UI for fastify-overview's graphic representation.
This plugin will generate a UI to visualize the structure of your fastify application. Here is a simple example of what you will see:
The previous image shows the home page of the UI. It contains a Radial tree visualization. The graph can be zoomed and panned to explor it regardless its dimensions. It describes the structure of your application:
- the center of the tree is the root of your fastify application
- every
black
node is a fastify context - every
red
node is a hook - every
green
node is a decorator - every
blue
node is a route
So, by reading the graph you can understand the structure of your application and the functions that is beeing executed whenever a route handler is called. To lean how to read the graph, please read the following documentation.
npm i fastify-overview fastify-overview-ui
Note: This plugin requires fastify-overview
to be installed (usage instructions).
await fastify.register(require('fastify-overview'), {...})
await fastify.register(require('fastify-overview-ui'))
The UI will be available at {your app's url}/fastify-overview-ui/
The radial graph must be read from the center to the circle outside, in clockwise direction starting from the 12:00 position (see the fucsia trace):
So, reading the example image above, you can understand the following:
- The
Root plugin
is loaded first - The
Routes plugin
is loaded next - The
Note plugin
is loaded next - The
childNodePlugin
is loaded last
Every black
node is a fastify context that may contain hooks, decorators and routes.
Thanks to the encapsulation
every context has a parent context and it inherits all the hooks, decorators and routes from its parent context.
For example: the GET /note/inheritance
route is a child of the Note plugin
context.
This means that, when a client will call that route, the parents' hooks will be executed first:
- The
globalHook
will be executed first because it is nearest to the center of the graph - Then the
noteHook
function will be executed because it is a hook of theNote plugin
context.
Moreover, the route handler can access the someSupport
and getAuthor
decorators because they are inherited from parents nodes.
As exercise, you can read the graph and understand the hooks that are executed when the /example/list
route is called.
An example application is provided which can be used to try out the plugin.
npm run build
cd example
npm run dev
- open
http://localhost:3000/fastify-overview-ui
This will use the built version of the application. For developing the plugin see the next section.
An example application is provided which can be used to develop the plugin locally while using the development version of the source code of the client application.
- run
npm run dev
in theexample/
folder - run
npm run dev
in the root folder - open
http://localhost:3001
- make changes to the client codebase and see them reflected in the UI live
Design proposal can be found in this Figma file.
Licensed under MIT.