TV is an interactive debug console plugin for hapi
Lead Maintainer: Oscar A. Funes Martinez
TV is a simple web page in which developers can view server logs for their requests. Optionally, they can also filter the server logs to just their requests by attaching a unique client id to each request. The server will use WebSocket to stream the logs to the web application in real-time.
Here's what it looks like in action:
Using TV in Your Application
To enable TV in a hapi application, install tv and register it. Below is an example of registering the tv plugin:
const Hapi = require('hapi');
const Tv = require('tv');
const server = new Hapi.Server();
server.register(Tv, (err) => {
if (err) {
throw err;
}
server.start();
});
In applications using multiple server instances, only one server can enable the debug interface using the default port.
Options
Below are the options available to be passed into the tv plugin:
-
host
- the public hostname or IP address. Used only to setserver.info.host
andserver.info.uri
. Deaults to hostname and if not available tolocalhost
(see hapinew Server()
). -
address
- the hostname of IP address the WebSocket connection will bind to. Defaults tohost
if present otherwise0.0.0.0
(see hapinew Server()
). -
port
- the port used by the WebSocket connection. Defaults to 0 and therefore an ephemeral port (see hapinew Server()
). -
endpoint
- the debug console request path added to the server routes. Defaults to '/debug/console'. -
queryKey
- the name or the request query parameter used to mark requests being debugged. Defaults to debug. -
template
- the name of the template to use for the debug console. Defaults to index. -
authenticateEndpoint
- set this to true to use auth schemes for TVs main- and file delivering routes (defaults to false)
Below is an example of registering the tv plugin with some options:
const Hapi = require('hapi');
const Tv = require('tv');
const options = { endpoint: '/awesome' };
const server = new Hapi.Server();
server.register({ register: Tv, options: options }, function (err) {
...
});