Edit Page

.configure()

The configure feature provides a way to configure a hook after the defaults objects have been applied to all hooks. By the time a custom hook’s configure() function runs, all user-level configuration and core hook settings will have been merged into sails.config. However, you should not depend on other custom hooks’ configuration at this point, as the load order of custom hooks is not guaranteed.

configure should be implemented as a function with no arguments, and should not return any value. For example, the following configure function could be used for a hook that communicates with a remote API, to change the API endpoint based on whether the user set the hook’s ssl property to true. Note that the hook’s configuration key is available in configure as this.configKey:

configure: function() {

   // If SSL is on, use the HTTPS endpoint
   if (sails.config[this.configKey].ssl == true) {
      sails.config[this.configKey].url = "https://" + sails.config[this.configKey].domain;
   }
   // Otherwise use HTTP
   else {
      sails.config[this.configKey].url = "http://" + sails.config[this.configKey].domain;
   }
}

The main benefit of configure is that all hook configure functions are guaranteed to run before any initialize functions run; therefore a hook’s initialize function can examine the configuration settings of other hooks.

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.