Boilerplates can be a huge time sink to maintain and I've decieded to archive this project.
I started the work for upgrading to hapi v17 and using async/await instead of
callbacks, that work can be found in the hapi-17-async-await
branch.
Thanks for your interest in my projects.
A website and user system starter.
- Universal front-end website
- Basic web pages ready to customize
- Contact page with form to email
- Account sign-up page
- Login pages including forgot and reset password
- My account area
- Stub dashboard ready to customize
- Settings screen to update contact info and login credentials
- Admin back office
- Stub dashboard ready to customize
- Manage accounts, admins, groups and users
- Use groups (like departments) for shared permissions
- Granular permissions override group permissions
url | username | password |
---|---|---|
https://getaqua.herokuapp.com/ | root | root |
Server side, Aqua is built with the hapi framework. We're using MongoDB as a data store.
The front-end is built with React. We use Redux as our state container. Client side routing is done with React Router. We're using Gulp for the build system.
We use bcrypt
for hashing
secrets. If you have issues during installation related to bcrypt
then refer
to this wiki
page.
If you don't use React and/or would rather bring your own front-end, checkout Frame. It's just the HTTP API parts of Aqua.
$ git clone [email protected]:jedireza/aqua.git
$ cd aqua
$ npm install
Simply edit config.js
. The configuration uses
confidence
which makes it easy to
manage configuration settings across environments. Don't store secrets in
this file or commit them to your repository.
Instead, access secrets via environment variables. We use
dotenv
to help make setting local
environment variables easy (not to be used in production).
Simply copy .env-sample
to .env
and edit as needed. Don't commit .env
to your repository.
WARNING: This will clear all data in the following MongoDB collections if
they exist: accounts
, adminGroups
, admins
, authAttempts
, sessions
,
statuses
, and users
.
$ npm run first-time-setup
# > [email protected] first-time-setup /home/jedireza/projects/aqua
# > node first-time-setup.js
# MongoDB URL: (mongodb://localhost:27017/aqua)
# Root user email: [email protected]
# Root user password:
# Setup complete.
$ npm start
# > [email protected] start /Users/jedireza/projects/aqua
# > gulp react && gulp
# [23:41:44] Using gulpfile ~/projects/aqua/gulpfile.js
# ...
Now you should be able to point your browser to http://127.0.0.1:8000/ and see the welcome page.
nodemon
watches for changes in server code
and restarts the app automatically. gulp
and
webpack
watch the front-end files and
re-build those automatically too.
We also pass the --inspect
flag to Node so you have a debugger available.
Watch the output of $ npm start
and look for the debugging URL and open it in
Chrome. It looks something like this:
chrome-devtools://devtools/remote/serve_file/@62cd277117e6f8ec53e31b1be58290a6f7ab42ef/inspector.html?experiments=true&v8only=true&ws=localhost:9229/node
$ node server.js
Unlike $ npm start
this doesn't watch for file changes. Also be sure to set
these environment variables in your production environment:
NODE_ENV=production
- This is important for many different optimizations, both server-side and with the front-end build files.NPM_CONFIG_PRODUCTION=false
- This tells$ npm install
to not skip installingdevDependencies
, which we need to build the front-end files.
Any issues or questions (no matter how basic), open an issue. Please take the initiative to read relevant documentation and be proactive with debugging.
- There are some guides in the wiki
- Read through previously asked questions
Contributions are welcome. If you're changing something non-trivial, you may want to submit an issue before creating a large pull request.
Lab is part of the hapi ecosystem and what we use to write all of our tests.
$ npm test
# > [email protected] test /Users/jedireza/projects/aqua
# > lab -t 100 -S -T ./test/lab/transform -L --lint-options '{"extensions":[".js",".jsx"]}' ./test/lab/client-before.js ./test/client/ ./test/lab/client-after.js ./test/server/ ./test/lab/server-after.js ./test/misc/
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# ...............
# 865 tests complete
# Test duration: 6382 ms
# No global variable leaks detected
# Coverage: 100.00%
# Linting results: No issues
If you'd like to run a specific test or subset of tests you can use the
test-client
and test-server
scripts included in the package.json
file.
You specificy the path(s) via the TEST_TARGET
environment variable like:
$ TEST_TARGET=test/server/web/main.js npm run test-server
# or
$ TEST_TARGET=test/client/actions/api.js npm run test-client
MIT
What you build with Aqua is more important than Aqua.