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I am relatively new to Node JS, I've built three small application I would like to host. Is there anyone who could provide a good starting point to learn how to deploy an app to one of the many services available? So far I am astonished by the lack of support from the companies who offer this service, as well as the vast amount of problems I am running into so if anyone has any tips, please help.
This is cloud platforms compatible with node.js. The most popular heroku, nodejitsu, appfog (my choice).
Heroku
https://www.heroku.com/
It's super easy to use and provides easy integration of mongo db
Also If in future u create ionic app , u can host them too
I've been trying several of those options, and on my opinion Nodejitsu is by far the best, the thing is that is not free (just the first month). So, because of that you may wanna try Heroku (it didnt like me). Another option in beta is Cloudno.de.
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I am looking to build an application that has cross platform with a plugin architecture. I see that Electron is a good fit for kind of requirement, however I am unable to understand how the plugin architecture can be implemented in electron.
Think of this as a tool that will evolve over time with team adding new functionalities over time. I am looking at making this as a plugin and delivered to the app to enable new features (UI + Logic) once the application is deployed.
I am really new to both NodeJs and electron so this may sound very basic ask, however I have been looking around the net but can't see any explanation on how to address my requirement. Can someone please help me point to the right resources on the net.
Regards
Kiran
I am using Vue and Vuetify at work. I tried to implement them on electron and I can suggest you to do same thing. There are some plugins that automatically add vue support to your current electron project without any effort. Once you add vue support its like developing a web client but only difference is you have node.js functionalities. After you do that you can make a project structure that you split your modules how ever you want. I may share the project structure that I use in my projects if you want. I can edit my post depending on your questions if you want to go on this way. Cheers!!
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I have to create an admin panel that will rely on an API I created.
I would like to use an framework that will speed up my dev. (create request based on field provided by user, search ,etc)
To make it , I want to make a single app REST API client front-end. I didn't find a framework that could do that easily (for example : one that use a rest api client and a another front-end app)
Any ideas ?
No one will choose that for you. Go to this website:
http://nodeframework.com/
And read about all of the framkeworks there. Compare their differences and see which is the best tool for the job for you. Every one of them has its use, every one of them is good for something, every one of them has its strengths and its weaknesses. For API development most of the people choose Express, Hapi, Restify or LoopBack but there are much more than just those few to choose from. You need to test for yourself which works for you.
What I discover and that could help another guys :
https://github.com/marmelab/restful.js
With some explanation : https://marmelab.com/blog/2015/03/10/deal-easily-with-your-rest-api-using-restful-js.html
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I enjoy using loopback to quickly build a REST api, with a fair amount of scaffolding. All I need to do is define my data, write any custom validations, and add any other server-side logic. For simple requirements, you can have a RESTful API in minutes. What about GraphQL?
Loopback doesn't support GraphQL. A quick websearch shows a few grapql servers like express-graphql. Is there a more batteries-included option? I don't want to write a web-server. I want a framework, but I can't find such.
I just want a functioning and stable data-abstraction layer, access control, a graphQL interface, and a solid way to connect all of these reliably. Is there a solution available already?
I would prefer a solution using either nodejs or python
It may help you to know that I have just discovered GraphQL. So maybe my question shows a fundamental misunderstanding of the topic, maybe I'm ignoring something obvious. If so, enlighten me.
Does Apollo server come closer to what you're looking for? https://github.com/apollostack/apollo-server/blob/master/README.md
express-graphql's main goal is to be a minimal reference implementation, whereas Apollo Server's goal is to be a complete production-ready GraphQL server.
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Im trying to make load testing for web application that based on Webrtc,
does someone knows with whitch tool can I test that application.
also I`d like to know if i can use Jmeter and if so , how can i use it ?
thanks a head
When it comes to load testing, WebRTC is different. And that's because WebRTC is peer-to-peer and not client server.
What you can test is the client server part, more specifically the signaling server and the STUN/TURN server. For these, you can easily use JMeter as for any web server. For STUN/TURN just follow the specs (though if you're using an existing server, I would leave this into the authors hands, unless you want to involve in that project too). For the signaling server, it depends on how you build it.
What you can also do with WebRTC is try to test with a controlled limited bandwidth and delay/jitter. This will be more like a smoke test, than a load one. To do this automatically is a little bit more complicated. especially if you want to do it with audio/video, not data.
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After trolling through quite a number of Node.js CMS hopefuls, it seems that Calipso is the most active / well developed CMS so far. Am I missing other options or projects that are more robust and mature at this point in time?
Update: Calipso is now dead. We are currently using Apostrophe CMS which in my opinion is more feature-full and better architected for a node.js based cms.
We use Calipso for some of the projects here in my company and it works out fine. If you have love for node you should be fine :)
We constantly review other node based cmses, and so far Calipso is most active and favorite.
I highly recommend KeystoneJS, it's still relatively new but i'm already using it in several commercial projects, give it a go! (I also contribute to the project).
DocPad seems to be nearly as active as Calipso - 831 commits from 22 developers vs 1023 commits in Calipso. DocPad has nice docs and lots of plugins.
Check out enduro.js. It is minimalistic, extensible by node.js and has a pretty nice auto-generated admin interface.