It doesn't really matter where you place the files as long as the user that runs the node
command has access to that location.
In fact, I would recommend that you place node.js source files outside any www
or htdocs
folder (or any publicly avaiable folder for that matter), because else the .js
source file could be world readable when served using your webserver (including any security credentials that might be in the source files, leaving you exposed).
Yes, that is a correct way of running a node script. I would however recommend to first cd
into the correct directory and running node example.js
from there to prevent path resolution errors, especially when you start using various npm
modules later on.
Probably not. It's hard to tell without seeing the code you're trying to run first, but if any path resolution errors would occur due to folder structures etc, node
would just exit with a nasty error instead of printing '...'.
Yes, it's possible to build an entire website using node
. In fact, there are various npm
modules that can help you making that easier. I recommend you take a look at:
These frameworks provide lots of bells and whistles that extend node
to make it more feasible as a full fledged webserver (cookies, vhosts, sessions, path routing, etc.)
EDIT
To elaborate on answer nr.3:
I've tried the code you pasted, both from the correct folder as I've recommended in answer nr.2 and using an absolute path; They both work fine:
remco@Prosperpine ~ $ node tests.js
Server running at http://127.0.0.1:8124/
^C
remco@Prosperpine ~ $ cd /
remco@Prosperpine / $ node /Users/remco/tests.js
Server running at http://127.0.0.1:8124/
So the node server starts up and is serving content on http://127.0.0.1:8124/
, which works as well:
remco@Prosperpine ~ $ wget http://127.0.0.1:8124/ && cat index.html
--2012-07-03 13:25:32-- http://127.0.0.1:8124/
Connecting to 127.0.0.1:8124... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: unspecified [text/plain]
Saving to: `index.html'
[ <=> ] 12 --.-K/s in 0s
2012-07-03 13:25:32 (901 KB/s) - `index.html' saved [12]
Hello World
remco@Prosperpine ~ $
So we can conclude that there's nothing wrong with the code you are trying. Probably there's something wrong with your node
installation. Is this on Linux, OSX or Windows?
...
.