Today we will look into a very handy tool json-server, which can give you a mock rest json server in a minute. In a regular enterprise application, you work with many teams and third party APIs. Imagine you have to call a third party restful web service that will get you JSON data to work on. You are in a tight schedule, so you can’t wait for them to finish their work and then start your own. If you wish to have a mockup Rest Web service in place to get the demo data for you, then json-server is the tool you are looking for.
JSON Server is a Node Module that you can use to create demo rest json webservice in less than a minute. All you need is a JSON file for sample data.
You should have NPM installed on your machine. If not, then refer this post to install NPM. Below shows the one liner command to install json-server
with output on my machine.
$ npm install -g json-server
npm WARN deprecated graceful-fs@3.0.8: graceful-fs v3.0.0 and before will fail on node releases >= v7.0. Please update to graceful-fs@^4.0.0 as soon as possible. Use 'npm ls graceful-fs' to find it in the tree.
/usr/local/bin/json-server -> /usr/local/lib/node_modules/json-server/bin/index.js
- bytes@2.3.0 node_modules/json-server/node_modules/raw-body/node_modules/bytes
/usr/local/lib
└─┬ json-server@0.8.10
├─┬ body-parser@1.15.1
│ └── bytes@2.3.0
├─┬ compression@1.6.1
│ └── bytes@2.2.0
├─┬ lowdb@0.10.3
│ └─┬ steno@0.4.4
│ └── graceful-fs@4.1.4
├─┬ update-notifier@0.5.0
│ └─┬ configstore@1.4.0
│ ├── graceful-fs@4.1.4
│ └─┬ write-file-atomic@1.1.4
│ └── graceful-fs@4.1.4
└─┬ yargs@4.7.0
├─┬ pkg-conf@1.1.2
│ └─┬ load-json-file@1.1.0
│ └── graceful-fs@4.1.4
└─┬ read-pkg-up@1.0.1
└─┬ read-pkg@1.1.0
└─┬ path-type@1.1.0
└── graceful-fs@4.1.4
$
$ json-server -v
0.8.10
$ json-server -help
/usr/local/bin/json-server [options] <source>
Options:
--config, -c Path to config file [default: "json-server.json"]
--port, -p Set port [default: 3000]
--host, -H Set host [default: "0.0.0.0"]
--watch, -w Watch file(s) [boolean]
--routes, -r Path to routes file
--static, -s Set static files directory
--read-only, --ro Allow only GET requests [boolean]
--no-cors, --nc Disable Cross-Origin Resource Sharing [boolean]
--no-gzip, --ng Disable GZIP Content-Encoding [boolean]
--snapshots, -S Set snapshots directory [default: "."]
--delay, -d Add delay to responses (ms)
--id, -i Set database id property (e.g. _id) [default: "id"]
--quiet, -q Suppress log messages from output [boolean]
$
Now it’s time to start our json-server. Below is a sample file with my employees json data.
{
"employees": [
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Pankaj",
"salary": "10000"
},
{
"name": "David",
"salary": "5000",
"id": 2
}
]
}
Important point here is the name of array i.e employees. JSON server will create the REST APIs based on this. Let’s start our json-server with above file.
$ json-server --watch db.json
\{^_^}/ hi!
Loading db.json
Done
Resources
https://localhost:3000/employees
Home
https://localhost:3000
Type s + enter at any time to create a snapshot of the database
Watching...
Don’t close this terminal, otherwise it will kill the json-server. Below are the sample CRUD requests and responses.
$ curl -X GET -H "Content-Type: application/json" "https://localhost:3000/employees"
[
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Pankaj",
"salary": "10000"
},
{
"name": "David",
"salary": "5000",
"id": 2
}
]
$
$ curl -X GET -H "Content-Type: application/json" "https://localhost:3000/employees/1"
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Pankaj",
"salary": "10000"
}
$
$ curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"name": "Lisa","salary": "2000"}' "https://localhost:3000/employees"
{
"name": "Lisa",
"salary": 2000,
"id": 3
}
$
$ curl -XPUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"name": "Lisa", "salary": "8000"}' "https://localhost:3000/employees/3"
{
"name": "Lisa",
"salary": 8000,
"id": 3
}
$
$ curl -X DELETE -H "Content-Type: application/json" "https://localhost:3000/employees/2"
{}
$ curl -GET -H "Content-Type: application/json" "https://localhost:3000/employees"
[
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Pankaj",
"salary": "10000"
},
{
"name": "Lisa",
"salary": 8000,
"id": 3
}
]
$
As you can see that with a simple JSON, json-server creates demo APIs for us to use. Note that all the PUT, POST, DELETE requests are getting saved into db.json
file. Now the URIs for GET and DELETE are same, similarly it’s same for POST and PUT requests. Well, we can create our custom URIs too with a simple mapping file.
Create a file with custom routes for our json-server to use. routes.json
{
"/employees/list": "/employees",
"/employees/get/:id": "/employees/:id",
"/employees/create": "/employees",
"/employees/update/:id": "/employees/:id",
"/employees/delete/:id": "/employees/:id"
}
We can also change the json-server port and simulate like a third party API, just change the base URL when the real service is ready and you will be good to go. Now start the JSON server again as shown below.
$ json-server --port 7000 --routes routes.json --watch db.json
(node:60899) fs: re-evaluating native module sources is not supported. If you are using the graceful-fs module, please update it to a more recent version.
\{^_^}/ hi!
Loading db.json
Loading routes.json
Done
Resources
https://localhost:7000/employees
Other routes
/employees/list -> /employees
/employees/get/:id -> /employees/:id
/employees/create -> /employees
/employees/update/:id -> /employees/:id
/employees/delete/:id -> /employees/:id
Home
https://localhost:7000
Type s + enter at any time to create a snapshot of the database
Watching...
It’s showing the custom routes defined by us.
Below is the example of some of the commands and their output with custom routes.
$ curl -X GET -H "Content-Type: application/json" "https://localhost:7000/employees/list"
[
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Pankaj",
"salary": "10000"
},
{
"name": "Lisa",
"salary": 8000,
"id": 3
}
]
$ curl -X GET -H "Content-Type: application/json" "https://localhost:7000/employees/get/1"
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Pankaj",
"salary": "10000"
}
$ curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"name": "Lisa","salary": "2000"}' "https://localhost:7000/employees/create"
{
"name": "Lisa",
"salary": 2000,
"id": 4
}
$ curl -XPUT -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"name": "Lisa", "salary": "8000"}' "https://localhost:7000/emloyees/update/4"
{
"name": "Lisa",
"salary": 8000,
"id": 4
}
$ curl -XDELETE -H "Content-Type: application/json" "https://localhost:7000/employees/delete/4"
{}
$ curl -GET -H "Content-Type: application/json" "https://localhost:7000/employees/list"
[
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Pankaj",
"salary": "10000"
},
{
"name": "Lisa",
"salary": 8000,
"id": 3
}
]
$
JSON server provides some other useful options such as sorting, searching and pagination. That’s all for json-server, it’s my go to tool whenever I need to create demo Rest JSON APIs. Reference: json-server GitHub
Thanks for learning with the DigitalOcean Community. Check out our offerings for compute, storage, networking, and managed databases.
While we believe that this content benefits our community, we have not yet thoroughly reviewed it. If you have any suggestions for improvements, please let us know by clicking the “report an issue“ button at the bottom of the tutorial.
How do i download?
- Ezzeldin Ahmed
Hi, nice but how did you get the HTTPS, after installing and running, the “resources” and “home” show only http :-( And unfortunately, my app needs secure socket. Thanx
- Widchris
Helpful tutorial
- madfinger
how to do in live server
- hussian
hi can i use primary key to save id in json-server. If yes, please share the code. Thank you.
- Deepti Jain
Is purely open source…can we use it in our production?
- Hitesh Singh
if we write get post delete directly in json server then we don’t have to write it in visual studio code in component?
- Sonali Swami
It is interesting and easy to learn. Good article. In SQl we create a database like HRM and create multiple tables like employee, login, salary etc. Could you please let me know how to create this kind of database in JSON
- Joga Singh Rawat
Please take in account that for Windows the single quote character did not work and I ended up escaping the double quote: curl -X POST -H “Content-Type: application/json” -d “{\“id\”: 3, \“name\”: \“Lisa\”, \“salary\”: \“2000\”}” “https://localhost:3000/employees” Cheers
- Valentino