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shortstop

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Sometimes JSON just isn't enough for configuration needs. Occasionally it would be nice to use arbitrary types as values, but JSON is necessarily a subset of all available JS types. shortstop enables the use of protocols and handlers to enable identification and special handling of json values.

var fs = require('fs');
var shortstop = require('shortstop');

function buffer(value) {
    return new Buffer(value);
}


var resolver, json;
resolver = shortstop.create();
resolver.use('buffer', buffer);
resolver.use('file', fs.readFile);

json = {
    "secret": "buffer:SGVsbG8sIHdvcmxkIQ==",
    "ssl": {
        "pfx": "file:foo/bar",
        "key": "file:foo/baz.key",
    }
};

resolver.resolve(json, function (err, data) {
    console.log(data);
    // {
    //     "secret": <Buffer ... >,
    //     "ssl" {
    //         "pfx": <Buffer ... >,
    //         "key": <Buffer ... >
    //     }
    // }
});

API

shortstop.create([parent]);

  • parent (Object, optional) - An optional shortstop resolver. Returns a resolver instance.

resolver.use(protocol, handler);

  • protocol (String) - The protocol used to identify a property to be processed, e.g. "file"
  • handler (Function) - The implementation of the given protocol with signature function (value, [callback])

This method returns a function when invoked will remove the handler from the stack for this protocol.

resolver.resolve(data, callback);

  • data (Object) - The object, containing protocols in values, to be processed.
  • callback (Function) - The callback invoked when the processing is complete with signature function (err, result).

resolver.resolveFile(path, callback);

  • path (String) - The path to a file which is, or exports, JSON or a javascript object.
  • callback (Function) - The callback invoked when the processing is complete with signature function (err, result).

Multiple handlers

Multiple handlers can be registered for a given protocol. They will be executed in the order registered and the output of one handler will be the input of the next handler in the chain.

var fs = require('fs'),
var path = require('path'),
var shortstop = require('shortstop');

function resolve(value) {
    if (path.resolve(value) === value) {
        // Is absolute path already
        return value;
    }
    return path.join(process.cwd(), value);
}


var resolver, json;
resolver = shortstop.create();
resolver.use('path', resolve);
resolver.use('file', resolve);
resolver.use('file', fs.readFile);

json = {
    "key": "file:foo/baz.key",
    "certs": "path:certs/myapp"
};

resolver.resolve(json, function (err, data) {
    console.log(data);
    // {
    //     "key": <Buffer ... >,
    //     "certs": "/path/to/my/certs/myapp"
    // }
});

Removing Handlers

When registered, handlers return an unregister function you can call when you no longer want a handler in the chain.

var path = require('path');
var shortstop = require('shortstop');


function resolve(value) {
    if (path.resolve(value) === value) {
        // Is absolute path already
        return value;
    }
    return path.join(process.cwd(), value);
}

var resolver, unuse, json;
resolver = shortstop.create();
unuse = resolver.use('path', resolve);
json = { "key": "path:foo/baz.key" };

resolver.resolve(json, function (err, data) {
    console.log(data);
    // {
    //     "key": "/path/to/my/foo/baz.key"
    // }

    unuse();

    resolver.resolve(json, function (err, data) {
        console.log(data);
        // {
        //     "key": "path:foo/baz.key"
        // }
    });
});