THIS CONNECTOR DOES NOT SUPPORT LOOPBACK 4
The remote connector enables you to use a LoopBack application as a data source via REST. You can use the remote connector with a LoopBack application, a Node application, or a browser-based application that uses LoopBack in the client. The connector uses Strong Remoting.
In general, using the remote connector is more convenient than calling into REST API, and enables you to switch the transport later if you need to.
Use loopback-connector-remote:
- Version 3.x with LoopBack v3 and later.
- Prior versions with LoopBack v2.
In your application root directory, enter:
$ npm install loopback-connector-remote --save
This will install the module and add it as a dependency to the application's package.json
file.
Create a new remote data source with the datasource generator:
$ lb datasource
When prompted:
- For connector, scroll down and select other.
- For connector name without the loopback-connector- prefix, enter remote.
This creates an entry in datasources.json
; Then you need to edit this to add the data source properties, for example:
{% include code-caption.html content="/server/datasources.json" %}
...
"myRemoteDataSource": {
"name": "myRemoteDataSource",
"connector": "remote",
"url": "http://localhost:3000/api"
}
...
The url
property specifies the root URL of the LoopBack API.
If you do not specify a url
property, the remote connector will point to it's own host name, port it's running on, etc.
The connector will generate models on the myRemoteDataSource datasource object based on the models/methods exposed from the remote service. Those models will have methods attached that are
from the model's remote methods. So if the model foo
exposes a remote method called bar
,
the connector will automatically generate the following:
app.datasources.myRemoteDataSource.models.foo.bar()
To access the remote Loopback service in a model:
module.exports = function(Message) {
Message.test = function (cb) {
Message.app.datasources.myRemoteDataSource.models.
SomeModel.remoteMethodNameHere(function () {});
cb(null, {});
};
};
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
host | String | Hostname of LoopBack application providing remote data source. |
port | Number | Port number of LoopBack application providing remote data source. |
root | String | Path to API root of LoopBack application providing remote data source. |
url | String | Full URL of LoopBack application providing remote connector. Use instead of host, port, and root properties. |
The remote connector does not support JSON-based configuration of the authentication credentials (see issue #3). You can use the following code as a workaround. It assumes that your data source is called "remote" and the AccessToken id is provided in the variable "token".
app.dataSources.remote.connector.remotes.auth = {
bearer: new Buffer(token).toString('base64'),
sendImmediately: true
};
When using the MongoDB connector on the server and a remote connector on the client,
use the following id
property:
"id": {
"type": "string",
"generated": true,
"id": true
}