Book Image

Hands-On RESTful Web Services with TypeScript 3

By : Biharck Muniz Araújo
5 (1)
Book Image

Hands-On RESTful Web Services with TypeScript 3

5 (1)
By: Biharck Muniz Araújo

Overview of this book

In the world of web development, leveraging data is the key to developing comprehensive applications, and RESTful APIs help you to achieve this systematically. This book will guide you in designing and developing web services with the power of TypeScript 3 and Node.js. You'll design REST APIs using best practices for request handling, validation, authentication, and authorization. You'll also understand how to enhance the capabilities of your APIs with ODMs, databases, models and views, as well as asynchronous callbacks. This book will guide you in securing your environment by testing your services and initiating test automation with different testing approaches. Furthermore, you'll get to grips with developing secure, testable, and more efficient code, and be able to scale and deploy TypeScript 3 and Node.js-powered RESTful APIs on cloud platforms such as the Google Cloud Platform. Finally, the book will help you explore microservices and give you an overview of what GraphQL can allow you to do. By the end of this book, you will be able to use RESTful web services to create your APIs for mobile and web apps and other platforms.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Unraveling API Design
5
Section 2: Developing RESTful Web Services
10
Section 3: Enhancing RESTful Web Services
15
Section 4: Extending the Capabilities of RESTful Web Services

Continuous Integration

Continuous Integration (CI) is a development practice that involves developers integrating their code into a shared repository several times per day. Every time that code is sent to a repository, an automated process runs several processes, such as an automated build, testing, and other tasks, helping developers to identify possible problems before going to production.

The practice of integrating regularly allows developers to detect errors sooner than with normal processes, which, of course, means that they can be solved sooner too.

To exemplify this concept, this chapter will walk you through a process that involves Travis CI being triggered when changes are pushed to GitHub. It will then run tests automatically, and, if the tests pass, it will deploy a new version of order-api to Google Cloud Platform:

The Continuous Integration process with Travis CI...