Example project using the parse-server module on Express. Read the full Parse Server Guide for more information.
- Make sure you have at least Node 4.3.
node --version
- Clone this repo and change directory to it.
npm install
- Install mongo locally using http://docs.mongodb.org/master/tutorial/install-mongodb-on-os-x/
- Run
mongo
to connect to your database, just to make sure it's working. Once you see a mongo prompt, exit with Control-D - Run the server with:
npm start
- By default it will use a path of /parse for the API routes. To change this, or use older client SDKs, run
export PARSE_MOUNT=/1
before launching the server. - You now have a database named "dev" that contains your Parse data
- Install ngrok and you can test with devices
These scripts can help you to develop your app for Parse Server:
npm run watch
will start your Parse Server and restart if you make any changes.npm run lint
will check the linting of your cloud code, tests andindex.js
, as defined in.eslintrc.json
.npm run lint-fix
will attempt fix the linting of your cloud code, tests andindex.js
.npm run prettier
will help improve the formatting and layout of your cloud code, tests andindex.js
, as defined in.prettierrc
.npm run test
will run any tests that are written in/spec
.npm run coverage
will run tests and check coverage. Output is available in the/coverage
folder.
Alternatively, to deploy manually:
- Clone the repo and change directory to it
- Log in with the Heroku Toolbelt and create an app:
heroku create
- Use the mLab addon:
heroku addons:create mongolab:sandbox --app YourAppName
- By default it will use a path of /parse for the API routes. To change this, or use older client SDKs, run
heroku config:set PARSE_MOUNT=/1
- Deploy it with:
git push heroku master
Alternatively, deploy your local changes manually:
- Clone the repo and change directory to it
- Log in with the AWS Elastic Beanstalk CLI, select a region, and create an app:
eb init
- Create an environment and pass in MongoDB URI, App ID, and Master Key:
eb create --envvars DATABASE_URI=<replace with URI>,APP_ID=<replace with Parse app ID>,MASTER_KEY=<replace with Parse master key>
Detailed information is available here:
- Clone the repo and change directory to it
- Create a project in the Google Cloud Platform Console.
- Enable billing for your project.
- Install the Google Cloud SDK.
- Setup a MongoDB server. You have a few options:
- Create a Google Compute Engine virtual machine with MongoDB pre-installed.
- Use mLab to create a free MongoDB deployment on Google Cloud Platform (only US-central).
- Modify
app.yaml
to update your environment variables. - Delete
Dockerfile
- Deploy it with
gcloud preview app deploy
A detailed tutorial is available here: Running Parse server on Google App Engine
Alternatively, to deploy manually:
- Clone the repo and change directory to it
- Log in with the Scalingo CLI and create an app:
scalingo create my-parse
- Use the Scalingo MongoDB addon:
scalingo addons-add scalingo-mongodb free
- Setup MongoDB connection string:
scalingo env-set DATABASE_URI='$SCALINGO_MONGO_URL'
- By default it will use a path of /parse for the API routes. To change this, or use older client SDKs, run
scalingo env-set PARSE_MOUNT=/1
- Deploy it with:
git push scalingo master
- Register for a free OpenShift Online (Next Gen) account
- Create a project in the OpenShift Online Console.
- Install the OpenShift CLI.
- Add the Parse Server template to your project:
oc create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ParsePlatform/parse-server-example/master/openshift.json
- Deploy Parse Server from the web console
- Open your project in the OpenShift Online Console:
- Click Add to Project from the top navigation
- Scroll down and select NodeJS > Parse Server
- (Optionally) Update the Parse Server settings (parameters)
- Click Create
A detailed tutorial is available here: Running Parse Server on OpenShift Online (Next Gen)
You can use the /health
endpoint to verify that Parse Server is up and running. For example, for local deployment, enter this URL in your browser:
If you deployed Parse Server remotely, change the URL accordingly.
Use the REST API, GraphQL API or any of the Parse SDKs to see Parse Server in action. Parse Server comes with a variety of SDKs to cover most common ecosystems and languages, such as JavaScript, Swift, ObjectiveC and Android just to name a few.
The following shows example requests when interacting with a local deployment of Parse Server. If you deployed Parse Server remotely, change the URL accordingly.
Save object:
curl -X POST \
-H "X-Parse-Application-Id: YOUR_APP_ID" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"score":1337}' \
http://localhost:1337/parse/classes/GameScore
Call Cloud Code function:
curl -X POST \
-H "X-Parse-Application-Id: YOUR_APP_ID" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d "{}" \
http://localhost:1337/parse/functions/hello
// Initialize SDK
Parse.initialize("YOUR_APP_ID", "unused");
Parse.serverURL = 'http://localhost:1337/parse';
// Save object
const obj = new Parse.Object('GameScore');
obj.set('score',1337);
await obj.save();
// Query object
const query = new Parse.Query('GameScore');
const objAgain = await query.get(obj.id);
// Initialize SDK in the application class
Parse.initialize(new Parse.Configuration.Builder(getApplicationContext())
.applicationId("YOUR_APP_ID")
.server("http://localhost:1337/parse/") // '/' important after 'parse'
.build());
// Save object
ParseObject obj = new ParseObject("TestObject");
obj.put("foo", "bar");
obj.saveInBackground();
// Initialize SDK in AppDelegate
Parse.initializeWithConfiguration(ParseClientConfiguration(block: {
(configuration: ParseMutableClientConfiguration) -> Void in
configuration.server = "http://localhost:1337/parse/" // '/' important after 'parse'
configuration.applicationId = "YOUR_APP_ID"
}))
You can change the server URL in all of the open-source SDKs, but we're releasing new builds which provide initialization time configuration of this property.