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Deno Web Development

You're reading from   Deno Web Development Write, test, maintain, and deploy JavaScript and TypeScript web applications using Deno

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800205666
Length 310 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Alexandre Santos Alexandre Santos
Author Profile Icon Alexandre Santos
Alexandre Santos
Alexandre Portela dos Santos Alexandre Portela dos Santos
Author Profile Icon Alexandre Portela dos Santos
Alexandre Portela dos Santos
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Familiar with Deno
2. Chapter 1: What is Deno? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: The Toolchain 4. Chapter 3: The Runtime and Standard Library 5. Section 2: Building an Application
6. Chapter 4: Building a Web Application 7. Chapter 5: Adding Users and Migrating to Oak 8. Chapter 6: Adding Authentication and Connecting to the Database 9. Chapter 7: HTTPS, Extracting Configuration, and Deno in the Browser 10. Section 3: Testing and Deploying
11. Chapter 8: Testing – Unit and Integration 12. Chapter 9: Deploying a Deno Application 13. Chapter 10: What's Next? 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

This was a chapter in which we focused a lot on practices that bring our application closer to a state that we can deploy into production. We started by exploring basic security practices, adding the CORS mechanism and HTTPS to the API. These two features, which are pretty much standard in any application, are a big security improvement on what we already had.

Also, thinking about deploying the application, we also abstracted the configuration and secrets from the code base. We started by creating an abstraction that would deal with it so that the configuration is not scattered, and modules just receive their configuration values without any awareness of how they're loaded. Then, we proceeded to using those values in our current code base, something that revealed itself to be quite easy. This step removed any configuration values from the code and moved them to a configuration file.

Once done with configuration, we used the same abstraction created to deal with secrets...

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