Foxx CLI Details
Install
foxx-cli runs on Node.js and can be installed with yarn:
yarn global add foxx-cli
Or with npm:
npm install --global foxx-cli
Note: using yarn you can also run foxx-cli from your project’s
devDependencies
:
yarn add --dev foxx-cli
yarn foxx help
If you’re using a recent version of npm you can also use npx:
npx -p foxx-cli foxx help
Usage
After you’ve installed foxx-cli, you should be able to use the foxx
program. You can learn more about the different commands foxx
supports by
using the --help
flag.
foxx --help
You can also use the --help
flag with commands to learn more about them, e.g.:
foxx install --help # Help for the "install" command
foxx server --help # Help for the "server" command
foxx server list --help # Subcommands are supported, too
If you have no prior knowledge of Foxx, you can get started by
installing ArangoDB locally
and then creating a new Foxx service in the current directory using the init
command:
foxx init -i # answer the interactive questions
If you want an example, you can also let init
create an example service for you:
foxx init -e # create an example service please
You can also just use foxx init
to create a minimal service without the example code.
You can inspect the files created by the program and tweak them as necessary.
Once you’re ready, install the service at a mount path using the install
command:
foxx install /hello-foxx # installs the current directory
You should then be able to view the installed service in your browser at the following URL:
http://localhost:8529/_db/_system/hello-foxx
If you continue to work on your Foxx service and want to upgrade the installed
version with your local changes use the upgrade
command to do so.
foxx upgrade /hello-foxx # upgrades the server with the current directory
Special files
manifest.json
The manifest.json
or manifest file contains a service’s meta-information.
See the Foxx reference documentation.
The directory containing a service’s manifest.json
file is called the root
directory of the service.
foxxignore
If you want to exclude files from the service bundle that will uploaded to
ArangoDB you can create a file called .foxxignore
in the root directory of
your service. Each line should specify one pattern you wish to ignore:
-
Patterns starting with
!
will be treated as an explicit whitelist. Paths matching these patterns will not be ignored even if they would match any of the other patterns.Example:
!index.js
will override any pattern matching a file calledindex.js
. -
Patterns starting with
/
will only match paths relative to the service’s root directory.Example:
/package.json
will not matchnode_modules/joi/package.json
. -
Patterns ending with
/
will match a directory and any files inside of it.Example:
node_modules/
will exclude allnode_modules
directories and all of their contents. -
A single
*
(glob) will match zero or more characters (even dots) in a file or directory name.Example:
.*
will match any files and directories with a name starting with a dot. -
A double
**
(globstar) will match zero or more levels of nesting.Example:
hello/**/world
will matchhello/world
,hello/foo/world
,hello/foo/bar/world
, and so on. -
Patterns starting with
#
are considered comments and will be ignored.
For more details on the pattern matching behavior, see the documentation of the
minimatch module (with the dot
flag
enabled).
If no .foxxignore
file is present in the service’s root directory the
following patterns will be ignored automatically: .git/
, .svn/
, .hg/
,
*.swp
, .DS_Store
.
Should you need to include files that match these patterns for some reason, you
can override this list by creating an empty .foxxignore
file.
You can also create a .foxxignore
file in the current directory using the
ignore
command:
foxx ignore # creates a file pre-populated with the defaults
foxx ignore --force # creates an empty file
To add individual patterns to the .foxxignore
file just pass them as
additional arguments:
foxx ignore .git/ .svn/ # you can pass multiple patterns at once
foxx ignore '*.swp' # make sure to escape special characters
foxxrc
If you define servers using the server
commands, a .foxxrc
file will be
created in your $HOME
directory, which is typically one of the following
paths:
-
/home/$USER
on Linux -
/Users/$USER
on macOS -
C:\Users\$USER
on Windows
This file contains sections for each server which may contain server credentials should you decide to save them.