Decentralized micrologging. A lightweight module to manage mini posts through your node app.
You can use curl to run all the commands below or you can create your own site and use the module as part of your micrologging setup.
Install redis.
> brew install redis
> redis-server
npm install
{
id: 1,
fullName: 'Edna Piranha',
postUrl: 'http://url/to/this/meatspace.com/recent.json',
content: {
created: 1368383147,
updated: 1368383147,
message: 'some message',
urls: [
{
title: 'some url',
url: 'http://some.url.com'
}
]
},
meta: {
location: '37.3882807, -122.0828559',
isPrivate: false,
isShared: false
},
shares: [
'http://some.other.url.com/recent.json'
]
}
var Meatspace = require('meatspace');
var meat = new Meatspace({
fullName: 'Edna Piranha',
username: 'ednapiranha',
postUrl: 'http://meatspace.generalgoods.net/recent.json',
db: 0,
limit: 10,
keyId: ':1'
});
db
is the Redis database you are using.
keyId
is an optional value you can set to assign a key to a particular user id or identifier. If you are not running this for multiple users, skip changing this option (optional).
limit
is the number of records you want returned per page - defaults to 10 (optional).
var message = {
content: {
message: 'some message',
urls: [
{
title: 'some url',
url: 'http://some.url.com'
}
]
},
meta: {
location: '37.3882807, -122.0828559',
isPrivate: false
}
};
meat.create(message, function (err, message) {
if (!err) {
console.log(message);
}
});
meat.get(1, function (err, m) {
if (!err) {
m.content.message = 'new updated message';
meat.update(m, function (err, m) {
if (!err) {
console.log(m)
}
});
}
});
meat.get(1, function (err, message) {
if (!err) {
meat.del(message.id, function (err, status) {
if (status) {
console.log('deleted!')
}
});
}
});
The default limit is set to 10. You can change this by setting meat.limit = 15
as an example.
First argument 0 is the starting point from where you want to get messages.
meat.getAll(0, function (err, messages) {
if (!err) {
console.log(messages);
}
});
The default limit is set to 10. You can change this by setting meat.limit = 15
as an example.
First argument 0 is the starting point from where you want to get messages.
meat.shareRecent(0, function (err, messages) {
if (!err) {
console.log(messages);
}
});
meat.shareOne(1, function (err, message) {
if (!err) {
console.log(message);
}
});
Assumptions: externalMessage is a meatspace message from a separate server.
meat.share(externalMessage, meat.postUrl, function (err, message) {
if (!err) {
console.log(message);
}
});
meat.getSubscriptions(function (err, subscriptoins) {
if (!err) {
console.log(subscriptions);
}
});
meat.subscribe('http://some.other.url/recent.json', function (err, url) {
if (!err) {
console.log(url);
}
});
meat.unsubscribe('http://some.other.url/recent.json', function (err, status) {
if (!err) {
console.log(status);
}
});
meat.getSubscriptionRecent('http://some.other.url/recent.json', function (err, messages) {
if (!err) {
console.log(messages);
}
});
meat.flush();
make test
- Your posts will not be automatically protected from XSS so that is up to you to handle if you decide to use this in a web app. If you want to work from an existing example, feel free to fork generaltoast.
- If you want to back up your messages in a secondary database such as PostgreSQL or MySQL, just add this after a successfull callback in meat.add, meat.del, etc.