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Node JS Cheatsheet

Synopsis

Node.js is an open-source, cross-platform, back-end JavaScript runtime environment that runs on a JavaScript Engine and executes JavaScript code outside a web browser, which was designed to build scalable network applications.

Running Node JS

For running Node JS:

Command Description
node Run the Node REPL in your terminal
node —version Print your current Node version
node filename.js Execute the Node code in filename.js

💡 REPL stands for Read Eval Print Loop. This is the list of steps that happen when you run the node command and then type some code.


Node JS Global Object

In Node, we have a global object that we can always access. Features that we expect to be available everywhere live in this global object. For example, to have some code execute after 5 seconds we can use either global.setTimeout or just setTimeout. The global keyword is optional.

setTimeout(() => {
  console.log("hello");
}, 5000);

The most famous global is global.console.log which we write as just console.log.

Node JS Module System

In Node.js, each file is treated as a separate module. Modules provide us a way of re-using existing code

The Required Function
We can re-use existing code by using the Node built-in require() function. This function imports code from another module.

const fs = require("fs");
fs.readFileSync("hello.txt");

// OR...

const { readFileSync } = require("fs");
readFileSync("hello.txt");

Built-in Modules
Some modules like fs are built in to Node. These modules contain Node-specific features.

Key built-in modules include:

  • fs -- read and write files on your file system
  • path -- combine paths regardless of which OS you're using
  • process -- information about the currently running process, e.g. process.argv for arguments passed in or process.env for environment variables
  • http -- make requests and create HTTP servers
  • https -- work with secure HTTP servers using SSL/TLS
  • events -- work with the EventEmitter
  • crypto -- cryptography tools like encryption and hashing

Creating Modules
We can create our own modules by exporting a function from a file and importing it in another module.

// In src/fileModule.js
function read(filename) {}
function write(filename, data) {}

module.exports = {
  read,
  write,
};

// In src/sayHello.js
const { write } = require("./fileModule.js");
write("hello.txt", "Hello world!");

Some Node modules may instead use the shorthand syntax to export functions.

// In src/fileModule.js
exports.read = function read(filename) {};
exports.write = function write(filename, data) {};

ECMAScript Modules
The imports above use a syntax known as CommonJS (CJS) modules. Node treats JavaScript code as CommonJS modules by default. More recently, you may have seen the ECMAScript module (ESM) syntax. This is the syntax that is used by TypeScript.

// In src/fileModule.mjs
function read(filename) {}
function write(filename, data) {}

export { read, write };

// In src/sayHello.mjs
import { write } from "./response.mjs";
write("hello.txt", "Hello world!");

We tell Node to treat JavaScript code as an ECMAScript module by using the .mjs file extension. Pick one approach and use it consistently throughout your Node project.

Node JS Package Manager

Node developers often publicly share packages, that other developers can use to help solve common problems. A package is a collection of Node modules along with a package.json file describing the package.

To work with Node packages we use NPM. NPM includes two things:

  1. The NPM registry with a massive collection of Node packages for us to use.
  2. The NPM tool that you installed when you installed Node.

NPM COMMANDS

Command Description
npm start Execute the current Node package defined by package.json
Defaults to executing node server.js
npm init Initialize a fresh package.json file
npm init -y Initialize a fresh package.json file, accepting all default options.
Equivalent to npm init —yes
npm install Equivalent to npm i
npm install Install a package from the NPM registry at www.npmjs.com
Equivalent to npm i
npm install -D Install a package as a development dependency
Equivalent to npm install —save-dev
npm install -g Install a package globally.
npm update Update an already installed package
Equivalent to npm up
npm uninstall Uninstall a package from your node_modules/ folder
Equivalent to npm un
npm outdated Check for outdated package dependencies
npm audit Check for security vulnerabilities in package dependencies
npm audit fix Try to fix any security vulnerabilities by automatically updating vulnerable packages

package.json
Most Node applications we create include a package.json file, which means our Node applications are also Node packages. The package.json file contains:

  1. Name, version, description, license of the current package.
  2. Scripts to automate tasks like starting, testing, and installing the current package.
  3. Lists of dependencies that are required to be installed by the current package.

node_modules
This folder lives next to your package.json file.
When you run npm install the packages listed as dependencies in your package.json are downloaded from the NPM registry and put in the node_modules folder.
It contains not just your direct dependencies, but also the dependencies of those dependencies. The entire dependency tree lives in node_modules.

package-lock.json
The package-lock.json file is automatically created by NPM to track the exact versions of packages that are installed in your node_modules folder. Share your package-lock.json with other developers on your team to ensure that everyone is running the exact same versions of every package in the dependency tree.

Node JS Event Emitter

Node JS provides a built-in module to work with events.

const EventEmitter = require("events");
const celebrity = new EventEmitter();

celebrity.on("success", () => {
  console.log("Congratulations! You are the best!");
});

celebrity.emit("success"); // logs success message
celebrity.emit("success"); // logs success message again
celebrity.emit("failure"); // logs nothing

Many features of Node are modelled with the EventEmitter class. Some examples include the currently running Node process, a running HTTP server, and web sockets. They all emit events that can then be listened for using a listener function like on().

For example, we can listen for the exit event on the current running process. In this case, the event has a code associated with it to be more specific about how the process is exiting.

const process = require("process");

process.on("exit", (code) => {
  console.log(`About to exit with code: ${code}`);
});

Backends with Node JS

Client-server architecture
Your frontend is usually the client. Your backend is usually the server.
In a client-server architecture, clients get access to data (or "resources") from the server. The client can then display and interact with this data.
The client and server communicate with each other using the HTTP protocol.

API
Short for Application Programming Interface.
This is the set of functions or operations that your backend server supports. The frontend interacts with the backend by using only these operations.
On the web, backend APIs are commonly defined by a list of URLs, corresponding HTTP methods, and any queries and parameters.

CRUD
Short for Create Read Update and Delete.
These are the basic operations that every API supports on collections of data. Your API will usually save (or "persist") these collections of data in a database.

RESTful
RESTful APIs are those that follow certain constraints. These include:

  • Client-server architecture. Clients get access to resources from the server using the HTTP protocol.

  • Stateless communication. Each request contains all the information required by the server to handle that request. Every request is separate from every other request.

  • Cacheable. The stateless communication makes caching easier.

    In RESTful APIs each of our CRUD operations corresponds to an HTTP method.

    CRUD Operation HTTP Method Example
    Create POST POST /cards (save a new card to the cards collection)
    Read GET GET /cards (get the whole cards collection) or GET /cards/:cardId (get an individual card)
    Update PUT (or more rarely PATCH) PUT /cards/:cardId (update an individual card)
    Delete DELETE DELETE /cards/:cardId (delete an individual card) or more rarely DELETE /cards (delete the entire collection of cards)

    EXPRESS.JS

    GET Routes

    // Get a whole collection of JSON objects
    app.get("/cards", (req, res) => {
      return res.json(cards);
    });
    
    // Get a specific item in a collection by ID
    app.get("/cards/:cardId", (req, res) => {
      const cardId = req.params.cardId;
      return res.json(cards[cardId]);
    });

    POST Routes

    app.post("/cards", (req, res) => {
      // Get body from the request
      const card = req.body;
    
      // Validate the body
      if (!card.value || !card.suit) {
        return res.status(400).json({
          error: "Missing required card property",
        });
      }
    
      // Update your collection
      cards.push(card);
    
      // Send saved object in the response to verify
      return res.json(card);
    });

    Routers

    // In src/cards.router.js
    const cardsRouter = express.Router();
    
    cardsRouter.get("/", (req, res) => {
      return res.json(cards);
    });
    
    cardsRouter.get("/:cardId", (req, res) => {
      const cardId = req.params.cardId;
      return res.json(cards[cardId]);
    });
    
    // In src/api.js
    const cardsRouter = require("./cards.router");
    
    const api = express.Router();
    
    api.use("/cards", cardsRouter);

    Node JS Folder Structure

    One typical folder structure for an API following RESTful architecture and using the Express framework can be found below. Node servers typically follow the Model View Controller pattern. Models live together in one folder. Controllers are grouped together based on which feature or collection they are related to. Views are typically managed by the front end, although some Node servers may serve static HTML or use templating engines like Handlebars.

    node-project/                   # top level project
     node_modules/                  # all installed node packages
     data/                          # static data files, if needed
       database.json
     src/                           # the source code for your server
       models/                      # models following the model-view-controller pattern
         comment.model.js
         post.model.js
       routes/                      # one folder for each collection in your API
         feeds/                     # folder for the user feeds collection
           feed.router.js           # router listing all possible routes for user feeds
           feed.controller.js       # controller with the implementation for each route
         posts/
           post.router.js
           post.controller.js
         api.js                     # top level router connecting all the above routes
       services/                    # any long running services or utilities
         mongo.js                   # e.g. connecting to a MongoDB database
       app.js                       # all Express middleware and routers
       server.js                    # the top level Node HTTP server
     .gitignore
     package-lock.json
     package.json
    

    This is just a reference. In the real world, every project will have differences in the requirements and the ideal project structure.

    CROSS ORIGIN RESOURCE SHARING

    Something all web developers soon come across is Cross Origin Resource Sharing (CORS).

    Browsers follow the Same Origin Policy (SOP), which prevents requests being made across different origins. This is designed to stop malicious servers from stealing information that doesn't belong to them.

    Cross Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) allows us to allow or whitelist other origins that we trust, so that we can make requests to servers that don't belong to us. For example, with CORS set up properly, https://www.mydomain.com could make a POST request to https://www.yourdomain.com.

    In Express we commonly set up CORS using the following middleware package: https://www.npmjs.com/package/cors.

    PM2 Configuration

    PM2 is a tool we use to create and manage Node.js clusters. It allows us to create clusters of processes, to manage those processes in production, and to keep our applications running forever. We can install the PM2 tool globally using npm install -g pm2.

    Command Description
    pm2 list List the status of all processes managed by PM2.
    pm2 start server.js -i 4 Start server.js in cluster mode with 4 processes.
    pm2 start server.js -i 0 Start server.js in cluster mode with the maximum number of processes to take full advantage of your CPU.
    pm2 logs Show logs from all processes.
    pm2 logs —lines 200 Show older logs up to 200 lines long.
    pm2 monit Display a real-time dashboard in your terminal with statistics for all processes.
    pm2 stop 0 Stop running process with ID 0.
    pm2 restart 0 Restart process with ID 0.
    pm2 delete 0 Remove process with ID 0 from PM2's list of managed processes.
    pm2 delete all Remove all processes from PM2's list.
    pm2 reload all Zero downtime reload of all processes managed by PM2. For updating and reloading server code already running in production.