docker-json-server
JSON Server provides REST API mocking based on plain JSON. This is a docker image that eases setup.
Usage
This docker image is available as a trusted build on the docker index, so there's no setup required. Using this image for the first time will start a download automatically. Further runs will be immediate, as the image will be cached locally.
The recommended way to run this container looks like this:
$ docker run -d -p 80:80 -v /home/user/articles.json:/data/db.json clue/json-server
The above example exposes the JSON Server REST API on port 80, so that you can now browse to:
http://localhost/
This is a rather common setup following docker's conventions:
-d
will run a detached instance in the background-p {OutsidePort}:80
will bind the webserver to the given outside port-v {AbsolutePathToJsonFile}:/data/db.json
should be passed to mount the given JSON file into the containerclue/json-server
the name of this docker image
Help
You can supply any number of JSON Server arguments that will be passed through unmodified.
$ docker run -it --rm clue/json-server --help
JSON source
If you mount a file to /data/db.json
(as in the above example),
it will automatically be used as the plain JSON data source file.
A sample file could look like this:
{
"posts": [
{ "id": 1, "body": "foo" },
{ "id": 2, "body": "bar" }
],
"comments": [
{ "id": 1, "body": "baz", "postId": 1 },
{ "id": 2, "body": "qux", "postId": 2 }
]
}
JS seed file
If you mount a file to /data/file.js
,
it will automatically be used as a JS seed file.
JSON Server expects JS files to export a function that returns an object. Seed files are useful if you need to programmaticaly create a lot of data.
A sample file could look like this:
module.exports = function() {
var data = {};
data.posts = [];
data.posts.push({ id: 1, body: 'foo' });
//...
return data;
}