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json-server-docker

Dockerized json-server for building a full fake RESTful API.

version pulls MIT License

Created with <3 for front-end developers who need a quick back-end for prototyping and mocking.

Features

  • πŸ’¨ Up and running quickly - Spin up a RESTful mock API in seconds.
  • βš™οΈ Configurable - Supports every json-server configuration option, with some purposeful exceptions.
  • Typescript support - Use TS for your db, middleware, or any file you mount into the container.
  • πŸ’» Mount in any supporting files you'd like! - For instance, want to use your custom data fixtures, utils, etc. in your db/middleware? Mount them in, import & prosper.
  • πŸ“¦ Useful dependencies are pre-installed in the image for your convenience. Use lodash, @faker-js/faker & jwt-decode in any of the files powering your mock api.
  • 🧳 Install your own dependencies - Use the DEPENDENCIES envvar to pass a list of additional npm dependencies to use in your server files.
  • πŸ”‚ Hot reloading the server on any changes.

Getting Started

Latest Version: codfish/json-server:0.17.3

Note: It's recommended to specify the tag of the image you want rather than using the latest image, which might break. Image tags are based off of the release versions for json-server. However there is not an image for every version. See the available versions here.

By default, the image runs an instance of json-server with some dummy data for show. Spin up the example mock api in seconds.

docker run -p 9999:80 codfish/json-server:0.17.3

Visit http://localhost:9999 to see it in action.

That's all good, but not very useful to you. You're meant to mount in your own db file(s) into the container. Read on for usage...

Usage

This project actually dogfoods itself. View the docker-compose.yml & the examples/ directory to see various usage examples. Also visit the json-server docs for more detailed examples on how to use the tool.

Examples

Docker Compose (Recommended)

version: '3'

services:
  api:
    image: codfish/json-server:0.17.3
    ports:
      - 9999:80
    volumes:
      - ./my-db.js:/app/db.js:delegated
      - ./my-middleware.js:/app/middleware.json:delegated
      - ./my-routes.json:/app/routes.json:delegated

Run docker-compose up api. Visit http://localhost:9999/ to see your API.

Docker cli

docker run -d -p 9999:80 \
  -v ./my-db.js:/app/db.js \
  -v ./my-middleware.js:/app/middleware.json \
  -v ./my-routes.json:/app/routes.json \
  codfish/json-server:0.17.3

Advanced

Set configuration via environment variables.

services:
  json-server:
    image: codfish/json-server:0.17.3
    volumes:
      - ./db.ts:/app/db.ts:delegated
      - ./middleware.ts:/app/middleware.ts:delegated
      - ./routes.json:/app/routes.json:delegated
    environment:
      FKS: Address
      ID: address
      NO_CORS: true
      NO_GZIP: true

See all the available options below.

Important Usage Notes

  • LIMITATION: json-server ONLY supports commonjs! If you try to use any ESM dependency in your db files, it will fail. For our Typescript support, while ESM is supported in your db files, we're compiling to target es5 & commonjs and dependencies are not compiled, so when using 3rd party deps, use versions that export commonjs modules.
  • Your db.{js,ts} & any middleware files need to return a function as their default export.
  • When mounting *.js files, make sure they are using commonjs (modules.exports = ...). That's what json-server is expecting.
  • When mounting *.ts files, use ESModules, but instead of using export default ..., use export = ....
  • All files should be mounted into the /app directory in the container.
  • The following files are special and will "just work" when mounted over.
    • /app/db.{ts,js,json} - The database file.
    • /app/middleware.{ts,js} - Custom middleware file.
    • /app/routes.json - Custom routes file.
    • /public - Static files directory.

Database File

When building your mock api's you'll most like want to generate some fake data and return a number of items for a specific collection. Faker is included in the image to help facilitate doing these sorts of things inside your db or middleware files. For example:

// db.js
const times = require('lodash/times');
const faker = require('@faker-js/faker');

module.exports = (req, res) => {
  return {
    posts: times(100, () => ({
      id: faker.datatype.uuid(),
      title: faker.lorem.words(3),
      body: faker.lorem.paragraphs(3),
    })),
  };
};

Middleware

Example middleware.

// middleware.ts
import { faker } from '@faker-js/faker';

export = (req, res, next) => {
  // If you're making an ajax request and not viewing in the browser, require an Authorization header.
  if (!req.accepts('html') && !req.header('Authorization')) {
    res.status(401).send();
  }

  // Force uuid's for id's for primary keys instead of integers.
  if (req.method === 'POST') {
    req.body.id = faker.string.uuid();
  }

  next();
};

Using Multiple Middleware files

Use the MIDDLEWARES to pass the --middlewares option to json-server.

Important: Notice here the files you're mounting in are using *.ts extentions, but the MIDDLEWARES env var uses js extensions. TS compiling happens before json-server loads the files.

services:
  middlewares:
    image: .
    volumes:
      - ./db.json:/app/db.json
      - ./middleware_a.ts:/app/middleware_a.ts:delegated
      - ./middleware_b.ts:/app/middleware_b.ts:delegated
    ports:
      - 9996:80
    environment:
      VIRTUAL_HOST: middlewares.json-server.docker
      MIDDLEWARES: 'middleware_a.js middleware_b.js'

Typescript Support

Important

  • Instead of using export default ..., use export = ... for any default exports from your ts files.
  • TS is configured to target commonjs es5 modules to work well with json-server.
  • A path alias is configured for your convenience to map to the /app directory where all server files should be mounted.
  • You can technically mount in your tsconfig file (-v ./tsconfig.json:/app/tsconfig.json) with your own configuration file, but beware, json-server needs the resulting compiled files to be commonjs modules.
// db.ts
import { faker } from '@faker-js/faker';

interface Database {
  posts: Array<{
    id: string;
    title: string;
    body: string;
  }>;
}

export = (): Database => ({
  posts: faker.helpers.multiple(
    () => ({
      id: faker.string.uuid(),
      title: faker.lorem.words(3),
      body: faker.lorem.paragraphs(3),
    }),
    { count: 10 },
  ),
});
docker run -d -p 9999:80 -v ./db.ts:/app/db.ts codfish/json-server

Options

json-server cli options: https://github.com/typicode/json-server#cli-usage

We will use the default options that json-server has set unless an override is provided. For certain options like --port and --host we will explicitly set them to work well within a container.

Here's the list of json-server options that are NOT configurable:

  • --host - Always set to 0.0.0.0 within the container.
  • --port - Always set to 80 within the container but you're still in full control of what port you want the api to run on on your machine by mapping any port to port 80 on the container (i.e. docker run -p 9999:80 ...).
  • --routes - The /app/routes.json will always be the path to the routes file used in the container, but you're free to mount any json file from your machine over it.

However you still have the ability to override almost every option yourself as well. All options should be passed in as environment variables. They are named exactly like json-server's but upper snake-case (i.e. --no-cors -> NO_CORS).

⋆ = Custom option. Not an official json-server option.

Option Description Default
MIDDLEWARES Path to middleware file middleware.js (Stored in image, optionally mount over it or provide your own)
CONFIG Path to config file Defers to json-server default
SNAPSHOTS Set snapshots directory Defers to json-server default
ID Set database id property (e.g. address) Defers to json-server default
FKS Set foreign key suffix, (e.g. _id as in user_id) Defers to json-server default
DELAY Add delay to responses (ms) β€”
STATIC Set static files directory Defers to json-server default
QUIET Suppress log messages from output Boolean flag only true if set to "true"
NO_GZIP Disable GZIP Content-Encoding Boolean flag only true if set to "true"
NO_CORS Disable Cross-Origin Resource Sharing Boolean flag only true if set to "true"
READ_ONLY Allow only GET requests Boolean flag only true if set to "true"
⋆ DEPENDENCIES Install extra npm dependencies in the container for you to use in your server files. β€”

For details on the options view json-server's documentation.

Maintaining/Contributing

This project actually dogfoods itself. To test it directly you can run:

git clone [email protected]:codfish/json-server-docker.git
cd json-server-docker
docker-compose up -d

To update:

  • Bump version of json-server in Dockerfile
  • Bump node dependencies
  • Test it out
docker-compose up -d --build

Visit http://localhost:9999. Update db.js, routes.json, or middleware.ts to test out functionality. Changes should propagate automatically, just refresh the page.

Releasing

New version:

git tag -f -m '0.17.3' 0.17.3
git push origin 0.17.3

Updating old version

We keep our versions in sync with json-server. This scenario would happen if there's a bug fix or feature change with our implementation but the json-server version doesn't change.

git tag -fa 0.16.1 -m "Update 0.16.1 tag" && git push origin 0.16.1 --force

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Docker image to easily integrate json-server mock api's into your app.

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