Book Image

Node Cookbook

By : David Mark Clements
Book Image

Node Cookbook

By: David Mark Clements

Overview of this book

The principles of asynchronous event-driven programming are perfect for today's web, where efficient real-time applications and scalability are at the forefront. Server-side JavaScript has been here since the 90's but Node got it right. With a thriving community and interest from Internet giants, it could be the PHP of tomorrow. "Node Cookbook" shows you how to transfer your JavaScript skills to server side programming. With simple examples and supporting code, "Node Cookbook" talks you through various server side scenarios often saving you time, effort, and trouble by demonstrating best practices and showing you how to avoid security faux pas. Beginning with making your own web server, the practical recipes in this cookbook are designed to smoothly progress you to making full web applications, command line applications, and Node modules. Node Cookbook takes you through interfacing with various database backends such as MySQL, MongoDB and Redis, working with web sockets, and interfacing with network protocols, such as SMTP. Additionally, there are recipes on correctly performing heavy computations, security implementations, writing, your own Node modules and different ways to take your apps live.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Node Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Deploying a module to npm


Now that we've created a module, we can share it with the rest of the world using the same integrated tool that we retrieve modules with: npm.

Getting ready

Before we can deploy to npm we need to make a package.json file, so let's do that for our module. In mp3dat, we'll create package.json and add the following code:

{
"author": "David Mark Clements <[email protected]> (http://davidmarkclements.com)",
"name": "mp3dat",
"description": "A simple MP3 parser that returns stat infos in a similar style to fs.stat for MP3 files or streams. (MPEG-1 compatible only)",
"version": "0.0.1",
"homepage": "http://nodecookbook.com/mp3dat",
"repository": {
"type": "git",
"url": "git://github.com/davidmarkclements/mp3dat.git"
},
"main": "./lib/index.js",
"scripts": {
"test": "node test"
},
"engines": {
"node": "~0.6.13"
},
"dependencies": {},
"devDependencies": {}
}

We can of course insert our own name and the name of the package. Another way to create a package...