I'm trying to create a simple CMS with express.js that dynamically creates routes. It gets a JSON from a database that looks like this:
pagesfromdb = {
home = {
paths = ['/','/home','/koti'],
render = 'home.ejs',
fi_FI = {html='<h1>Hei maailma!</h1>'},
en_US = {html='<h1>Hello World!</h1>'}
},
about = {
paths = ['/about','/tietoja'],
render = 'general.ejs',
fi_FI = {html='Tietoja'},
en_US = {html='About Us'}
}
}
and iterates over the objects creating routes like so:
Object.keys(pagesfromdb).forEach(function(key) {
var page = pagesfromdb[key];
app.get(page.global.paths,function(req, res){
res.render(page.render, page[language]);
});
});
Now everything is working fine. But the problem is, every time a user modifies the content and paths, the whole node app needs to be restarted. I didin't find any API calls to remove routes.
Is there any way to safely remove the old routes set with app.get? Should I even do that?
Is there a better way to do this kind of routing? I do like this method as it allows me to use the built in function, is fast and supports regex.
I tried removing the whole app.routes with app.routes = nul but it didn't do anything, the old routes were still in place.
One thing that did indeed remove them was
delete app._router.map.get;
app._router.map.get = [];
But does this actually remove them and is it safe to use so I don't end up hijacking huge amounts of ram if the router keeps getting repopulated?