In this tutorial, I'm going to demonstrate how Eicrud can save you tons of time when building your Node.js backend.
We're going to make a simple blogging platform where users can read, publish and comment on articles.
First, let's set up our app by following Eicrud's documentation.
We create a new NestJS application.
npm i -g @nestjs/cli
nest new myblog
cd myblog
Then install Eicrud on top of it.
npm i -g @eicrud/cli
eicrud setup mongo myblog
Finally, we generate a secret key and store it in a .env
file at the root of our project.
echo "JWT_SECRET=$(node -e "console.log(require('crypto').randomBytes(256).toString('base64'));")" > .env
Now we already have a well-structured project! You can check that everything is working.
npm run start
The CLI already generated a User
service for us in src\services\user
. All we need to add to our application is an Article
service and a Comment
service.
eicrud generate service Article
eicrud generate service Comment
Let's edit our entities to our liking.
Update the file src\services\article\article.entity.ts
with the following.
import { Entity, PrimaryKey, Property,
ManyToOne } from "@mikro-orm/core";
import { IsString, IsOptional } from "class-validator";
import { CrudEntity } from "@eicrud/core/crud";
import { User } from "../user/user.entity";
import { $MaxSize } from "@eicrud/core/validation";
@Entity()
export class Article implements CrudEntity {
@PrimaryKey({ name: '_id' })
@IsString()
@IsOptional()
id: string;
@ManyToOne(() => User)
@IsString()
author: User | string;
@Property()
@IsString()
title: string;
@Property()
@IsString()
@$MaxSize(1000)
content: string;
@Property()
createdAt: Date;
@Property()
updatedAt: Date;
}
And don't forget our Comment
entity in src\services\comment\comment.entity.ts
.
import { Entity, PrimaryKey, Property, ManyToOne } from "@mikro-orm/core";
import { IsString, IsOptional } from "class-validator";
import { CrudEntity } from "@eicrud/core/crud";
import { Article } from "../article/article.entity";
import { User } from "../user/user.entity";
import { $MaxSize } from "@eicrud/core/validation";
@Entity()
export class Comment implements CrudEntity {
@PrimaryKey({ name: '_id' })
@IsString()
@IsOptional()
id: string;
@ManyToOne(() => Article)
@IsString()
article: Article | string;
@ManyToOne(() => User)
@IsString()
author: User | string;
@Property()
@IsString()
@$MaxSize(200)
content: string;
@Property()
createdAt: Date;
@Property()
updatedAt: Date;
}
Now that we have our model, let's update the access rules in src\services\article\article.security.ts
. We want everyone to read our articles, but only their author should be able to modify them.
guest: {
async defineCRUDAbility(can, cannot, ctx) {
// guests can read all articles
can('read', article)
}
},
user: {
async defineCRUDAbility(can, cannot, ctx) {
// user can manage their own articles
can('crud', article, { author: ctx.userId })
}
}
It's the same idea for comments, except this time we don't want users to modify their comments after creation. Let's change the rules in src\services\comment\comment.security.ts
.
guest: {
async defineCRUDAbility(can, cannot, ctx) {
// guests can read all comments
can('read', comment)
}
},
user: {
async defineCRUDAbility(can, cannot, ctx) {
// user create and delete their own comments
can('cd', comment, {author: ctx.userId})
}
}
Eicrud has prebuilt commands for account creation and login. We just need to allow their usage in src\services\user\cmds\create_account\create_account.security.ts
.
guest: {
async defineCMDAbility(can, cannot, ctx) {
// can create an account with the role 'user'
can(create_account, user, {role: 'user'})
}
}
And in src\services\user\cmds\login\login.security.ts
.
guest: {
async defineCMDAbility(can, cannot, ctx) {
// Define abilities for user
can(login, user)
}
}
Now our backend is ready for action! Let's start the server and switch to another terminal.
npm run start
To simulate our frontend we're going to use ts-node, but you can use your favorite framework or tools like esbuild if you prefer.
npm i -g ts-node # make sur to install it globally
Let's install Eicrud's client.
npm i @eicrud/client
Create a file front.ts
and start with a helper class to make Eicrud's client dynamic.
import { ClientConfig, CrudClient } from "@eicrud/client";
export class DynamicClient {
crudClient: CrudClient<any>;
constructor() {
const initalConfig: ClientConfig = {
url: 'http://localhost:3000',
serviceName: 'user',
}
this.crudClient = new CrudClient(initalConfig);
}
get(serviceName){
this.crudClient.config.serviceName = serviceName;
return this.crudClient;
}
}
Now we can create our first account and publish an article.
// ... following in front.ts
import { ICreateAccountDto } from '@eicrud/shared/interfaces';
import { ILoginDto } from '@eicrud/shared/interfaces';
import { Article } from "./src/services/article/article.entity";
async function main() {
const client = new DynamicClient();
// Create account and publish article
const dto: ICreateAccountDto = {
email: '[email protected]',
password: 'p4ssw0rd',
role: 'user',
};
const { userId } = await client.get('user').cmdS('create_account', dto);
console.log('User created!', userId);
const loginDto: ILoginDto = {
email: '[email protected]',
password: 'p4ssw0rd',
};
await client.get('user').login(loginDto);
const newArticle: Partial<Article> = {
title: 'New article',
content: 'This is a new article',
author: userId,
};
await client.get('article').create(newArticle);
// Let's check that our article was created
const userArticles = await client.get('article').find({ author: userId });
console.log('User articles:', userArticles);
}
main();
And let's run our frontend to test our API.
ts-node front.ts
That's all for the basics!
Take note of all the CRUD operations available to the client. You can use any of them to query the 'article'
or 'comment'
service.
Eicrud is in active development and has many features to make your life easier. You can learn all about it in the documentation. If you find any issue don't hesitate to create one and I'll look into it.
Happy coding!
Original article: https://dev.to/acrosett/build-your-crud-backend-in-20min-with-eicrud-mongodb-4n3p