Edit Page

Adding a Custom Response

To add your own custom response method, simply add a file to /api/responses with the same name as the method you would like to create. The file should export a function, which can take any parameters you like.

/** 
 * api/responses/myResponse.js
 *
 * This will be available in controllers as res.myResponse('foo');
 */

module.exports = function(message) {

  var req = this.req;
  var res = this.res;

  var viewFilePath = 'mySpecialView';
  var statusCode = 200;

  var result = {
    status: statusCode
  };

  // Optional message
  if (message) {
    result.message = message;
  }

  // If the user-agent wants a JSON response, send json
  if (req.wantsJSON) {
    return res.json(result, result.status);
  }

  // Set status code and view locals
  res.status(result.status);
  for (var key in result) {
    res.locals[key] = result[key];
  }
  // And render view
  res.render(viewFilePath, result, function(err) {
    // If the view doesn't exist, or an error occured, send json
    if (err) {
      return res.json(result, result.status);
    }

    // Otherwise, serve the `views/mySpecialView.*` page
    res.render(viewFilePath);
  });
}

Is something missing?

If you notice something we've missed or could be improved on, please follow this link and submit a pull request to the sails-docs repo. Once we merge it, the changes will be reflected on the website the next time it is deployed.

Sails logo
  • Home
  • Get started
  • Support
  • Documentation
  • Documentation

For a better experience on sailsjs.com, update your browser.

Documentation

Reference Concepts App structure | Upgrading Contribution guide | Tutorials More

Concepts

  • Assets
    • Default Tasks
    • Disabling Grunt
    • Task Automation
  • Blueprints
    • Blueprint Actions
    • Blueprint Routes
  • Configuration
    • The local.js file
    • Using `.sailsrc` Files
  • Controllers
    • Generating Controllers
    • Routing to Controllers
  • Custom Responses
    • Adding a Custom Response
    • Default Responses
  • Deployment
    • FAQ
    • Hosting
    • Scaling
  • Extending Sails
    • Adapters
      • Available Adapters
      • Custom Adapters
    • Generators
      • Available Generators
      • Custom Generators
    • Hooks
      • Hook Specification
        • .configure()
        • .defaults
        • .initialize()
        • .routes
      • Installable Hooks
      • Project Hooks
      • Using Hooks
  • File Uploads
    • Uploading to GridFS
    • Uploading to S3
  • Globals
    • Disabling Globals
  • Internationalization
    • Locales
    • Translating Dynamic Content
  • Logging
    • Custom log messages
  • Middleware
    • Conventional Defaults
  • Models and ORM
    • Associations
      • Dominance
      • Many-to-Many
      • One Way Association
      • One-to-Many
      • One-to-One
      • Through Associations
    • Attributes
    • Lifecycle callbacks
    • Model Settings
    • Models
    • Query Language
    • Validations
  • Policies
    • Sails + Passport
  • Programmatic Usage
    • Tips and Tricks
  • Realtime
    • Multi-server environments
    • On the client
    • On the server
  • Routes
    • Custom Routes
    • URL Slugs
  • Security
    • Clickjacking
    • Content Security Policy
    • CORS
    • CSRF
    • DDOS
    • P3P
    • Socket Hijacking
    • Strict Transport Security
    • XSS
  • Services
    • Creating a Service
  • Sessions
  • Testing
  • Views
    • Layouts
    • Locals
    • Partials
    • View Engines

Built with Love

The Sails framework is maintained by a web & mobile studio in Austin, TX, with the help of our contributors. We created Sails in 2012 to assist us on Node.js projects. Naturally we open-sourced it. We hope it makes your life a little bit easier!

Sails:
  • What is Sails?
  • Treeline IDE
  • Contribute
  • Logos/artwork
About:
  • The Sails Company
  • Security
  • News
  • Legal
Help:
  • Get started
  • Documentation
  • Docs
  • Enterprise
  • Hire us

© 2012-2018 The Sails Company. 
The Sails framework is free and open-source under the MIT License.