I'm working on a small webapp that normally is built with a relatively complex process and then deployed to WebLogic.
However, the portion I'm working on is using AngularJS, and is all HTML and Javascript. It normally makes ajax calls into another webapp on the same domain. To shorten my development cycle, I'd like to avoid a build process and just reload the browser page.
I think I can do this with "node express", but the details escape me. I've managed to define a very simple app that just serves local files, but now I have to figure out how to detect some of those paths as matching an expression, and reroute those requests to a request to an external domain.
So, if it gets a request for "/diag/stuff.html", "/foo/thing.html", or just "/index.html", it will send back the file matching the same path. However, if the path matches "/fooService/.*", then I have to send back the response from a GET to the same path, but on a different host and port.
This is my trivial app so far:
var express = require('express');
var app = express();
app.use("/", express.static(__dirname));
app.listen(8000);
Update:
I like the proxy idea, so I did a local install of "http-proxy" (I forgot and first did a global install) then changed the script to this:
var express = require('express');
var app = express();
var httpProxy = require('http-proxy');
var proxy = new httpProxy.RoutingProxy();
app.use("/", express.static(__dirname));
app.get('/FooService/*', function(req, res) {
"use strict";
return proxy.proxyRequest(req, res, {
host: "foohost.net",
port: 80
});
});
app.listen(8000);
This fails with:
<path>\server.js:4
var proxy = new httpProxy.RoutingProxy();
^
TypeError: undefined is not a function
at Object.<anonymous> (<path>\server.js:4:13)
What might be wrong here?
Update:
Would it be useful to see the contents of "console.log(httpProxy)" after that "require"?:
function ProxyServer(options) {
EE3.call(this);
this.web = this.proxyRequest = createRightProxy('web')(options);
this.ws = this.proxyWebsocketRequest = createRightProxy('ws')(options);
this.options = options;
this.webPasses = Object.keys(web).map(function(pass) {
return web[pass];
});
this.wsPasses = Object.keys(ws).map(function(pass) {
return ws[pass];
});
this.on('error', this.onError.bind(this));
}
Does that provide a clue for why "new httpProxy.RoutingProxy()" says it's undefined?