OpenBikeSensor Web API
Find a file
2020-10-23 00:41:16 +02:00
_helpers feat: add registration flow with email verification 2020-10-22 23:53:43 +02:00
_middleware feat: add registration flow with email verification 2020-10-22 23:53:43 +02:00
accounts feat: add registration flow with email verification 2020-10-22 23:53:43 +02:00
config configurable mailserver and sender 2020-10-23 00:41:16 +02:00
models feat: add registration flow with email verification 2020-10-22 23:53:43 +02:00
postman-examples chore: update package versions and readme 2020-10-01 13:40:11 +02:00
public first version of the OpenBikeSensor Web API 2020-04-13 02:02:40 +02:00
routes feat: add registration flow with email verification 2020-10-22 23:53:43 +02:00
.gitignore first version of the OpenBikeSensor Web API 2020-04-13 02:02:40 +02:00
app.js feat: add registration flow with email verification 2020-10-22 23:53:43 +02:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2020-04-13 01:52:25 +02:00
package-lock.json feat: add registration flow with email verification 2020-10-22 23:53:43 +02:00
package.json feat: add registration flow with email verification 2020-10-22 23:53:43 +02:00
README.md configurable mailserver and sender 2020-10-23 00:41:16 +02:00
yarn.lock Bump express-jwt from 5.3.3 to 6.0.0 2020-06-30 20:35:25 +02:00

OpenBikeSensor Web API

The backend API for the OpenBikeSensor Web App.

Running it

Requirements

A working installation of npm and node.js - get the latest node.js LTS release at the node.js homepage and verify it's working via node -v and npm -v in a command prompt of your choice.

A working installation of Docker for the used containerized MongoDB.

First start

To get started you need to download all used packages with npm i in the project's root folder first.

Next up is our local MongoDB. This uses docker but can be conveniently started via sudo npm run mongo:start (at least in Ubuntu Linux).

Afterwards the dev server is started with npm run dev and can be called via http://localhost:3000/api.

To completely stop the project after running it a call to sudo npm run mongo:stop is necessary.

Running the tests

Just execute npm run test while both the node.js server and the MongoDB are up and running.

Warning: At the moment (2020-09-29) there are no tests.

Uploading a track for test purposes

Uploading a track to the local server requires multiple steps, as uploading is not possible via the dummy upload form in the corresponding web app yet:

  • Create a user in the web app and copy the user id, which can be found at (http://localhost:4200/settings) as "API key"
  • Import the Postman script "add-track.json" from the "postman-examples" into Postman
  • In each of the three requests add your user id in the "Pre-request script" tab as the value for the "UserId" variable
  • As tracks have to be split into smaller parts to get a working upload from the sensor you have to run the three requests in the order of: begin -> add -> end
  • View your freshly uploaded track at (http://localhost:4200) -> Home -> Your feed

Sending E-Mails

By default in development mode mails are not sent, but instead the mail data is logged to the console. This can be overriden with the --devSendMails flag if you start the application like so: npm run dev -- --devSendMails.

Mails are also always sent in production mode!

For actually sending e-mails the mailserver, sender, user and password for the SMTP server need to be specified as environment variables. The username is read from MAILUSER, and the password is read from MAILPW, Mailserver is read from 'MAILSERVER' and the sender name from 'MAILSENDER', so in local development startup would like something like this (at least in Linux): MAILSERVER=mail.my-domain.de MAILSENDER=noreply@whatever.de MAILUSER=myuser MAILPW=supersecurepassword npm run dev -- --devSendMails.