Book Image

Deno Web Development

By : Alexandre Portela dos Santos
Book Image

Deno Web Development

By: Alexandre Portela dos Santos

Overview of this book

Deno is a JavaScript and TypeScript runtime with secure defaults and a great developer experience. With Deno Web Development, you'll learn all about Deno's primitives, its principles, and how you can use them to build real-world applications. The book is divided into three main sections: an introduction to Deno, building an API from scratch, and testing and deploying a Deno application. The book starts by getting you up to speed with Deno's runtime and the reason why it was developed. You'll explore some of the concepts introduced by Node, why many of them transitioned into Deno, and why new features were introduced. After understanding Deno and why it was created, you will start to experiment with Deno, exploring the toolchain and writing simple scripts and CLI applications. As you progress to the second section, you will create a simple web application and then add more features to it. This application will evolve from a simple 'hello world' API to a web application connected to the database, with users, authentication, and a JavaScript client. In the third section, the book will take you through topics such as dependency management, configuration and testing, finishing with an application deployed in a cloud environment. By the end of this web development book, you will become comfortable with using Deno to create, maintain, and deploy secure and reliable web applications.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting Familiar with Deno
5
Section 2: Building an Application
10
Section 3: Testing and Deploying

Chapter 7: HTTPS, Extracting Configuration, and Deno in the Browser

In the previous chapter, we pretty much wrapped up our application's features. We added authorization and persistence, ending up with an application connected to a MongoDB instance. In this chapter, we'll focus on some known best practices that are standard in production applications: basic security practices and dealing with configuration.

First, we'll add a couple of basic security features to our application programming interface (API), starting with Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) protection, to enable the filtering of requests based on their origin. Then, we'll learn how to enable HyperText Transfer Protocol Secure (HTTPS) in our application so that it supports encrypted connections. This will allow users to perform requests to the API using a secure connection.

Until now, we've used a few secret values, but we weren't concerned about having them in the code. In this chapter...