README
contextualize
A simple tool for lazily bootstrapping any nodejs app into each application context.
Basic Usage
contextualize creates an http server for you and provides a mechanism for defining the context for each request, and a mechanism for bootstrapping an application for each unique context.
var contextualize = require('contextualize');
contextualize()
.context(function(request, done) {
// Set the context for this request
done(null, { foo:'bar' });
})
.bootstrap(function(context, done) {
// Bootstrap an application for a context
done(null, function(req, res) {
res.end('Hello World');
});
})
.listen(80);
Practical Use
Here is an example of how you might switch contexts based on environment and locale code in the host name:
contextualize()
.context(function(request, done) {
// Extract the environment and locale code from the host name (e.g. prod.en-US.foobar.com)
var m = request.host.match(/^(\w+)\.([a-z]{2}-[A-Z]{2})\./);
// Return the context
done(null, {
environment: m[1],
locale: m[2]
});
})
.bootstrap(function(context, done) {
// Bootstrap an application for each unique context
done(null, new Application(context));
})
.listen(80);
Preloading Contexts at Startup
By default the first request in a context will take the hit of bootstrapping the application for that context. If you want to
preload known contexts to avoid that latency on the first request then you can use the preload
method:
contextualize()
.context(getContext)
.bootstrap(bootstrapApp)
.preload([{
locale: 'en-US',
environment: 'prod'
}, {
locale: 'pt-BR',
environment: 'prod'
}])
.listen(80);
Pre-Context Switch Middleware
You may want to apply some middleware (e.g. static file serving, cookie parsing, body parsing, user authentication, etc.) prior to setting the context for a request.
contextualize()
// Attach middleware here
.use(staticMiddleware('./public', './static'))
.use(authMiddleware())
.context(function(request, done) {
// Use result of authentication middleware in the context
done(null, {
authorized: request.authorized,
});
})
.bootstrap(function(context, done) {
// Bootstrap seperate apps for logged in or not logged in users
done(null, context.authorized ? new PublicApplication() : new PrivateApplication());
})
.listen(80);
Applications
Applications returned by your bootstrap function are either a Function
or an Object
with a handleRequest
method.
contextualizer()
.context(getContext)
.bootstrap(function(context, done) {
done(null, function(req, res) {
res.end('Hello World');
});
});
.listen(80);
or:
contextualizer()
.context(getContext)
.bootstrap(function(context, done) {
done(null, {
handleRequest: function(req, res) {
res.end('Hello World');
}
});
})
.listen(80);
Note that express and connect applications are already functions with this interface so this will work as well:
contextualizer()
.context(getContext)
.bootstrap(function(context, done) {
var app = require('express')();
app.get('/sup', function(req, res){
res.send(200, 'Hello World');
});
done(null, app);
})
.listen(80);