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nodezoo-npm

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This is a repository in the microservice demonstration system for the Tao of Microservices book (chapter 9). This code is live at nodezoo.com. To get started, visit the nodezoo/tao repository.

This microservice provides the npm module data functionality.

Running

To run this microservice normally, use the tooling describing in the nodezoo/tao repository, which shows you how to run the entire system of microservices (of which this is only one of many) in production (Kubernetes), staging (Docker), and development (fuge) modes.

To run from the terminal for testing and debugging, see the Running from the terminal section below.

Message flows

The table shows how this microservice acts on the Accepted message patterns and performs appropriate business Actions, as a result of which, new messages are possibly Sent.

Accepted Actions Sent
role:npm,cmd:get (SC) Get npm data about a module
role:info,need:part (AO) Provide partial module information role:info,collect:part (AO)

(KEY: A: asynchronous, S: synchronous, O: observed, C: consumed)

Service interactions

npm

Testing

Unit tests are in the test folder. To run, use:

$ npm test

Note that this is a learning system, and the tests are not intended to be high coverage.

Running from the terminal

This microservice is written in node.js, which you will need to download and install. Fork and checkout this repository, and then run npm inside the repository folder to install its dependencies:

$ npm install

To run this microservice separately, for development, debug, or testing purposes, use the service scripts in the srv folder:

  • npm-dev.js : run the development configuration with hard-coded network ports.

    $ node srv/npm-dev.js

    This script listens for messages on port 9040 and provides a REPL on port 10040 (try $ telnet localhost 10040).

    A seneca-mesh version, for testing purposes, is also shown in the script npm-dev-mesh.js. For more on this, see the nodezoo-repl repository.

  • npm-stage.js : run the staging configuration. This configuration is intended to run in a Docker container so listens on port 9000 by default, but you can change that by providing an optional argument to the script.

    $ node srv/npm-stage.js [PORT]
  • npm-prod.js : run the production configuration. This configuration is intended to run under Kubernetes in a seneca-mesh network. If running in a terminal (only do this for testing), you'll need to provide the mesh base nodes in the BASES environment variable.

    $ BASES=x.x.x.x:port node srv/npm-prod.js