Shariff is used to determine how often a page is shared in social media, but without generating requests from the displaying page to the social sites.
This document describes the Node backend. The following backends are also available:
The frontend is available here:
Create a project folder and install the Shariff server using npm
:
$ mkdir my-shariff-server
$ cd my-shariff-server
$ npm init
$ npm install --save shariff-backend-node
The node package contains a configuration file shariff.json
. The following configuration options are available:
Key | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
port |
integer |
Port Shariff runs on |
host |
string |
Host/IP address Shariff runs on |
cache |
object |
Cache settings described below |
Cache settings:
Key | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
engine |
string |
catbox backend |
expiresIn |
integer |
Cache duration in milliseconds |
Start Shariff with:
$ node node_modules/shariff-backend-node/run.js
141104/143603.929, info, Server ist running at: http://localhost:3001
Alternatively, you may call the Shariff backend from your own code. If called directly, the code will still use a cache and honor the expiresIn setting, the engine will however not be used in this case, just a simple object store.
Sample:
var Shariff = require('shariff-backend-node');
Shariff.getCounts('google.com').then(function(counts) {
console.log('Success, counts:', counts);
}, function(err) {
console.log('Failed to grab counts!', err);
});
If passed true
as second parameter, the getCounts()
method will not use its cache and instead re-query the services.
Visit http://localhost:3001/?url=www.example.com
to get a JSON structure containing the share counts:
{"facebook":1452,"googleplus":23}