A TypeScript framework to create APIs following the 1.1 Spec of JSONAPI + the Operations proposal spec.
- Operation-driven API: JSONAPI is transport-layer independent, so it can be used for HTTP, WebSockets or any transport protocol of your choice.
- Declarative style for resource definition: Every queryable object in JSONAPI is a resource, a representation of data that may come from any source, be it a database, an external API, etc. Kurier defines these resources in a declarative style.
- CRUD database operations: Baked into Kurier, there is an operation processor which takes care of basic CRUD actions by using Knex. This allows the framework to support any database engine compatible with Knex. Also includes support for filtering fields by using common SQL operators, sorting and pagination.
- Transport layer integrations: The framework supports JSONAPI operations via WebSockets, and it includes middlewares for Koa, Express and Vercel to automatically add HTTP endpoints for each declared resource and processor.
- Relationships and sideloading: Resources can be related with
belongsTo
/hasMany
helpers on their declarations. Kurier provides proper, compliant serialization to connect resources and even serve them all together on a single response. - Error handling: The framework includes some basic error responses to handle cases equivalent to HTTP status codes 401 (Unauthorized), 403 (Forbidden), 404 (Not Found) and 500 (Internal Server Error).
- User/Role presence authorization: By building on top of the decorators syntax, Kurier allows you to inject user detection on specific operations or whole processors. The framework uses JSON Web Tokens as a way of verifying if a user is valid for a given operation.
- Extensibility: Both resources and processors are open classes that you can extend to suit your use case. For example, do you need to serialize an existing, external API into JSONAPI format? Create a
MyExternalApiProcessor
extending fromOperationProcessor
and implement the necessary calls et voilà!.
▶ Click right here to get started with TypeScript, a dockerized database, basic user management support, HTTP logs and more.
Create your project using the GitHub CLI and with one of our starter packs:
# Create a TypeScript + Kurier API.
npx gh repo create my-api-with-kurier -p kurierjs/kurier-starter-pack-typescript
# Create a JavaScript + Kurier API.
npx gh repo create my-api-with-kurier -p kurierjs/kurier-starter-pack-javascript
Note: This example assumes a TypeScript environment with several dependencies preinstalled.
-
Install the package with
npm
oryarn
:$ npm i kurier # or yarn add kurier
-
Create a Resource:
import { Resource } from "kurier"; export default class Author extends Resource { static schema = { attributes: { firstName: String, lastName: String, }, }; }
-
Create an Application and inject it into your server. For example, let's say you've installed Koa in your Node application and want to expose JSONAPI via HTTP:
import { Application, jsonApiKoa, KnexProcessor } from "kurier"; import Koa from "koa"; import Author from "./author"; const app = new Application({ namespace: "api", types: [Author], defaultProcessor: new KnexProcessor(/* your knex DB connection settings */), }); const api = new Koa(); api.use(jsonApiKoa(app)); api.listen(3000);
-
Run the Node app, open a browser and navigate to
http://localhost:3000/api/authors
. You should get an empty response like this:{ "data": [], "included": [] }
-
Add some data to the "authors" table and go back to the previous URL. You'll start seeing your data!
{ "data": [ { "id": 1, "type": "author", "attributes": { "firstName": "John", "lastName": "Katzenbach" } } ], "included": [] }
Extend Kurier's features with these addons:
@kurier/addon-many-to-many
creates intermediate resource types for many-to-many relationships.@kurier/addon-auto-include
alters GET operations to automatically include relationships.@kurier/addon-nextjs-auth0
integrates authorization mechanisms provided bynextjs-auth0
into Kurier.@kurier/addon-transport-layer-context
allows Kurier processors to know the client's IP address and request headers via ApplicationInstance.
We've created a template repository for developers who want to build their own addons. Check it out here!
Jump-start your project with these preconfigured, opinionated starter packs. They all include a dockerized database, HTTP logs, linting and basic user management.
Check out our updated docs at ReadTheDocs. There you will find more info and examples.
We have a little contributors guide now! Take a look at it in here.