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Keystone Yeoman Generator

The easiest way to get started with KeystoneJS is to use our Yeoman Generator. The rest of this guide will walk you through what the generator has done for you, however this should also give you the context to start a project from scratch if you do not wish to use the generator.

To use the generator, you will need to install yo if you have not.

$ npm install -g yo

Once you have yo, you will need to install the keystone generator.

$ npm install -g generator-keystone

Run yo keystone to create a new project. The generator will ask you questions about your project setup, and then generate the base files for you, before doing an npm install.

Running yo keystone will create most of the parts in guide below, which explains the purpose of the parts you have created.

If you want more information about the generator, it can be found at KeystoneJS Yeoman Generator.

In the guide we’ll also be using Pug for our view templates and LESS for our CSS templates. In your own project you can use any template language you like; see using other template languages (below) for more information.

Our Setup:

keystone.js start script

The first place to look is the keystone.js file. This is the script that will run our keystone website, and is the file we use to set most of the keystone configuration options.

var keystone = require('keystone');
keystone.init({

  'name': 'My Project',

  'less': 'public',
  'static': 'public',

  'views': 'templates/views',
  'view engine': 'pug',

  'auto update': true,
  'mongo': 'mongodb://localhost/my-project',

  'session': true,
  'auth': true,
  'user model': 'User',
  'cookie secret': '(your secret here)'

});

keystone.import('models');

keystone.set('routes', require('./routes'));

keystone.start();

For more information about the options Keystone supports, see the configuration guide.

Project Structure

The yeoman generator comes with our suggested structure for keystone, designed to make it easy to begin development. Below is the folder structure liad out with explanations of each part.

|--lib
|  Custom libraries and other code
|--models
|  Your application's database models
|--public
|  Static files (css, js, images, etc.) that are publicly available
|--routes
|  |--api
|  |  Your application's api controllers
|  |--views
|  |  Your application's view controllers
|  |--index.js
|  |  Initialises your application's routes and views
|  |--middleware.js
|  |  Custom middleware for your routes
|--templates
|  |--includes
|  |  Common .pug includes go in here
|  |--layouts
|  |  Base .pug layouts go in here
|  |--mixins
|  |  Common .pug mixins go in here
|  |--views
|  |  Your application's view templates
|--updates
|  Data population and migration scripts
|--package.json
|  Project configuration for npm
|--keystone.js
|  Main script that starts your application

We also recommend that your application will be simpler to build and maintain if you mirror the internal structure of your routes/views and templates/views directories as much as possible.

This guide assumes you follow the recommendations above, however Keystone doesn’t actually enforce any structure, so you’re free to make changes to suit your application better.

Models

Before you can start your Keystone app, you’ll need some data models.

We’re going to start with the User model, which is special - we need it so that Keystone can do authentication and session management.

models/users.js

This script initialises the User model. It doesn’t need to export anything, but the model must be registered with Keystone.

var keystone = require('keystone');
var Types = keystone.Field.Types;

var User = new keystone.List('User');

User.add({
    name: { type: Types.Name, required: true, index: true },
    email: { type: Types.Email, initial: true, required: true, index: true },
    password: { type: Types.Password, initial: true },
    canAccessKeystone: { type: Boolean, initial: true }
});

User.register();

Authentication and Session Management

For Keystone to provide authentication and session management to your application, it needs to know a few things:

  • The option user model must be the name of the Model that Keystone should look in to find your users. If you use a different model name, be sure to set the option correctly.
  • If you want your application to support session management, set the session option to true. Loading sessions incurs a small overhead, so if your application doesn’t need sessions you can turn this off.
  • Keystone has built-in views for signing in and out. To enable them, set the auth option to true. You can also implement custom signin and signout screens in your applications’ views.
  • Sessions are persisted using an encrypted cookie storing the user’s ID. Make sure you set the cookie secret option to a long, random string.
  • The user model must have a canAccessKeystone property (which can be a virtual method or a stored boolean) that says whether a user can access Keystone’s Admin UI or not. *Note* If you choose to use a virtual method setting the value in mongodb directly will not authenticate correctly. A virtual method is useful when the criteria for access is more complex. See Mongoose virtuals.

More on Data Models

For more information on how to set up your application’s models, and the full documentation for lists and fields, see the database guide.

Routes & Views

Usually, the easiest and clearest way to configure the logic for different routes (or views) in your application is to set up all the bindings single file, then put any common logic (or middleware) in another file.

Then, the controller for each route you bind goes in its own file, organised similarly to the template that renders the view.

Keystone’s importer and Express’s middleware support makes this easy to set up.

Routes and Middleware

routes/index.js

This script imports your route controllers and binds them to URLs.

var keystone = require('keystone');
var middleware = require('./middleware');
var importRoutes = keystone.importer(__dirname);

// Common Middleware
keystone.pre('routes', middleware.initErrorHandlers);
keystone.pre('routes', middleware.initLocals);
keystone.pre('render', middleware.flashMessages);

// Handle 404 errors
keystone.set('404', function(req, res, next) {
    res.notfound();
});

// Handle other errors
keystone.set('500', function(err, req, res, next) {
    var title, message;
    if (err instanceof Error) {
        message = err.message;
        err = err.stack;
    }
    res.err(err, title, message);
});

// Load Routes
var routes = {
    views: importRoutes('./views')
};

// Bind Routes
exports = module.exports = function(app) {

    app.get('/', routes.views.index);

}

Stepping through the route controller index

  • Load keystone, the middleware.js file (below), and create an importer for the current directory
  • Bind middleware (below) that - Initialises our basic error handlers - Initialises common local variables for our view templates - Retrieves flash messages from session before the view template is rendered
  • Tell Keystone how to handle 404 and 500 errors
  • Use the importer to load all the route controllers in the /routes/views directory
  • Export a method that binds the index route controller to GET requests on the root url / - The app argument to this method our express app, so anything you can do binding routes in express, you can do here.
  • Additional route controllers that you add to your app should be added using app.get, app.post or app.all under your root controller.

Common Route Middleware

Putting your common middleware in a separate routes/middleware.js file keeps your route index nice and clean. If your middleware file gets too big, it’s a good idea to restructure any significant functionality into custom modules in your projects /lib folder.

routes/middleware.js This script includes common middleware for your application routes

var _ = require('lodash');

/**
    Initialises the standard view locals.
    Include anything that should be initialised before route controllers are executed.
*/
exports.initLocals = function(req, res, next) {

    var locals = res.locals;

    locals.user = req.user;

    // Add your own local variables here

    next();

};

/**
    Inits the error handler functions into `res`
*/
exports.initErrorHandlers = function(req, res, next) {

    res.err = function(err, title, message) {
        res.status(500).render('errors/500', {
            err: err,
            errorTitle: title,
            errorMsg: message
        });
    }

    res.notfound = function(title, message) {
        res.status(404).render('errors/404', {
            errorTitle: title,
            errorMsg: message
        });
    }

    next();

};

/**
    Fetches and clears the flashMessages before a view is rendered
*/
exports.flashMessages = function(req, res, next) {

    var flashMessages = {
        info: req.flash('info'),
        success: req.flash('success'),
        warning: req.flash('warning'),
        error: req.flash('error')
    };

    res.locals.messages = _.some(flashMessages, function(msgs) { return msgs.length }) ? flashMessages : false;

    next();

};

Middleware functions

Keystone expects middleware functions to accept the following arguments:

  • req - an express request object
  • res - an express response object
  • next - the method to call when the middleware has finished running (including any internal callbacks)

Flash message support (no, not that flash)

Keystone includes support for ‘flashing’ messages to your visitors via session. The default setup above supports four categories, all of which can be styled differently:

  • info
  • success
  • warning
  • error

You can easily support other types of messages by updating your middleware and the .pug template that renders them (which we’ll get to below).

To use flash messages in your route controllers, do this:

req.flash('info', 'Some information!');

Messages use session so they survive redirects, and will only be displayed to the user once, making them perfect for status messages (e.g. “Your changes have been saved”) or form validation (e.g. “Please enter a valid email address”).

Some Keystone features (such as the Update Handler) can automatically generate flash messages for you, and expect the categories above to be available.

Templates

Now, for the template our route will render. The render method looks in the views directory specified in our keystone.js, which we set to /templates/views.

The generator has several options, however we are going to use pug. To learn more about Pug, visit pugjs.org.

Pug comes with some great features to simplify templates - including using layouts that define regions. We’re going to use a layout called ../templates/layouts/base.pug, which is included on the first line of the file above:

templates/layouts/base.pug The base layout for our view templates

include ../mixins/flash-messages

doctype html
html
    head
        meta(charset="utf-8")
        meta(name="viewport", content="initial-scale=1.0,user-scalable=no,maximum-scale=1,width=device-width")

        title= title || 'My Keystone Website'
        link(href="/styles/site.min.css", rel="stylesheet")

        block css
        block head
    body

        #header My Keystone Website

        #body

            block intro

            +flash-messages(messages)

            block content

        #footer Powered by <a href='http://keystonejs.com', target='_blank'>KeystoneJS</a>.

    block js

We’re also have a mixin file templates/mixins/flash-messages.pug which we can add to include the flash-messages. Including mixins in your layout or view templates is a great way to keep your layout and view files clean, and re-use mixins across multiple views.

templates/mixins/flash-messages.pug Our flash-messages mixin

mixin flash-messages(messages)
    if messages
        #flash-messages.container
            each message in messages.info
                +flash-message(message, 'info')
            each message in messages.success
                +flash-message(message, 'success')
            each message in messages.warning
                +flash-message(message, 'warning')
            each message in messages.error
                +flash-message(message, 'danger')

mixin flash-message(message, type)
    div(class='alert alert-' + type)
        if utils.isObject(message)
            if message.title
                h4= message.title
            if message.detail
                p= message.detail
            if message.list
                ul
                    each item in message.list
                        li= item
        else
            = message

Using other template languages

KeystoneJS supports any template language supported by express.

Use the view engine option to specify the template language you want to use.

If you want to use a custom template engine, set the custom engine option as well. For instance, ejs is supported by express by default, but you might want to use ejs.locals as a template engine in order to benefit from get extensions.

// Modified web.js to use the ejs-locals custom template engine.
var keystone = require('keystone');
var engine   = require('ejs-locals');
keystone.init({
  ...
  'custom engine': engine,
  'view engine': 'ejs',
  ...
});

Public Assets

You’ll want to add your own css, javascript, images and other files to your project. In the examples above, we’re including /styles/site.min.css. If you are using less, add public/styles/site.less to your project. We can leave it blank for now, but note keystone will generate a site.min.css on run time.

Keystone will serve any static assets you place in the public directory. This path is specified in keystone.js by the static option.

It will also automatically generate .css or compressed .min.css files when a corresponding .less file is found in the public folder, as specified in keystone.js by the less option. For more information on LESS, see lesscss.org.

Writing Updates

To do this, we’re going to create an update script, which Keystone will automatically run before starting the web server.

Keystone’s automatic update functionality is enabled in keystone.js by the auto update option.

When the option is set to true, Keystone will scan the updates directory for .js files, each of which should export a method accepting a single argument:

  • next - the method to call when the update has finished running (including any internal callbacks)

Updates are ordered using Semantic Versioning, and Keystone will only run them once (successfully executed updates are stored in your database, in a collection called app_updates).

Update file names should match the pattern x.x.x-description.js - anything after the first hyphen is ignored, so you can describe the update in the filename.

So to automatically add a new Admin User when your app first launches, you have a updates/0.0.1-admin.js file:

updates/0.0.1-admin.js Update script to add the first admin (change to your own name, email and password)

var keystone = require('keystone');
var User = keystone.list('User');

exports = module.exports = function(done) {

    new User.model({
        name: { first: 'Admin', last: 'User' },
        email: 'admin@keystonejs.com',
        password: 'admin',
        canAccessKeystone: true
    }).save(done);

};

NOTE You probably don’t want to store your real password in the code, so it’s a good idea to set the default password to something simple, then sign in and change it using Keystone’s Admin UI after you start your app for the first time.

Starting Keystone

Now you’re ready to run your application, so execute the following in your project’s main folder:

npm start

Keystone will automatically apply the update, and then start a web server on the default port, 3000.

To see your home page, point your browser at localhost:3000. You should see our Hello World! message.

To sign in to Keystone’s Admin UI, go to localhost:3000/keystone. Use the email and password you put in the update script above to sign in, and you’ll be redirected to Keystone’s home page.

Next Steps

… you’re done! Well, not really. It’s time to start building your app now. For more information on list options and the field types Keystone supports, browse the database guide.

You should also Follow @KeystoneJS on Twitter for news and updates, Star KeystoneJS on GitHub, and discuss this guide (or anything KeystoneJS related) on the KeystoneJS Google Group.

Enjoy using KeystoneJS!