Example project using the parse-server module on Express.
Read the full Parse Server guide here: https://github.com/ParsePlatform/parse-server/wiki/Parse-Server-Guide
- 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
- 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
- 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
- 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)
Before using it, you can access a test page to verify if the basic setup is working fine http://localhost:1337/test. Then you can use the REST API, the JavaScript SDK, and any of our open-source SDKs:
Example request to a server running locally:
curl -X POST \
-H "X-Parse-Application-Id: myAppId" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"score":1337,"playerName":"Sean Plott","cheatMode":false}' \
http://localhost:1337/parse/classes/GameScore
curl -X POST \
-H "X-Parse-Application-Id: myAppId" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{}' \
http://localhost:1337/parse/functions/hello
Example using it via JavaScript:
Parse.initialize('myAppId','unused');
Parse.serverURL = 'https://whatever.herokuapp.com';
var obj = new Parse.Object('GameScore');
obj.set('score',1337);
obj.save().then(function(obj) {
console.log(obj.toJSON());
var query = new Parse.Query('GameScore');
query.get(obj.id).then(function(objAgain) {
console.log(objAgain.toJSON());
}, function(err) {console.log(err); });
}, function(err) { console.log(err); });
Example using it on Android:
//in your application class
Parse.initialize(new Parse.Configuration.Builder(getApplicationContext())
.applicationId("myAppId")
.server("http://myServerUrl/parse/") // '/' important after 'parse'
.build());
ParseObject testObject = new ParseObject("TestObject");
testObject.put("foo", "bar");
testObject.saveInBackground();
Example using it on iOS (Swift):
//in your AppDelegate
Parse.initializeWithConfiguration(ParseClientConfiguration(block: { (configuration: ParseMutableClientConfiguration) -> Void in
configuration.server = "https://<# Your Server URL #>/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.
As of April 5, 2017, Parse, LLC has transferred this code to the parse-community organization, and will no longer be contributing to or distributing this code.