Book Image

Designing Web APIs with Strapi

By : Khalid Elshafie, Mozafar Haider
4 (1)
Book Image

Designing Web APIs with Strapi

4 (1)
By: Khalid Elshafie, Mozafar Haider

Overview of this book

Strapi is a Node.js-based, flexible, open-source headless CMS with an integrated admin panel that anyone can use and helps save API development time. APIs built with Strapi can be consumed using REST or GraphQL from any client. With this book, you'll take a hands-on approach to exploring the capabilities of the Strapi platform and creating a custom API from scratch. This book will help JavaScript developers to put their knowledge to work by guiding them through building powerful backend APIs. You'll see how to effortlessly create content structures that can be customized according to your needs, and gain insights into how to write, edit, and manage your content seamlessly with Strapi. As you progress through the chapters, you'll discover a wide range of Strapi features, as well as understand how to add complex features to the API such as user authentication, data sorting, and pagination. You'll not only learn how to find and use existing plugins from the open-source community but also build your own plugins with custom functionality with the Strapi plugin API and add them to the admin panel. Finally, you'll learn how to deploy the API to Heroku and AWS. By the end of this book, you'll be able to build powerful, scalable, and secure APIs using Strapi.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Section 1: Understanding Strapi
6
Section 2: Diving Deeper into Strapi
11
Section 3: Running Strapi in Production

Summary

In this chapter, we explored best practices and strategies we can use to prepare and run our application in a production environment. We started with database seeding and saw how we can seed the database to have the data required for the initial application setup. The database seeder we created always initializes the database with the required user roles for the API.

Next, we discussed how can we keep permissions in sync across multiple environments, and we created a helper function that will do this job for us. After that, we moved on to media and assets and configured Strapi to use Amazon S3 to save media files instead of saving them on the local hard drive.

Finally, we prepared our API to use the PostgreSQL database in production, and we also tested it out locally with the help of Docker.

In the next chapter, we will explore how to deploy our API to a production environment and we will discuss two deployment strategies: deployment to a software-as-a-service (SaaS...