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08:38
@DrakaSAN @DrakaSAN yes please notify me when you try it with other dbs
09:30
@Owatch ... I always have troubles understanding what ppl wonder about :) but if I understood you correctly, you like to know if a return statement is required? no it's not.. and you don't need to return null, you could simply just return to "break" out of the function.. I believe you will be returned a "undefined" if you do so... But error first callbacks are a bit of a standard that maybe you should consider to be able to work with asynch as well..
...also, good example of why you shouldn't ask to ask, just ask instead :) I could have had a look at this yesterday if you posted your question right away when I was in for a short moment :)
09:58
@C4u: I am familiar with them. What you must understand with JWT is that whoever have one will be considered connected for the server, that's why you can't set them client side, because they are encrypted with a private key, which must never leave the server. If you were to send the private key to the client so that they can generate JWT at will, you are better off not having JWT at all
So the reason there is no description on how to generate JWT client side is simply that there is no use case for JWT were they must be generated client side
If by set you meant that you want to keep the JWT to reuse it, it depend on what the client is and what are it s capability to store a string in memory, so there is a lot of different ways, the most common being cookies
@Owatch: If your function is synchronous (which it seems to be since you use return for returning the result), the standard way is to throw the error and catch it outside, and return only when everything is fine and a result is needed. throw will interupt the function anyway.
If your function is asynchronous (with callback for example, or with Promise), you "return" everything throught the callback, and it is common and good practice to always have the first argument of the callback being the error. In that case, return is only useful to interrupt the function, so for example if you want something like:
if(err) {return callback(err);}
//...Continue
C4u
C4u
10:21
Oh an answer. Nice. Ill check this out.
@DrakaSAN I guess u missunderstood this. I dont want to create them on client-side.
@C4u: The last two lines are for you then :)
If by set you mean store, it depend on the client and what mecanism they have to store, the JWT is just a string, so there is a lot of different way to accomplish this in a browser, and with a app, you have a lot more ways to do this
C4u
C4u
I am creating tokens on server-side and sending them to the client. These tokens have to be stored. My problem is that I dont know how to access them if a user sends a get-request for a page.
Seen that lines.
Do you send the JWT in the headers of the get request?
C4u
C4u
I've seen your answer too late. Just posted it as a question: stackoverflow.com/questions/42972943/…
No I dont.
I did that by emitting data to the client. On client-side I stored it in SessionStorage.
IF I could get the token out of requests I would have all I need.
Because if a clients emits something, I can append the token. So the only problem is get-requests.
how to update a node in xml using power shell script
<resources>
<string name="app_names">Example</string>
</resources>
change the example value
10:34
Well, that is what you are missing, you should send it alongside any authentificated request, if I remeber well, the "standard" header for a JWT is something like "X-Authentification-Token"
How do you send the request?
C4u
C4u
Just to take in mind: I'm a software dev. Webcoding is new for me. ^^
The request on client-side?
The scenario I'm talking about is opening a link after being logged in.
So it will be a normal get-request to the server.
C4u
C4u
10:55
I'm currently at work but I'll be able to access my project soon. Ill post original code then.
11:09
@C4u: Yes, how do you send the request client side, you need to attach the token to it, usually by adding it to the headers
C4u
C4u
11:28
But: If someone pastes a link to the dashboard into the url bar of his browser, how should I be able modifying the request? Sounds impossible to me.
If it's a simple menu-bar on the website, for sure I could attach it. But what about pasting a link? This would have to work too.
 
1 hour later…
12:49
@C4u: You can put the token in the cookies, if I remeber well, cookies are automatically sent
C4u
C4u
I guess after this chaos of storing Ill truly get onto cookies.
Why not just use localStorage for this? @DrakaSAN @C4u
C4u
C4u
Because I cant access it.
what are the limitations? browser or app or .. ?
@superhero: Not used to client side technologies, so don't know how Local Storage can be used for this. pretty sure it can, but don't know how
13:00
ok, I always use localStorage, why I ask :)
C4u
C4u
Think about I pass a token to save it into the localStorage (from server-view the user has the state 'logged in'). If a user then clicks his bookmark to the users dashboad, it will create a raw get-request.
But you may need a wrapper for it ofc
C4u
C4u
How should I access my token then to verify the incoming user is logged in?
I'm not following the problem, you just access it.. it's domain specific
C4u
C4u
@DrakaSAN This guy who answered is talking about ajax calls from client-side. How should that be possible if he clicks on a bookmark?
Dont get it how scripts should be applied.
13:03
localStorage.setItem('key', 'awesome-token');
key = storage.getItem('key');
why would you not be able to do this?
ooh wait, you are ofc using http .. sorry... yes a cookie makes better sense then :)
C4u
C4u
So "local" in this context means local to the server, not the client?
no this is client, when you recieve the key you store it localy, just like you do in a cookie
@C4u: Ha, nice idea, it work like this: when the user make his get, you send him a non authenticated page. This page have JS code which read Local Storage, and make a call on a authenticated endpoint to get the data, and edit the page to print them
C4u
C4u
Oh god.
+1 for you drakaSan for this information.
Until now i was just totally confused.
@superhero Ok so it is stored at client-side. Then still my question is open: If a request is coming in, I couldnt access it as (from my understanding) the localStorage isnt delivered with the request.
But DrakaSan just posted a "how-to".
hang on, I just fucked up the internet for half of barcelona ....
C4u
C4u
13:09
Hahaha.
@DrakaSAN Thanks a lot. So I guess the best way would be placing a middleware. If a plain get-request for an authenticated page is coming in, it will result on a redirect to non-auth one. This one will again do a request with attached token. The middleware then lets this request pass.
If no token is attached -> login page.
...sorry, yhea, don't push to production, even if it's just 1 line of code...
anyway, great it worked out
@superhero Oh god
@C4u: That would be a nice and clean solution.
C4u
C4u
Oh wooooonderful. I can continue ^^. My hero of the day.
What I proposed is sighly different, some point are similar to a REST API and deliver only the data, and need authentification. The others serve web pages which calls the first endpoint and modify themselves once the data has been retrieved, or redirect to login.
So it differ in if the routing is made client side or server side. For me, the better one is making the routing client side, since with the REST like endpoint, you already have the tools for when you want to mmake a custom app or something else.
You're welcome @C4u :)
C4u
C4u
Modify itself? You mean instead of redirecting from server-side rather passing the data of the new page and really 'modifying' the current to the new data?
13:17
Yup, the page have a empty <div> that you populate with the data you got
C4u
C4u
I hope I'm not as annoying as I think of. As a noob in webcoding I have to ask twice.
Alright. Sounds easy. If you say it would be the better way, I'll pick it up.
Don't worry, if you check my first question on SO, you will see that we all started like that :)
C4u
C4u
Hah yeah. Think so.
But wouldnt I go easier with using a cookie as storage?
Well, I have a bias for REST like API, so I put them almost everywhere. If you are more comfortable doing the routing server side, it is just as valid, and it is better to have a working solution that run, than a "theorically perfect" solution that don't work because too hard to make :)
C4u
C4u
Yeah makes sense.
I guess with the cookie-version I wouldnt need to place a middleware. At least not for reading the token.
It would be delivered with the request itself so I could use the middleware for direct authentication.
13:22
It is another way to do that, and is also valid. But I don't know all the details on how it would work. Never used cookies for anything ^"
C4u
C4u
Is there anything bad about this compared to the other way with redirecting + js?
Ah alright.
@C4u: Edited my answer with the pro of both approach, don't know the con of the cookie way, and can't find any for the localstorage way
C4u
C4u
13:42
Ill have a look soon.
 
1 hour later…
15:09
hi guys, I was wondering if anyone would be able to edit this npm module so that it doesn't throw maximum call stack size exceeded when computing paths for a connected graph? github.com/chriswongtv/node-all-paths
Anyone familiar with a way in Node.js to send streams that are not as an eventStream meaning I need it to send events regardless if there is an open connection or not?
 
1 hour later…
16:31
@Stormie: That's original, I was used to "plz code for me", but that's the first "plz code for this guy"
Do you have any idea where is the recursion oin the code? Also, it has been one year without commits, why not search for a supported module?
I wrote a pathfinder when I was playing around with a game.. I can send you the code for that if you like, don't have it here..
17:27
@DrakaSAN the recursion is in the graph.js file where the findAll function, the else clause of that function in particular.

I haven't been able to find a similar module available on github or npm so I was hoping someone a little more experienced would be able to make this adjustment to the module :(
My idea was to add a condition to the foreach loop (line 116) that would check if the node was already in the current path, but I'm not sure how to go about checking the current path that's being built. It seems like I could construct the current path using the map, possibly. Or maybe the path doesn't exist unless you're in former part of the if statement

i'm really quite unsure
@Stormie: Can't look at it now, but send me everything you find, I ll try to look at it when I ll have internet and time
kas
kas
Hey everyone, newb here. A few months ago I followed separate tutorial series on React and Node.js/Express. I still don't understand how to combine them though. so on a basic level, React calls the express API?
@DrakaSAN thanks a lot. I'll update you as I go, I'm gonna try and crack it again tomorrow morning/afternoon some time
18:35
@Stormie: If it is just a foreach loop that block everything, you may be able to change it with async.each easily
18:52
@DrakaSAN that's the issue, I'm not sure how I can access the current path. I don't think it exists in the else statement which is what has me so confused
All the code is synchronous, I think it will be almost a complete rewrite to make it able to use async or Promises
19:14
Hello! Is there a service online that I can pay for that will help me with a issue with Angular 2 + NodeJS?
 
2 hours later…
21:15
Hi guys
is there any other way of passing parameter from one file to another except this
module.exports = function(param) {


}
var newModule = require('filename')(myParam)
21:37
Hey. Why does the following redirect call with Express puts an intermediate page?
res.redirect(400, '/app');
Bad Request. Redirecting to /app/addpatient
i think because that might not be a page or directory does not contain index.html
but I'm not sure
What do you mean?
the "/app" is a route in the website

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