Related
Http-Proxy, like adapter, adds "/store-name" at the last of the proxy target that I specify.
I want to have complete control of the URL ,or atleast I should be able to add suffix to the url.
The file server/proxies/members.js looks like this for me.
var proxyPath = '/members';
module.exports = function(app) {
// For options, see:
// https://github.com/nodejitsu/node-http-proxy
var proxy = require('http-proxy').createProxyServer({});
proxy.on('error', function(err, req) {
console.error(err, req.url);
});
app.use(proxyPath, function(req, res, next){
// include root path in proxied request
req.url = proxyPath + '/' + req.url;
proxy.web(req, res, { target: 'http://localhost:8082/connection/testdb?tablename=' });
});
};
As the final url is this case looks like
"http://localhost:8082/connection/testdb?tablename=/members/"
instead i want
http://localhost:8082/connection/testdb?tablename=storename
P.S.: Is something like "buildURL=url" , possible in http-proxy
I'm unclear on exactly what you're trying to do, but take a look at the prependPath and ignorePath options to proxy.createProxysServer() (https://github.com/nodejitsu/node-http-proxy#options)
Update: Setup a proxyReq handler on the proxy object and you can manipulate the path any way you want. For example:
proxy.on('proxyReq', function(proxyReq, req, res, options) {
proxyReq.path = '/custom/path/here';
});
I'm not trying to provide pagination within the view itself.
My API returns 500 records at a time and if there are more I'd like to automatically load them.
Although my solution right now does make the requests, I don't think it is the best way, but it does work.
App.StructureAdapter = App.ApplicationAdapter.extend({
findHasMany: function(store, record, url) {
// based on the normal `findHasMany` code
var host = Em.get(this, 'host'),
id = Em.get(record, 'id'),
type = record.constructor.typeKey;
if (host && url.charAt(0) === '/' && url.charAt(1) !== '/') {
url = host + url;
}
return this.findWithURL(this.urlPrefix(url, this.buildURL(type, id)), 1);
},
findWithURL: function(url, page) {
var that = this;
var completeUrl = url + "?page=" + page;
var nextPage = page + 1;
return this.ajax(completeUrl, 'GET').then(function(data) {
Em.Logger.log("calling then");
if (data.structures.length > 0){
that.findWithURL(url, nextPage);
}
return data;
});
}
});
My questions are:
Is there a better way to automatically get all of the pages for a given request?
How do I properly make sure the relationships are built. My Structure object has parent/children relationships on it, but only the first page of results is actually being associated correctly.
Update
Here is what my json response looks like:
{
"structures": [
{
"id": 6536,
"name": "Building",
"updated_at": "2013-05-21T07:14:54-06:00",
"person_id": 6535,
"notes": ""
},
... 499 more objects ...
]
}
It works properly, it loads the first group just fine. And I can adjust it in the extract/normalize methods if I need to.
Here is my normalize method as it is right now:
App.StructureSerializer = App.ApplicationSerializer.extend({
normalize: function(type, hash, prop) {
// adds the properly link to get children
hash.links = { "children": "structures" };
// change structure_id to parent_id
hash.parent_id = hash.structure_id;
delete hash.structure_id;
return this._super(type, hash, prop);
},
});
Again, the links makes it automatically know where to look for the has many relationship.
Looking at it closer, though the paginated pages actually do get called, they are not loaded into Ember data at all. So maybe if they did get loaded then the relationships would build properly.
Here's the best idea I have, I dunno how well it'd work and you might need to play around with it a bit.
In your StructureRoute, go ahead and return the model as normal, so:
App.StructureRoute = Ember.Route.extend({
model:function() {
return this.store.find('structure');
}
});
That'll fetch your first 500 objects and begin the route transition.
Then in your StructureController, fetch the other models using query parameters like this:
App.StructureController = Ember.ArrayController.extend({
init:function() {
this.loadNextPage(2);
this._super(); // this may not be necessary still, but the docs call for it
},
loadNextPage: function(page) {
var self = this;
var promise = this.store.find('structure',{page:page});
promise.then(function(structures) {
if(structures.get('length') < 500) {
self.loadNextPage(page + 1);
}
});
}
});
So when the StructureController initiates, it'll call the recursive function loadNextPage. This will keep running until it hits a page contains less then 500 models. Hopefully, that'll be the last page. By providing the second parameter to find, Ember should trigger a request to /structure?page=2. Inversely, you could do all of this in the route, if you don't mind the slow load time.
If at all possible, I would suggest modifying your API to add some pagination meta data to your request. Then you can use that metadata to control when to stop the recursive function. You can see how to handle metadata here.
Finally, I'm not sure if that's a typo in your json, but you may need to override your pluralization.
Anywho, hope that helps and I didn't overly simply the problem!
I really don't like this solution, but this does work. Please post if you have a much cleaner way of doing this.
Step 1: Load the Data into Ember Data
Since the data wasn't being loaded into Ember Data for the other pages I had to manually load it. I did that by adjusting the findWithURL function I created above.
findWithURL: function(url, page) {
var that = this;
var completeUrl = url + "?page=" + page;
var nextPage = page + 1;
var store = EditUserApp.__container__.lookup('store:main');
return this.ajax(completeUrl, 'GET').then(function(data) {
if (data.structures.length > 0){
that.findWithURL(url, nextPage);
}
store.pushPayload('structure', data);
return data;
});
},
I feel like there should be a cleaner way to do this, but it works.
Step 2: Rebuild the relationships
For some reason it didn't seem to be rebuilding the child/parent relationships. To take care of that I had to use the didLoad callback inside of the Structure model.
didLoad: function() {
var parent = this.get('parent');
if (parent) {
var that = this;
parent.get('children').then(function(children) {
children.addObject(that);
});
}
},
Any suggestions for how to improve this solution are welcome. Ideally I feel like there should be a better Ember way to handle this whole scenario.
TL;DR version:
Building a Phonegap app using Backbone, and have a model called Client and a collection called Clients. Using a Tastypie API to communicate with a separate server. When I run fetch(), the URL uses the correct absolute URL (something like http://127.0.0.1:8000/api/v1/client/1/, but when I run Client.destroy(), it uses a relative URL of file:///api/v1/client/1/. How can I make it use the absolute URL for deleting the object?
Long version:
I'm building a mobile app with Backbone.js that consumes a Django/Tastypie API, and I've run into some seemingly odd behaviour that I can't figure out.
I define a base URL for the server at the top of the file:
// Set the base URL for querying the API
baseUrl = 'http://127.0.0.1:8000/api/v1/';
I have the following model and collection:
// Client model
Client = Backbone.Model.extend({
urlRoot: baseUrl + 'client',
// Default values
defaults: {
id: '',
name: '',
mobile: '',
email: '',
notes: '',
operator: '',
date_client_joined: '',
address: '',
postcode: ''
}
});
// Client collection
Clients = Backbone.Collection.extend({
// Will hold Client objects
model: Client,
// Set URL
url: baseUrl + 'client/'
});
And the individual clients are rendered in a list using the following view:
// Client list item view
ClientListItemView = Backbone.View.extend({
tagName: 'li',
events: {
'click .delete': 'deleteclient'
},
render: function () {
// Render the client list item template
var template = _.template($('#client-list-item-template').html());
this.$el.html(template(this.model.toJSON()));
// Return the object
return this;
},
deleteclient: function () {
this.model.destroy();
return false;
}
});
Now, the app actually uses jQuery Mobile and each client has a Delete button next to it with a class of delete, so the deleteclient function is executed each time one of these buttons is clicked. I'm also using backbone-tastypie to iron out the inconsistencies between Backbone and Tastypie.
The deleteclient function is running, but it sends the HTTP DELETE request to a relative URL of file:///api/v1/client/1/ (as this is a Phonegap app, I'm just viewing the files locally). From the documentation setting urlRoot manually seems like the way to go, but doing so didn't seem to solve the issue. Running the fetch() function to populate the collection works absolutely fine, though - it uses the correct absolute URL.
So, my question is how can I override the default behaviour and ensure my HTTP DELETE request is sent to the correct URL?
By looking at your code it should work ok. The Model in backbone already has a url() function defined which should do this:
url: function() {
var base = _.result(this, 'urlRoot') || _.result(this.collection, 'url') || urlError();
if (this.isNew()) return base;
return base + (base.charAt(base.length - 1) === '/' ? '' : '/') + encodeURIComponent(this.id);
},
Can you use the debugger to see if it enters inside this code and what is the result of it? Mainly check the values from the _.result() calls...
Anyway, you can override the url property in your models rather than passing it in every call to destroy():
Client = Backbone.Model.extend({
url: function () { return baseUrl + 'client/' + this.id + '/'; }
// other code...
});
I found a solution, though I'm not entirely happy with it:
deleteclient: function () {
if (confirm('Are you sure you wish to delete this client?')) {
// Destroy the model
this.model.destroy({
url: baseUrl + 'client/' + this.model.get('id') + '/'
});
// Remove the view
this.remove();
}
}
Basically, if I explicitly pass through the URL to destroy(), that does the trick. It's a little annoying that I can't find a more DRY way to do this, so I'm open to any other method of doing the same thing.
UPDATE
Note that this question applies to Ember Data pre-1.0 beta, the mechanism for loading relationships via URL has changed significantly post-1.0 beta!
I asked a much longer question a while back, but since the library has changed since then, I'll ask a much simpler version:
How do you use DS.Adapter.findHasMany? I am building an adapter and I want to be able to load the contents of a relationship on get of the relationship property, and this looks like the way to do it. However, looking at the Ember Data code, I don't see how this function can ever be called (I can explain in comments if needed).
There's not an easy way with my backend to include an array of ids in the property key in the JSON I send--the serializer I'm using doesn't allow me to hook in anywhere good to change that, and it would also be computationally expensive.
Once upon a time, the Ember Data front page showed an example of doing this "lazy loading"...Is this possible, or is this "Handle partially-loaded records" as listed on the Roadmap, and can't yet be done.?
I'm on API revision 11, master branch as of Jan 15.
Update
Okay, the following mostly works. First, I made the following findHasMany method in my adapter, based on the test case's implementation:
findHasMany: function(store, record, relationship, details) {
var type = relationship.type;
var root = this.rootForType(type);
var url = (typeof(details) == 'string' || details instanceof String) ? details : this.buildURL(root);
this.ajax(url, "GET", {
success: function(json) {
var serializer = this.get('serializer');
var pluralRoot = serializer.pluralize(root);
var hashes = json[pluralRoot]; //FIXME: Should call some serializer method to get this?
store.loadMany(type, hashes);
// add ids to record...
var ids = [];
var len = hashes.length;
for(var i = 0; i < len; i++){
ids.push(serializer.extractId(type, hashes[i]));
}
store.loadHasMany(record, relationship.key, ids);
}
});
}
Prerequisite for above is you have to have a well-working extractId method in your serializer, but the built-in one from RESTAdapter will probably do in most cases.
This works, but has one significant problem that I haven't yet really gotten around in any attempt at this lazy-loading approach: if the original record is reloaded from the server, everything goes to pot. The simplest use case that shows this is if you load a single record, then retrieve the hasMany, then later load all the parent records. For example:
var p = App.Post.find(1);
var comments = p.get('comments');
// ...later...
App.Post.find();
In the case of only the code above, what happens is that when Ember Data re-materializes the record it recognizes that there was already a value on the record (posts/1), tries to re-populate it, and follows a different code path which treats the URL string in the JSON hash as an array of single-character IDs. Specifically, it passes the value from the JSON to Ember.EnumerableUtils.map, which understandably enumerates the string's characters as array members.
Therefore, I tried to work around this by "patching" DS.Model.hasManyDidChange, where this occurs, like so:
// Need this function for transplanted hasManyDidChange function...
var map = Ember.EnumerableUtils.map;
DS.Model.reopen({
});
(^ Never mind, this was a really bad idea.)
Update 2
I found I had to do (at least) one more thing to solve the problem mentioned above, when a parent model is re-loaded from the server. The code path where the URL was getting split into single-characters was in DS.Model.reloadHasManys. So, I overrode this method with the following code:
DS.Model.reopen({
reloadHasManys: function() {
var relationships = get(this.constructor, 'relationshipsByName');
this.updateRecordArraysLater();
relationships.forEach(function(name, relationship) {
if (relationship.kind === 'hasMany') {
// BEGIN FIX FOR OPAQUE HASMANY DATA
var cachedValue = this.cacheFor(relationship.key);
var idsOrReferencesOrOpaque = this._data.hasMany[relationship.key] || [];
if(cachedValue && !Ember.isArray(idsOrReferencesOrOpaque)){
var adapter = this.store.adapterForType(relationship.type);
var reloadBehavior = relationship.options.reloadBehavior;
relationship.name = relationship.name || relationship.key; // workaround bug in DS.Model.clearHasMany()?
if (adapter && adapter.findHasMany) {
switch (reloadBehavior) {
case 'ignore':
//FIXME: Should probably replace this._data with references/ids, currently has a string!
break;
case 'force':
case 'reset':
default:
this.clearHasMany(relationship);
cachedValue.set('isLoaded', false);
if (reloadBehavior == 'force' || Ember.meta(this).watching[relationship.key]) {
// reload the data now...
adapter.findHasMany(this.store, this, relationship, idsOrReferencesOrOpaque);
} else {
// force getter code to rerun next time the property is accessed...
delete Ember.meta(this).cache[relationship.key];
}
break;
}
} else if (idsOrReferencesOrOpaque !== undefined) {
Ember.assert("You tried to load many records but you have no adapter (for " + type + ")", adapter);
Ember.assert("You tried to load many records but your adapter does not implement `findHasMany`", adapter.findHasMany);
}
} else {
this.hasManyDidChange(relationship.key);
}
//- this.hasManyDidChange(relationship.key);
// END FIX FOR OPAQUE HASMANY DATA
}
}, this);
}
});
With that addition, using URL-based hasManys is almost usable, with two main remaining problems:
First, inverse belongsTo relationships don't work correctly--you'll have to remove them all. This appears to be a problem with the way RecordArrays are done using ArrayProxies, but it's complicated. When the parent record gets reloaded, both relationships get processed for "removal", so while a loop is iterating over the array, the belongsTo disassociation code removes items from the array at the same time and then the loop freaks out because it tries to access an index that is no longer there. I haven't figured this one out yet, and it's tough.
Second, it's often inefficient--I end up reloading the hasMany from the server too often...but at least maybe I can work around this by sending a few cache headers on the server side.
Anyone trying to use the solutions in this question, I suggest you add the code above to your app, it may get you somewhere finally. But this really needs to get fixed in Ember Data for it to work right, I think.
I'm hoping this gets better supported eventually. On the one hand, the JSONAPI direction they're going explicitly says that this kind of thing is part of the spec. But on the other hand, Ember Data 0.13 (or rev 12?) changed the default serialized format so that if you want to do this, your URL has to be in a JSON property called *_ids... e.g. child_object_ids ... when it's not even IDs you're sending in this case! This seems to suggest that not using an array of IDs is not high on their list of use-cases. Any Ember Data devs reading this: PLEASE SUPPORT THIS FEATURE!
Welcome further thoughts on this!
Instead of an array of ids, the payload needs to contain "something else" than an array.
In the case of the RESTAdapter, the returned JSON is like that:
{blog: {id: 1, comments: [1, 2, 3]}
If you want to handle manually/differently the association, you can return a JSON like that instead:
{blog: {id: 1, comments: "/posts/1/comments"}
It's up to your adapter then to fetch the data from the specified URL.
See the associated test: https://github.com/emberjs/data/blob/master/packages/ember-data/tests/integration/has_many_test.js#L112
I was glad to find this post, helped me. Here is my version, based off the current ember-data and your code.
findHasMany: function(store, record, relationship, details) {
var adapter = this;
var serializer = this.get('serializer');
var type = relationship.type;
var root = this.rootForType(type);
var url = (typeof(details) == 'string' || details instanceof String) ? details : this.buildURL(root);
return this.ajax(url, "GET", {}).then(function(json) {
adapter.didFindMany(store, type, json);
var list = $.map(json[relationship.key], function(o){ return serializer.extractId(type, o);});
store.loadHasMany(record, relationship.key, list);
}).then(null, $.rejectionHandler);
},
for the reload issue, I did this, based on code I found in another spot, inside the serializer I overrode:
materializeHasMany: function(name, record, hash, relationship) {
var type = record.constructor,
key = this._keyForHasMany(type, relationship.key),
cache = record.cacheFor('data');
if(cache) {
var hasMany = cache.hasMany[relationship.key];
if (typeof(hasMany) == 'object' || hasMany instanceof Object) {
record.materializeHasMany(name, hasMany);
return;
}
}
var value = this.extractHasMany(type, hash, key);
record.materializeHasMany(name, value);
}
I'm still working on figuring out paging, since some of the collections I'm working with need it.
I got a small step closer to getting it working with revision 13 and based myself on sfossen's findHasMany implementation. For an Ember model 'Author' with a hasMany relationship 'blogPosts', my rest api looks like '/api/authors/:author_id/blog_posts'. When querying the rest api for an author with id 11 the blog_posts field reads '/authors/11/blog_posts'.
I now see the related blog posts being returned by the server, but Ember still throws an obscure error that it can not read 'id' from an undefined model object when rendering the page. So I'm not quite there yet, but at least the related data is correctly requested from the rest service.
My complete adapter:
App.Adapter = DS.RESTAdapter.extend({
url: 'http://localhost:3000',
namespace: 'api',
serializer: DS.RESTSerializer.extend({
keyForHasMany: function(type, name) {
return Ember.String.underscore(name);
},
extractHasMany: function(record, json, relationship) {
var relationShip = relationship + '_path';
return { url : json[relationShip] }
}
}),
findHasMany: function(store, record, relationship, details) {
var type = relationship.type;
var root = this.rootForType(type);
var url = this.url + '/' + this.namespace + details.url;
var serializer = this.get('serializer');
return this.ajax(url, "GET", {}).then(
function(json) {
var relationship_key = Ember.String.underscore(relationship.key);
store.loadMany(type, json[relationship_key]);
var list = $.map(json[relationship_key], function(o){
return serializer.extractId(type, o);}
);
store.loadHasMany(record, relationship.key, list);
}).then(null, $.rejectionHandler);
}
});
Here is my solution but it is on Ember-data 0.14, so the world has moved on, even if we are still on this code base:
findHasMany: function(store, record, relationship, details) {
if(relationship.key !== 'activities') {
return;
}
var type = relationship.type,
root = this.rootForType(type),
url = this.url + details.url,
self = this;
this.ajax(url, "GET", {
data: {page: 1}
}).then(function(json) {
var data = record.get('data'),
ids = [],
references = json[relationship.key];
ids = references.map(function(ref){
return ref.id;
});
data[relationship.key] = ids;
record.set('data', data);
self.didFindMany(store, type, json);
record.suspendRelationshipObservers(function() {
record.hasManyDidChange(relationship.key);
});
}).then(null, DS.rejectionHandler);
},
I found replacing the data with the ids worked for me.
I have a cookie that is on every page of my site. It works fine when the address is like this.
http://mydomain.com/index.html or whatever.
but when I have a page that is in a folder like this
http://mydomain.com/folder/page.html
instead of using the cookie that I have set for all the other pages it creates a new cookie just for that folder. Is there any way to keep the same cookie for all folders? Or I'm I just doing something terrible wrong?
Thanks
my code -- I have this in a external js. file
$(document).ready(function(){
var cookie = $.cookie('cookiename');
if (cookie) {
}
else {
$.cookie('cookiename', 'cookievalue');
}
});
$(document).ready(function() {
$('.watevevever').click(function() {
var va = $('#watev').css('display');
if (va == 'none'){
$('#watev').fadeIn("slow");
$.cookie('cookiename', 'cookievalue');
}
else {
$('#watev').fadeOut("slow");
$.cookie('cookiename', 'cookievalue');
}
});
var va = $.cookie('cookiename');
if (va == 'cookievalue') {
$('#watev').css("display","none");
};
});
If you are using this plugin for jQuery (and its source is here), it seems, by looking at the source, that you can pass some additional parameters as an object, as a third parameter to the $.cookie method.
For instance, from this tutorial, you can add an expiration date :
$.cookie('the_cookie', 'the_value', { expires: 7 }); // set cookie with an expiration date seven days in the future
Looking at the source, you have this portion of code :
var path = options.path ? '; path=' + (options.path) : '';
var domain = options.domain ? '; domain=' + (options.domain) : '';
var secure = options.secure ? '; secure' : '';
So, I suppose you can use a "path" attribute in the object given as third parameter, like, for instance :
$.cookie('the_cookie', 'the_value', {path: '/'});
Of course, this '/' is if you want to set to cookie for every paths on your domain -- which seems to be the case.
You can probably also set some other options, like 'domain', if you want to use subdomains, btw...
$.cookie('the_cookie', 'the_value', { expires: 7, path: '/', domain: 'jquery.com', secure: true });
the optional parameters includes 'path' .. which should be '/'