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Drash
Drash is a microframework for Deno based on HTTP resources and content negotiation.
Drash is designed to help you build your project(s) quickly with the ability to scale. You can build an API, a SaaS, a web app, an SPA (like the documentation pages), or even a static HTML site. You can even just use it as a logging tool for your other project. How you use Drash is up to you, so that it can be everything you need and nothing you donât.
Although this module is working, it is still subject to breaking changes from Deno. For the most part, Drash stays up to date with breaking changes from Deno, but not all breaking changes are fixed immediately.
Install
// Import Drash master
import Drash from "https://deno.land/x/drash/mod.ts";
// Import Drash latest release or specific version
import Drash from "https://deno.land/x/drash@{latest|version}/mod.ts";
An Example HTML Application
Create /path/to/your/project/app.ts
âŚ
import Drash from "https://deno.land/x/drash/mod.ts";
class HomeResource extends Drash.Http.Resource {
static paths = ["/"];
public GET() {
this.response.body = "Hello World!";
return this.response;
}
}
let server = new Drash.Http.Server({
address: "localhost:8000",
response_output: "text/html",
resources: [HomeResource]
});
server.run();
⌠and run /path/to/your/project/app.ts
$ deno /path/to/your/project/app.ts --allow-net --allow-env
Deno server started at localhost:8000. Press CTRL+C to quit.
Features
HTTP Resources
Drash uses HTTP resources. It doesnât use controllers and it doesnât use app.get('/', someHandler())
-like syntax. You create a resource class, define its URIs, and give it HTTP methods (e.g., GET()
, POST()
, PUT()
, DELETE()
, etc.).
Content Negotiation
Drash is based on resources and you canât have true resources unless clients can request different representations of those resources through content negotiation. Drash ships with application/json
, text/html
, application/xml
, and text/xml
handling just to meet the needs of standard APIs and web apps. However, you can add more content types for your Drash server to handle. See Adding More Content Types for further information.
Request Path Params (e.g., /users/:id
)
If you want to build your RESTful/ish API, then go ahead and use your path params. Resources can access their URIâs path params via this.request.path_params.some_param
.
Request URL Query Params (e.g., /users?id=1234
)
Canât have path params and not have request URL query params. Resources can access the requestâs URL query params via this.request.url_query_params.some_param
.
Semantic Method Names
If you want your resource class to allow GET
requests, then give it a GET()
method. If you want your resource class to allow POST
requests, then give it a POST()
method. If you donât want your resource class to allow DELETE
requests, then donât give your resource class a DELETE()
method. Pretty simple ideology and very semantic.