Meteor methods are designed to be accessed from the client, if you don't want this, you just need to define a normal javascript function on the server. A really basic example would be:
server/server.js
:
someFunction = function(params) {
console.log('hello');
}
As long as it's in the server folder, the function won't be accessible from the client.
For coffeescript users, each file is technically a separate scope, so you would have to define a global variable with @
, e.g.
@someFunction = (params) ->
console.log 'hello'
or if you want to scope the function to a package:
share.someFunction = (params) ->
console.log 'hello'
If you have methods that need to be accessible from the client but only for say admin users, you need to add those checks at the start of the meteor method definition:
Meteor.methods({
'someMethod': function(params) {
var user = Meteor.user();
if (user && (user.isAdmin === true)) {
// Do something
} else {
throw new Meteor.Error(403, 'Forbidden');
}
}
});
I'm not going to vouch for the security of this example - it's just that, an example - but hopefully it gives you some idea of how you would secure your methods.
EDIT: Noticed the other answers mention using a if (Meteor.isServer) { ... }
conditional. Note that if you are doing this inside methods which are also accessible on the client, the user will be still be able to see your server code, even if they can't run it. This may or may not be a security problem for you - basically be careful if you're hardcoding any 3rd-party API credentials or any kind of sensitive data in methods whose code can be accessed from the client. If you don't need the method on the client, it would be better to just use normal JS functions. If you're wrapping the whole Meteor.methods call with a isServer conditional, the code will be on the server only, but can still be called from the client.