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Quick start ​

Alright then! Let's learn Feathers. In this quick start guide we'll create our first Feathers app, an API server and a simple website to use it. You'll see how easy it is to get started with Feathers in just a single file without additional boilerplate or tooling. If you want to jump right into creating a complete application you can go to the Creating An App chapter.

Getting started

Feathers works with all currently active NodeJS releases. All guides are assuming the languages features from the most current stable NodeJS release which you can get from the NodeJS website.

tip

You can follow this guide on your own computer in the terminal or try the steps out live without installing anything in the Feathers Quick Start on Stackblitz.

After successful installation, the node and npm commands should be available on the terminal:

node --version
npm --version

Important

Running NodeJS and npm should not require admin or root privileges.

Let's create a new folder for our application:

sh
mkdir feathers-basics
cd feathers-basics

Since any Feathers application is a Node application, we can create a default package.json using npm:

sh
npm init --yes
# Install TypeScript and its NodeJS wrapper
npm i typescript ts-node @types/node --save-dev
# Also initialize a TS configuration file that uses modern JavaScript
npx tsc --init --target es2020

Installing Feathers ​

Feathers can be installed like any other Node module by installing the @feathersjs/feathers package through npm. The same package can also be used with module loaders like Vite, Webpack, and in React Native.

sh
npm install @feathersjs/feathers --save

note

All Feathers core modules are in the @feathersjs namespace.

Our first app ​

Now we can create a Feathers application with a simple messages service that allows us to create new messages and find all existing ones.

Create a file called app.ts with the following content:

ts
import { feathers } from '@feathersjs/feathers'

// This is the interface for the message data
interface Message {
  id?: number
  text: string
}

// A messages service that allows us to create new
// and return all existing messages
class MessageService {
  messages: Message[] = []

  async find() {
    // Just return all our messages
    return this.messages
  }

  async create(data: Pick<Message, 'text'>) {
    // The new message is the data text with a unique identifier added
    // using the messages length since it changes whenever we add one
    const message: Message = {
      id: this.messages.length,
      text: data.text
    }

    // Add new message to the list
    this.messages.push(message)

    return message
  }
}

// This tells TypeScript what services we are registering
type ServiceTypes = {
  messages: MessageService
}

const app = feathers<ServiceTypes>()

// Register the message service on the Feathers application
app.use('messages', new MessageService())

// Log every time a new message has been created
app.service('messages').on('created', (message: Message) => {
  console.log('A new message has been created', message)
})

// A function that creates messages and then logs
// all existing messages on the service
const main = async () => {
  // Create a new message on our message service
  await app.service('messages').create({
    text: 'Hello Feathers'
  })

  // And another one
  await app.service('messages').create({
    text: 'Hello again'
  })

  // Find all existing messages
  const messages = await app.service('messages').find()

  console.log('All messages', messages)
}

main()

We can run it with

sh
npx ts-node app.ts

Try it out live >

We will see something like this in the terminal:

sh
A new message has been created { id: 0, text: 'Hello Feathers' }
A new message has been created { id: 1, text: 'Hello again' }
All messages [ { id: 0, text: 'Hello Feathers' },
  { id: 1, text: 'Hello again' } ]

Here we implemented only find and create, but a service can also have a few other methods, specifically get, update, patch and remove. We will learn more about service methods and events throughout this guide, but this sums up some of the most important concepts upon which Feathers is built.

An API Server ​

So far we've created a Feathers application, a message service, and are listening to events. However, this is only a simple NodeJS script that prints some output and then exits. What we really want is to host it as an API server. This is where Feathers transports come in.

A transport takes a service like the one we created above and turns it into a server that other clients can talk to, like a website or mobile application.

In the following example we will take our existing service and use:

  • @feathersjs/koa which uses KoaJS to automatically turn our services into a REST API
  • @feathersjs/socketio which uses Socket.io to do the same as a WebSocket, real-time API (as we will see in a bit this is where the created event we saw above comes in handy).

Run:

sh
npm install @feathersjs/socketio @feathersjs/koa --save

Then update app.ts with the following content:

ts
import { feathers } from '@feathersjs/feathers'
import { koa, rest, bodyParser, errorHandler, serveStatic } from '@feathersjs/koa'
import socketio from '@feathersjs/socketio'

// This is the interface for the message data
interface Message {
  id?: number
  text: string
}

// A messages service that allows us to create new
// and return all existing messages
class MessageService {
  messages: Message[] = []

  async find() {
    // Just return all our messages
    return this.messages
  }

  async create(data: Pick<Message, 'text'>) {
    // The new message is the data text with a unique identifier added
    // using the messages length since it changes whenever we add one
    const message: Message = {
      id: this.messages.length,
      text: data.text
    }

    // Add new message to the list
    this.messages.push(message)

    return message
  }
}

// This tells TypeScript what services we are registering
type ServiceTypes = {
  messages: MessageService
}

// Creates an KoaJS compatible Feathers application
const app = koa<ServiceTypes>(feathers())

// Use the current folder for static file hosting
app.use(serveStatic('.'))
// Register the error handle
app.use(errorHandler())
// Parse JSON request bodies
app.use(bodyParser())

// Register REST service handler
app.configure(rest())
// Configure Socket.io real-time APIs
app.configure(socketio())
// Register our messages service
app.use('messages', new MessageService())

// Add any new real-time connection to the `everybody` channel
app.on('connection', (connection) => app.channel('everybody').join(connection))
// Publish all events to the `everybody` channel
app.publish((_data) => app.channel('everybody'))

// Start the server
app
  .listen(3030)
  .then(() => console.log('Feathers server listening on localhost:3030'))

// For good measure let's create a message
// So our API doesn't look so empty
app.service('messages').create({
  text: 'Hello world from the server'
})

Try it out live >

We can start the server with

sh
npx ts-node app.ts

info

The server will stay running until you stop it by pressing Control + C in the terminal.

And in the browser visit

http://localhost:3030/messages

to see an array with the one message we created on the server.

tip

The built-in JSON viewer in Firefox or a browser plugin like JSON viewer for Chrome makes it nicer to view JSON responses in the browser.

This is the basic setup of a Feathers API server.

  • The app.use calls probably look familiar if you have used something like Koa or Express before.
  • app.configure calls set up the Feathers transport to host the API.
  • app.on('connection') and app.publish are used to set up event channels, which send real-time events to the proper clients (everybody that is connected to our server in this case). You can learn more about the channels API after finishing this guide.

In the browser ​

Now we can look at one of the really cool features of Feathers: It works the same in a web browser! This means that we could take our first app example from above and run it just the same in a website. Since we already have a server running, however, let's go a step further and create a Feathers app that talks to our messages service on the server using a real-time Socket.io connection.

In the same folder, add the following index.html page:

html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
  <head>
    <meta charset="UTF-8" />
    <title>Feathers Example</title>
    <link href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/daisyui@2.46.1/dist/full.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
    <link
      href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/tailwindcss@2.2/dist/tailwind.min.css"
      rel="stylesheet"
      type="text/css"
    />
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://feathersjs.com/feathers-chat.css" />
  </head>
  <body data-theme="dracula">
    <main id="main" class="p-8">
      <h1 class="font-medium leading-tight text-5xl mt-0 mb-2">Welcome to Feathers</h1>

      <div class="form-control w-full py-2">
        <form class="input-group overflow-hidden" onsubmit="sendMessage(event)">
          <input name="message" id="message-text" type="text" class="input input-bordered w-full" />
          <button type="submit" class="btn">Send</button>
        </form>
      </div>
      <h2 class="pt-1 pb-2 text-lg">Messages</h2>
    </main>

    <script src="//unpkg.com/@feathersjs/client@^5.0.0/dist/feathers.js"></script>
    <script src="/socket.io/socket.io.js"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript">
      // Set up socket.io
      const socket = io('http://localhost:3030')
      // Initialize a Feathers app
      const app = feathers()

      // Register socket.io to talk to our server
      app.configure(feathers.socketio(socket))

      // Form submission handler that sends a new message
      async function sendMessage(event) {
        const messageInput = document.getElementById('message-text')

        event.preventDefault()

        // Create a new message with the input field value
        await app.service('messages').create({
          text: messageInput.value
        })

        messageInput.value = ''
      }

      // Renders a single message on the page
      function addMessage(message) {
        document.getElementById('main').innerHTML += `<div class="chat chat-start">
          <div class="chat-bubble">${message.text}</div>
        </div>`
      }

      const main = async () => {
        // Find all existing messages
        const messages = await app.service('messages').find()

        // Add existing messages to the list
        messages.forEach(addMessage)

        // Add any newly created message to the list in real-time
        app.service('messages').on('created', addMessage)
      }

      main()
    </script>
  </body>
</html>

Try it out live >

Now in the browser if you go to

http://localhost:3030

you will see a simple website that allows creating new messages. It is possible to open the page in two tabs and see new messages show up on either side in real-time. You can verify that the messages got created by visiting

http://localhost:3030/messages

You'll see the JSON response including all current messages.

What's next? ​

In this chapter we created our first Feathers application and a service that allows creating new messages, storing them in memory, and retrieving them. We then hosted that service as a REST and real-time API server and used Feathers in the browser to connect to that server and create a website that can send new messages and show all existing messages in real-time.

Even though we are using just NodeJS and Feathers from scratch without any additional tools, we didn't write a lot of code. In the next chapter we will look at the Feathers CLI which can create a similar Feathers application with a recommended file structure, models, database connections, authentication and more.

Released under the MIT License.