fastify-express
pino
fastify-express | pino | |
---|---|---|
9 | 38 | |
227 | 13,297 | |
0.4% | 1.3% | |
6.0 | 8.6 | |
18 days ago | 5 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
fastify-express
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Migrate Your Express Application to Fastify
As mentioned in part 2 of this series, using the @fastify/express plugin is the quickest way to get your existing Express application working with Fastify. The plugin adds full Express compatibility to Fastify so that you can easily use any Express middleware — or even an entire Express application — with your Fastify instance, and it will just work with no changes required.
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Advanced Fastify: Hooks, Middleware, and Decorators
Fastify also supports Express-style middleware but it requires you to install an external plugin such as @fastify/express or @fastify/middie. This eases migration from Express to Fastify, but it should not be used in greenfield projects in favor of hooks. Note that in many cases, you can find a native Fastify plugin that provides the same functionality as Express middleware.
- Help Converting Express Routes/Middleware/Controllers to Fastify
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Vitejs SSR (Fastify, Vuejs)
Fastify Express
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Do big companies use Express.js?
It's correct that fastify doesn't support middleware out of the box. But Nestjs and its fastify adapter support it. I think they are using this package: https://github.com/fastify/fastify-express
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From Express to Fastify in Node.js
I've found that the fastify-express plugin makes migrating from Express to Fastify much easier: https://github.com/fastify/fastify-express. It has full support for Express middleware and routes, allowing you to migrate things in stages if you prefer.
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Are you using promises and async / await safely in Node.js?
An excellent alternative to Express or Restify is the Fastify framework. It has full native support for async code and is in active development. There is also a fastify-express plugin available which can help ease your migration path away from Express.
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Created my first library in typescript which gives express router a bit more juice
It seems like most of the important plugins have been built and available in the fastify ecosystem. Also with https://github.com/fastify/fastify-express you can use all the express middleware, and actually wrap your entire express application in fastify (obviously just cause you can, not cause you should)
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Why you should drop ExpressJS in 2021
This framework is well maintained, and provides an official compatibility layer for Express to help you migrate your application.
pino
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Migrate Your Express Application to Fastify
Learn more about logging in Fastify and how to customize the Pino logger.
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Logs monitoring with Loki, Node.js and Fastify.js
The Fastify framework includes the Pino logger by default (a really great logger with lots of cool features that doesn't compromise on performance). The framework itself allows a lot of really cool stuff, like controlling the level of logs at runtime.
- Advice on Node Logging to Google Cloud Platform
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Getting Started with Fastify for Node.js
Fastify provides a built-in logging mechanism based on Pino that allows you to capture various events in your applications. Once enabled, Fastify logs all incoming requests to the server and errors that occur while processing said requests. It also provides a convenient way to log custom messages through the log() method on the Fastify instance or the request object.
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10 Powerful Node.js Libraries Every Developer Should Know About
1. pino
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Node.js 20 Released: Experimental Perms, new V8, and Single Executable Apps
Vitest is for frontend. Jest is not good for backend (I don’t like it for frontend either), take a look at this issue.
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What is the preferred stack for managing medium to large-size logs?
Have a look at https://github.com/pinojs/pino
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Logging in your API
NodeJS -> Pino, Winston, Bunyan, Npmlog, e.t.c.
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Logging practices
Use a configurable logger like pino
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Logging - correlationId - headers - how?
Using pino as a logger, for every request on the _server_ , a unique ID generated client side in the headers, so a log may be something like:
What are some alternatives?
Restify - The future of Node.js REST development
winston - A logger for just about everything.
express-to-fastify-migration - Example applications demonstrating a migration from Express to Fastify.
Bunyan - a simple and fast JSON logging module for node.js services
fastify-openapi-glue - A plugin for the Fastify webserver to autogenerate a Fastify configuration based on a OpenApi(v2/v3) specification.
console-log-level - The most simple logger imaginable
vite-plugin-pages - File system based route generator for ⚡️Vite
log4js-node - A port of log4js to node.js
express-async-errors - async/await support for ExpressJS
winston-daily-rotate-file - A transport for winston which logs to a rotating file each day.
AdonisJs Framework - AdonisJS is a TypeScript-first web framework for building web apps and API servers. It comes with support for testing, modern tooling, an ecosystem of official packages, and more.
opentelemetry-specification - Specifications for OpenTelemetry