Basically I like how when using Object.entries you can destructure and
name the value. It feels a lot more explicit to give the value a name
rather than refer to it as obj[k]. The syntax is not super pretty though.
I am making a couple of small changes to how external environment
variables are used. From now own everything comming from the outside,
namely the .env file and the params flag are assigned to the '_'
variable within the internal environment. This is mostly to namespace
things and make it clear where they are coming from.
I normally prefer tabs for everything, it's nice to have the ability to
set to whatever your preferred width is. Since this project uses a lot
of yaml stuff I've had to indent those tests with spaces, for
consistency's sake I've decided to use spaces everywhere.
This results in two important changes:
- Made changes so that we actually use the replacement regex groups.
This was supposed to happen from the start but I guess I didn't notice.
By fixing this the code for finding dependencies and the cache#parse is
now a bit more reliable.
- This also changes how we store variables in the cache (which I've been
meaning to do for a while.) removing the dollar sign that usually
preceeded all cached requests in Beau. It's all more sensible now.
There's more refactoring left to do.
It now uses a plugin registry. Plugins are loaded when the configuration
file is first parsed. When a request is made it is passed over to the
available modifiers before and after it's execution and applies
whichever changes are made. It now passes a copy instead of a reference
to provide a nicer interface.
Dynamic values have been added as a plugin type. These plugins are
javascript functions that can be called from within the beau file and
whose results are used as a replacement.
These are added along with variables to the runtime execution flow. The
current order for their execution is:
Request composition -> Dynamic Values -> Pre-Request Modifiers ->
Post-Request Modifiers.
This introduces a top level key: `hosts`. It's an array where you can
configure multiple hosts with their own requests, they share defaults
and environment with the global scope.
This allows you to have multiple paths being the same with different
endpoints and settings.