'use strict'; const path = require('path'); const ejs = require('ejs') const express = require('express'); // Set up the express app. const app = express(); // Allow the express app to be exported into other files. module.exports = app; // Build the conf object from the conf files. app.conf = require('./conf/conf'); // Hold onto the auth middleware const middleware = require('./middleware/auth'); // load the JSON parser middleware. Express will parse JSON into native objects // for any request that has JSON in its content type. app.use(express.json()); // Set up the templating engine to build HTML for the front end. app.set('views', path.join(__dirname, 'views')); app.set('view engine', 'ejs'); // Have express server static content( images, CSS, browser JS) from the public // local folder. app.use('/static', express.static(path.join(__dirname, 'public'))) // Routes for front end content. app.use('/', require('./routes/index')); // API routes for authentication. app.use('/api/auth', require('./routes/auth')); // API routes for working with users. All endpoints need to be have valid user. app.use('/api/user', middleware.auth, require('./routes/user')); // API routes for working with hosts. All endpoints need to be have valid user. app.use('/api/host', middleware.auth, require('./routes/host')); // Catch 404 and forward to error handler. If none of the above routes are // used, this is what will be called. app.use(function(req, res, next) { var err = new Error('Not Found'); err.message = 'Page not found' err.status = 404; next(err); }); // Error handler. This is where `next()` will go on error app.use(function(err, req, res, next) { console.error(err.status || res.status, err.name, req.method, req.url); console.error(err.message); console.error(err.stack); console.error('========================================='); res.status(err.status || 500); res.json({name: err.name, message: err.message}); });