Templates rendering plugin support for Fastify.
point-of-view
decorates the reply interface with the view
method for managing view engines, which can be used to render templates responses.
Currently supports the following templates engines:
In production
mode, point-of-view
will heavily cache the templates file and functions, while in development
will reload every time the template file and function.
Note that at least Fastify v2.0.0
is needed.
Note: ejs-mate
support has been dropped.
The benchmark were run with the files in the benchmark
folder with the ejs
engine.
The data has been taken with: autocannon -c 100 -d 5 -p 10 localhost:3000
- Express: 8.8k req/sec
- Fastify: 15.6k req/sec
npm install point-of-view --save
const fastify = require('fastify')()
fastify.register(require('point-of-view'), {
engine: {
ejs: require('ejs')
}
})
fastify.get('/', (req, reply) => {
reply.view('/templates/index.ejs', { text: 'text' })
})
// With async handler be sure to return the result of reply.view
fastify.get('/', async (req, reply) => {
const t = await something()
return reply.view('/templates/index.ejs', { text: 'text' })
})
fastify.listen(3000, err => {
if (err) throw err
console.log(`server listening on ${fastify.server.address().port}`)
})
Or render a template directly with the fastify.view()
decorator:
// With a promise
const html = await fastify.view('/templates/index.ejs', { text: 'text' })
// or with a callback
fastify.view('/templates/index.ejs', { text: 'text' }, (err, html) => {
// ...
})
Like having 2 different declarations with different propertynames calling different partials:
fastify.register(require('../index'), {
engine: { ejs: ejs },
layout: './templates/layout-mobile.ejs'
propertyName: 'mobile'
})
fastify.register(require('../index'), {
engine: { ejs: ejs },
layout: './templates/layout-desktop.ejs'
propertyName: 'desktop'
})
If you want to set a fixed templates folder, or pass some options to the template engines:
fastify.register(require('point-of-view'), {
engine: {
ejs: require('ejs')
},
root: path.join(__dirname, 'view'),
layout: 'template',
viewExt: 'html', // it will add the extension to all the views
options: {}
})
If you want to set a default context that the variable can be using in each view:
fastify.register(require('point-of-view'), {
engine: {
ejs: require('ejs')
},
defaultContext: {
dev: process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development'
}
})
and in the template files like pug can use the variable like:
link(src=dev?"link-to-dev.css":"link-to-pro.css")
Note that the data passing to the template will override the defaultContext
If you want to omit view extension, you can add includeViewExtension
property as following:
fastify.register(require('point-of-view'), {
engine: {
ejs: require('ejs')
},
includeViewExtension: true
});
fastify.get('/', (req, reply) => {
reply.view('/templates/index', { text: 'text' })
})
Note that to use include files with ejs you also need:
// get a reference to resolve
const resolve = require('path').resolve
// other code ...
// in template engine options configure how to resolve templates folder
options: {
filename: resolve('templates')
}
and in ejs template files (for example templates/index.ejs) use something like:
<% include header.ejs %>
with a path relative to the current page, or an absolute path.
To use partials in mustache you will need to pass the names and paths in the options parameter:
options: {
partials: {
header: 'header.mustache',
footer: 'footer.mustache'
}
}
To use partials in handlebars you will need to pass the names and paths in the options parameter:
options: {
partials: {
header: 'header.hbs',
footer: 'footer.hbs'
}
}
To use layouts in handlebars you will need to pass the layout
parameter:
fastify.register(require('point-of-view'), {
engine: {
handlebars: require('handlebars')
},
layout: './templates/layout.hbs'
});
fastify.get('/', (req, reply) => {
reply.view('./templates/index.hbs', { text: 'text' })
})
To configure nunjucks environment after initialisation, you can pass callback function to options:
options: {
onConfigure: (env) => {
// do whatever you want on nunjucks env
}
}
To configure liquid you need to pass the engine instance as engine option:
const { Liquid } = require('liquidjs')
const path = require('path')
const engine = new Liquid({
root: path.join(__dirname, 'templates'),
extname: '.liquid'
})
fastify.register(require('point-of-view'), {
engine: {
liquid: engine
}
});
fastify.get('/', (req, reply) => {
reply.view('./templates/index.liquid', { text: 'text' })
})
When using doT the plugin compiles all templates when the application starts, this way all .def
files are loaded and
both .jst
and .dot
files are loaded as in-memory functions.
This behaviour is recommended by the doT team here.
To make it possible it is necessary to provide a root
or templates
option with the path to the template directory.
const path = require('path')
fastify.register(require('point-of-view'), {
engine: {
dot: require('dot')
},
root: 'templates',
options: {
destination: 'dot-compiled' // path where compiled .jst files are placed (default = 'out')
}
});
fastify.get('/', (req, reply) => {
// this works both for .jst and .dot files
reply.view('index', { text: 'text' })
})
To utilize html-minifier
in the rendering process, you can add the option useHtmlMinifier
with a reference to html-minifier
,
and the optional htmlMinifierOptions
option is used to specify the html-minifier
options:
// get a reference to html-minifier
const minifier = require('html-minifier')
// optionally defined the html-minifier options
const minifierOpts = {
removeComments: true,
removeCommentsFromCDATA: true,
collapseWhitespace: true,
collapseBooleanAttributes: true,
removeAttributeQuotes: true,
removeEmptyAttributes: true
}
// in template engine options configure the use of html-minifier
options: {
useHtmlMinifier: minifier,
htmlMinifierOptions: minifierOpts
}
To utilize html-minify-stream
in the rendering process with template engines that support streams,
you can add the option useHtmlMinifyStream
with a reference to html-minify-stream
, and the optional htmlMinifierOptions
option is used to specify the options just like html-minifier
:
// get a reference to html-minify-stream
const htmlMinifyStream = require('html-minify-stream')
// optionally defined the html-minifier options that are used by html-minify-stream
const minifierOpts = {
removeComments: true,
removeCommentsFromCDATA: true,
collapseWhitespace: true,
collapseBooleanAttributes: true,
removeAttributeQuotes: true,
removeEmptyAttributes: true
}
// in template engine options configure the use of html-minify-stream
options: {
useHtmlMinifyStream: htmlMinifyStream,
htmlMinifierOptions: minifierOpts
}
The optional boolean property production
will override environment variable NODE_ENV
and force point-of-view
into production
or development
mode:
options: {
// force production mode
production: true
}
If you want to provide data, which will be depended on by a request and available in all views, you have to add property locals
to reply
object, like in the example below:
fastify.addHook('preHandler', function (request, reply, done) {
reply.locals = {
text: getTextFromRequest(request) // it will be available in all views
}
done()
})
Properties from reply.locals
will override those from defaultContext
, but not from data
parameter provided to reply.view(template, data)
function.
Typing parameters from reply.locals
in typescript
:
interface Locals {
appVersion: string,
isAuthorized: boolean,
user?: {
id: number
login: string
}
}
declare module 'fastify' {
interface FastifyReply {
locals: Partial<Locals> | undefined;
}
}
app.addHook('onRequest', (request, reply, done) => {
if (!reply.locals) {
reply.locals = {}
}
reply.locals.isAuthorized = true;
reply.locals.user = {
id: 1,
login: 'Admin'
}
})
app.get("/data", (request, reply) => {
if (!reply.locals) {
reply.locals = {}
}
// reply.locals.appVersion = 1 // not a valid type
reply.locals.appVersion = '4.14.0'
reply.view("/index", { text: "Sample data" });
});
To require point-of-view
as a dependency to a fastify-plugin, add the name point-of-view
to the dependencies array in the plugin's opts.
fastify.register(myViewRendererPlugin, {
dependencies: ['point-of-view']
})
To forcefully clear cache when in production mode, call the view.clearCache()
function.
fastify.view.clearCache()
By default views are served with the mime type 'text/html; charset=utf-8', but you can specify a different value using the type function of reply, or by specifying the desired charset in the property 'charset' in the opts object given to the plugin.
This project is kindly sponsored by:
Licensed under MIT.