A simple backend to help you get up and running with mock data for flight data, travel info, and reservations to help you get hacking on the next big thing for AmericanAirlines.
Click the "Deploy to Heroku" button above to create an instance of the application in Heroku. You can use this instance for web and native app projects. After deploying, open the app and you will be redirected to the Swagger docs.
Note: if you plan to make changes to the backend, fork this repo before deploying to Heroku!
If you would like to edit/modify data in your mLab MongoDB instance, navigate to your project's dashboard and click the "mLab MongoDB" link. From their website, you can view collections, search for documents, and add/edit documents.
If you'd like to connect to your DB with a Mongo Client (Like Robo 3T), navigate to your Heroku instance's settings tab, click "Reveal Config Vars" and then grab your credentials and config values from the URL with the following format: mongodb://[User]:[Pass]@[Hostname]:[Port]/[DB Name]
.
- Run
npm install
to download all project devDependencies - Install MongoDB
If you would like to customize the port, duplicate .env.sample
and modify the value for PORT
. Changes to this file require the app to be restarted
Before the app can be run locally, edit api/swagger/swagger.yml
and uncomment http
under schemes
.
After installing all dependencies and starting the MongoDB daemon (mongod --dbpath=./data
), simply run npm start
to start the application.
To run the app in dev, start the MongoDB daemon (mongod --dbpath=./data
) then run npm run dev
. This will start the app using Nodemon, which will restart the server after changes.
To populate the DB with mock data (users, flights, airports), either use npm run mock
or navigate to SwaggerUI (/docs) and execute the /mock
post request. Note: mock data population can take some time, especially if you're running in Heroku. Running npm run mock
locally, from Heroku's UI, or from the Heroku CLI will let you monitor progress. If you start the process from Swagger, you can see progress by navigating to your app's dashboard and then selecting "View Logs" from the "More" dropdown.
Starting the app will let you investigate the API via Swagger by utilizing the interactive methods found at /docs
. You can examine different endpoints to see their request/response structure and retrieve/create data.
To add new endpoints or modify existing ones, use Swagger Editor (run swagger project edit
from the project root after installing Swagger globally with npm install swagger -g
) to modify api/swagger/swagger.yml
. To execute commands from the Swagger Editor, uncomment the host
declaration under basePath
.
Find a bug? Have a feature you'd like to request? See our Contributing Guidelines to get started.