Skip to content

Sitelink-Spatial/forge-server-utils

 
 

Repository files navigation

forge-server-utils

Publish to NPM npm version node npm downloads platforms license

Unofficial tools for accessing Autodesk Forge APIs from Node.js applications and from browsers, built using TypeScript and modern language features like async/await or generators.

Autodesk Forge

Usage

Server Side

The TypeScript implementation is transpiled into CommonJS JavaScript module with type definition files, so you can use it both in Node.js projects, and in TypeScript projects:

// JavaScript
const { DataManagementClient } = require('forge-server-utils');
// TypeScript
import {
	DataManagementClient,
	IBucket,
	IObject,
	IResumableUploadRange,
	DataRetentionPolicy
} from 'forge-server-utils';

Authentication

If you need to generate 2-legged tokens manually, you can use the AuthenticationClient class:

const { AuthenticationClient } = require('forge-server-utils');
const { FORGE_CLIENT_ID, FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET } = process.env;
const auth = new AuthenticationClient(FORGE_CLIENT_ID, FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET);
const authentication = await auth.authenticate(['bucket:read', 'data:read']);
console.log('2-legged token', authentication.access_token);

Other API clients in this library are typically configured using a simple JavaScript object containing either client_id and client_secret properties (for 2-legged authentication), or a single token property (for authentication using a pre-generated access token):

const { DataManagementClient, BIM360Client } = require('forge-server-utils');
const dm = new DataManagementClient({ client_id: '...', client_secret: '...' });
const bim360 = new BIM360Client({ token: '...' });

Data Management

const { DataManagementClient } = require('forge-server-utils');
const { FORGE_CLIENT_ID, FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET } = process.env;
const data = new DataManagementClient({ client_id: FORGE_CLIENT_ID, client_secret: FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET });

const buckets = await data.listBuckets();
console.log('Buckets', buckets.map(bucket => bucket.bucketKey).join(','));

const objects = await data.listObjects('foo-bucket');
console.log('Objects', objects.map(object => object.objectId).join(','));

Model Derivatives

const { ModelDerivativeClient } = require('forge-server-utils');
const { FORGE_CLIENT_ID, FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET } = process.env;
const derivatives = new ModelDerivativeClient({ client_id: FORGE_CLIENT_ID, client_secret: FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET });
const job = await derivatives.submitJob('<your-document-urn>', [{ type: 'svf', views: ['2d', '3d'] }]);
console.log('Job', job);

Design Automation

const { DesignAutomationClient } = require('forge-server-utils');
const { FORGE_CLIENT_ID, FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET } = process.env;
const client = new DesignAutomationClient({ client_id: FORGE_CLIENT_ID, client_secret: FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET });
const bundles = await client.listAppBundles();
console.log('App bundles', bundles);

Reality Capture

const { OutputFormat, RealityCaptureClient, SceneType } = require('forge-server-utils');
const { FORGE_CLIENT_ID, FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET } = process.env;
const recap = new RealityCaptureClient({ client_id: FORGE_CLIENT_ID, client_secret: FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET });
const options = {
    scenename: '<scene name>',
    scenetype: SceneType.Aerial,
    format: OutputFormat.RecapPhotoMesh,
    callback: '<callback>'
};
const photoscene = await recap.createPhotoScene(options);
console.log('Photoscene', photoscene);

Client Side (experimental)

The transpiled output from TypeScript is also bundled using webpack, so you can use the same functionality in a browser. There is a caveat, unfortunately: at the moment it is not possible to request Forge access tokens from the browser due to CORS limitations, so when creating instances of the various clients, instead of providing client ID and secret you will have to provide the token directly.

<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/forge-server-utils/dist/browser/forge-server-utils.js"></script>
<script>
	const data = new forge.DataManagementClient({ token: '<your access token>' });
	const deriv = new forge.ModelDerivativeClient({ token: '<your access token>' });
	data.listBuckets()
		.then(buckets => { console.log('Buckets', buckets); })
		.catch(err => { console.error('Could not list buckets', err); });
	deriv.submitJob('<your document urn>', [{ type: 'svf', views: ['2d', '3d'] }])
		.then(job => { console.log('Translation job', job); })
		.catch(err => { console.error('Could not start translation', err); });
</script>

Note that you can also request a specific version of the library from CDN by appending @<version> to the npm package name, for example, https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/forge-server-utils@4.0.0/dist/browser/forge-server-utils.js.

Testing

export FORGE_CLIENT_ID=<your-client-id>
export FORGE_CLIENT_SECRET=<your-client-secret>
export FORGE_BUCKET=<your-test-bucket>
export FORGE_MODEL_URN=<testing-model-urn>
yarn run build # Transpile TypeScript into JavaScript
yarn test

About

Tools for accessing Autodesk Forge APIs from modern Node.js apps.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 89.4%
  • JavaScript 8.8%
  • HTML 1.8%