Parse server to be used as a microservice endpoint

Fabio Cavalcante e92cb3d0ff Small fix to Azure secion and update to deploy file to match environment variables před 9 roky
.ebextensions d195fafe50 Update AWS Elastic Beanstalk sections před 9 roky
cloud 09d3f95d15 Initial release, parse-server-example před 10 roky
.gitignore 09d3f95d15 Initial release, parse-server-example před 10 roky
Dockerfile 258924a444 Create Dockerfile před 10 roky
README.md e92cb3d0ff Small fix to Azure secion and update to deploy file to match environment variables před 9 roky
app.json b34e7f5832 support additional config via env vars and button před 10 roky
azuredeploy.json e92cb3d0ff Small fix to Azure secion and update to deploy file to match environment variables před 9 roky
index.js 506b17b039 Merge pull request #15 from didierfranc/patch-1 před 10 roky
jsconfig.json 09d3f95d15 Initial release, parse-server-example před 10 roky
package.json 7e76fdac27 Update package.json před 10 roky

README.md

parse-server-example

Example project using the parse-server module on Express.

Read the full server guide here: https://parse.com/docs/server/guide

For Local Development

  • Make sure you have at least Node 4.1. node --version
  • Clone this repo and change directory to it.
  • npm install
  • Install mongo locally using http://docs.mongodb.org/master/tutorial/install-mongodb-on-os-x/
  • Run mongo to connect to your database, just to make sure it's working. Once you see a mongo prompt, exit with Control-D
  • Run the server with: npm start
  • By default it will use a path of /parse for the API routes. To change this, or use older client SDKs, run export PARSE_MOUNT=/1 before launching the server.
  • You now have a database named "dev" that contains your Parse data
  • Install ngrok and you can test with devices

Getting Started With Heroku + Mongolab Development

With the Heroku Button

Deploy

Without It

  • Clone the repo and change directory to it
  • Log in with the Heroku Toolbelt and create an app: heroku create
  • Use the MongoLab addon: heroku addons:create mongolab:sandbox
  • By default it will use a path of /parse for the API routes. To change this, or use older client SDKs, run heroku config:set PARSE_MOUNT=/1
  • Deploy it with: git push heroku master

Getting Started With AWS Elastic Beanstalk

With the Deploy to AWS Button

Deploy to AWS

Without It

  • Clone the repo and change directory to it
  • Log in with the AWS Elastic Beanstalk CLI, select a region, and create an app: eb init
  • Create an environment and pass in MongoDB URI, App ID, and Master Key: eb create --envvars DATABASE_URI=<replace with URI>,APP_ID=<replace with Parse app ID>,MASTER_KEY=<replace with Parse master key>

Getting Started With Microsoft Azure App Service

With the Deploy to Azure Button

Deploy to Azure

Without It

A detailed tutorial is available here: Azure welcomes Parse developers

Using it

You can use the REST API, the JavaScript SDK, and any of our open-source SDKs:

Example request to a server running locally:

curl -X POST \
  -H "X-Parse-Application-Id: myAppId" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"score":1337,"playerName":"Sean Plott","cheatMode":false}' \
  http://localhost:1337/parse/classes/GameScore
  
curl -X POST \
  -H "X-Parse-Application-Id: myAppId" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{}' \
  http://localhost:1337/parse/functions/hello

Example using it via JavaScript:

Parse.initialize('myAppId','unused');
Parse.serverURL = 'https://whatever.herokuapp.com';
var obj = new Parse.Object('GameScore');
obj.set('score',1337);
obj.save().then(function(obj) {
  console.log(obj.toJSON());
  var query = new Parse.Query('GameScore');
  query.get(obj.id).then(function(objAgain) {
    console.log(objAgain.toJSON());
  }, function(err) {console.log(err); });
}, function(err) { console.log(err); });

You can change the server URL in all of the open-source SDKs, but we're releasing new builds which provide initialization time configuration of this property.