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my-loader

v1.0.2

Published

Require modules matching glob while respecting that exported arrays may contain desired object

Downloads

10

Readme

my-loader

Require modules matching glob while respecting that exported arrays may contain desired object

Description

This script loader initializes with a directory (e.g. __dirname)

You must call the configure() method on the resulting instance

The configuration object allows you to create named objects with glob and leaf attributes for use later by the load method.

The glob is used with the directory name to require all the scripts.

The leaf function is passed every module. It is there that you have a chance to return true or false to indicate if this module should be included in the output.

If the leaf function is defined properly, the loader traverses deeply into objects and arrays to produce a normalized array containing all objects matching your criteria. This is what makes this loader useful compared to other loaders that don't allow inspecting and acting on the logical subunits of a given module.

The load method defined on the loader instance takes the configuration key name and returns a promise that resolves with an array of loaded leaves.

Example

Using my-loader to define a folder convention and load objects for a Hapi server:

var Hapi = require('hapi');
var loader = require('./my-loader')(__dirname)

loader.configure({
  auth: {
    glob: 'auth/**/*.js',
    leaf: function(i) { return i.length === 3; }
  },
  routes: {
    glob: 'routes/**/*.js',
    // Note that in my routes I can have route objects and arrays of route objects yet
    // they will still be found since we search for leaves that have `handler` defined.
    leaf: function(i) { return i.handler; }
  },
  plugins: {
    glob: 'plugins/**/*.js',
    leaf: function(i) { return i.register; }
  }
});

var server = new Hapi.Server();

server.connection({ port: 3000 });

loader.load('plugins').then(function(plugins) {
  server.register(plugins), function(err) {
    if (err) throw err;
    loader.load('auth').map(function(strategy) {
      server.auth.strategy.apply(this, strategy);
    });
    loader.load('routes').then(function(routes) {
      server.route(routes);
    });
  })
})

server.start()