, in the infrastructure level, through custom logic and based in the Open API specification.
It implements Basic and Bearer HTTP auth mechanism with a custom role system. Replaceable with other auth mechanisms. Tied to the API OAS spec.
It implements a HTTP web server port actually implementing adapters for aws Lambda, Express.js, Fastify, Restify and Hyper-Express.
It implements an agnostic data repository port that actually writes/reads data from a In Memory database adapter. It is easily replaceable with Mongoose, Sequelize, etc.
Diagram illustrating the components:
https://miro.com/app/board/uXjVNq5nWJY=/?share_link_id=603404471489
The API OASdoc might be visualized at: http://localhost:3000/OASdoc/
Note: Remember to start the application before trying to reach it through the browser.
Request Handler - Controller - Domain Service - Domain Use Case - Data Repository - Data Adapter
Request Handler <- Controller <- Domain Service <- Domain Use Case <- Data Repository <- Data Adapter
It is the entry point in a HTTP request made to the service.
It is a infrastructure's component.
It composes a Domain Event using it income parameters such as body and headers. The domain event is passed to the Controller by calling an associated method.
It may offers adapters for different outside service interfaces:
- HTTP - Lambdas (AWS, Azure, Google)
- HTTP - Express
- HTTP - Fastify
- HTTP - Hyper-Express
- HTTP - etc
- Events/SQS
- Events/SNS
- Events/etc
Controllers are responsible to forward the incoming Domain Events to their specific corelated method in the Domain Service.
It is a infrastructure's component.
It performs input data validation and access permission validation against the incoming Domain Events using an associated OAS specification
It is the entry point for the application core (domains).
It is a domain's component.
May works as aggregation root / bounded contexts talking directly to injected domain services (aka domains and subdomains).
It should be the unique option working as communication interface between infrastructure and domain components.
It has a databaseClient adapter and a mutexService adapter injected on it instance.
It may lock resources to avoid race conditions by using the injected mutexService.
It knows it internal domain use cases.
It doesn't knows external domain use cases.
The Use Cases, as the meaning of the words, are the use cases implemented in the Product.
They represents the features delivered to the customers.
It is a domain's component. They known and are consumed by the Domain Service component only.
They are the point entry for all Data Repository calls. They handle Data Models rather than raw objects.
They have an associated Data Repository that is injected into it scope when calling Use Case clojure.
The Data Repository layer implements, in a agnostic manner, all actions related to the data persistency.
It does not talk directly to a database. I has a port to adapt different Database Clients.
It is a domain's component. They are consumed by Use Case component only.
The Data adapter is a kind of database client implementation that respect the Data Repository port.
It may implement database access through native drivers or ORMs and ODMs.
It is a domain's component.
- Node.js (^20 preferred) and pnpm
- Typescript
- Jest
- Redis - used to implement mutex (included as Docker image)
- OpenAPI official typings
- yaml - yaml parser
- Install the project
pnpm install- Run Redis (if you don't have already)
pnpm run docker:composeredisRun the entire test suite
pnpm testRun unit tests
pnpm run test:unitRun integration tests
pnpm run test:integrationRun integration tests - Express
pnpm run test:integration:expressRun integration tests - Fastify
pnpm run test:integration:fastifyRun integration tests - Restify
pnpm run test:integration:restifyRun integration tests - aws lambda
pnpm run test:integration:lambdaRun with Express
pnpm run dev:fastifyRun with Fastify
pnpm run dev:fastify- Reach the URL http://localhost:3000/OASdoc/ and click in the
Version 1.0.0. It will open the API documentation. - Reach http://localhost:3000/docs/1.0.0 to see the JSON version of the API documentation.
pnpm run dev:serverless- Create a new branch.
Run the app in TDD mode - live reload of tests
pnpm run tdd-
Make your changes.
-
Commit it
commit
It will run lint and test before asking info about the commit
pnpm run commit- Ask for PR
lint code
pnpm run lintlint && fix code
pnpm run lint:fixbcryptjs - ^2.4.3
jsonwebtoken - ^9.0.2
openapi-types - ^12.1.3
reflect-metadata - ^0.2.2
uuid - ^9.0.1
xss - ^1.0.15
yaml - ^2.3.4
express - ^4.18.2
body-parser - ^1.20.2
cors - ^2.8.5
helmet - ^7.1.0
fastify - ^4.26.2
@fastify/cors - ^9.0.1
@fastify/formbody - ^7.4.0
@fastify/helmet - ^11.1.1
@fastify/static - ^7.0.1
restify - ^11.1.0 bunyan - ^1.8.15
hyper-express - ^6.14.12
live-directory - ^3.0.3
aws-lambda - ^1.0.7
serverless - ^4.2.4
redis - ^4.6.13

