API 4.x
Note
Express 4.0 requires Node.js 0.10 or higher.
Application
The app
object conventionally denotes the Express application.
Create it by calling the top-level express()
function exported by the Express module:
var express = require('express')
var app = express()
app.get('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('hello world')
})
app.listen(3000)
The app
object has methods for
- Routing HTTP requests; see for example, app.METHOD and app.param.
- Configuring middleware; see app.route.
- Rendering HTML views; see app.render.
- Registering a template engine; see app.engine.
It also has settings (properties) that affect how the application behaves; for more information, see Application settings.
The Express application object can be referred from the request object and the response object as req.app
, and res.app
, respectively.
Properties
app.locals
The app.locals
object has properties that are local variables within the application,
and will be available in templates rendered with res.render.
The locals
object is used by view engines to render a response. The object
keys may be particularly sensitive and should not contain user-controlled
input, as it may affect the operation of the view engine or provide a path to
cross-site scripting. Consult the documentation for the used view engine for
additional considerations.
console.dir(app.locals.title)
// => 'My App'
console.dir(app.locals.email)
// => 'me@myapp.com'
Once set, the value of app.locals
properties persist throughout the life of the application,
in contrast with res.locals properties that
are valid only for the lifetime of the request.
You can access local variables in templates rendered within the application.
This is useful for providing helper functions to templates, as well as application-level data.
Local variables are available in middleware via req.app.locals
(see req.app)
app.locals.title = 'My App'
app.locals.strftime = require('strftime')
app.locals.email = 'me@myapp.com'
app.mountpath
The app.mountpath
property contains one or more path patterns on which a sub-app was mounted.
A sub-app is an instance of express
that may be used for handling the request to a route.
var express = require('express')
var app = express() // the main app
var admin = express() // the sub app
admin.get('/', function (req, res) {
console.log(admin.mountpath) // /admin
res.send('Admin Homepage')
})
app.use('/admin', admin) // mount the sub app
It is similar to the baseUrl property of the req
object, except req.baseUrl
returns the matched URL path, instead of the matched patterns.
If a sub-app is mounted on multiple path patterns, app.mountpath
returns the list of
patterns it is mounted on, as shown in the following example.
var admin = express()
admin.get('/', function (req, res) {
console.dir(admin.mountpath) // [ '/adm*n', '/manager' ]
res.send('Admin Homepage')
})
var secret = express()
secret.get('/', function (req, res) {
console.log(secret.mountpath) // /secr*t
res.send('Admin Secret')
})
admin.use('/secr*t', secret) // load the 'secret' router on '/secr*t', on the 'admin' sub app
app.use(['/adm*n', '/manager'], admin) // load the 'admin' router on '/adm*n' and '/manager', on the parent app
Events
app.on('mount', callback(parent))
The mount
event is fired on a sub-app, when it is mounted on a parent app. The parent app is passed to the callback function.
NOTE
Sub-apps will:
- Not inherit the value of settings that have a default value. You must set the value in the sub-app.
- Inherit the value of settings with no default value.
For details, see Application settings.
var admin = express()
admin.on('mount', function (parent) {
console.log('Admin Mounted')
console.log(parent) // refers to the parent app
})
admin.get('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('Admin Homepage')
})
app.use('/admin', admin)
Methods
app.all(path, callback [, callback ...])
This method is like the standard app.METHOD() methods, except it matches all HTTP verbs.
Arguments
Argument | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
path |
The path for which the middleware function is invoked; can be any of:
|
'/' (root path) |
callback |
Callback functions; can be:
You can provide multiple callback functions that behave just like middleware, except
that these callbacks can invoke Since router and app implement the middleware interface, you can use them as you would any other middleware function. For examples, see Middleware callback function examples. |
None |
Examples
The following callback is executed for requests to /secret
whether using
GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, or any other HTTP request method:
app.all('/secret', function (req, res, next) {
console.log('Accessing the secret section ...')
next() // pass control to the next handler
})
The app.all()
method is useful for mapping “global” logic for specific path prefixes or arbitrary matches. For example, if you put the following at the top of all other
route definitions, it requires that all routes from that point on
require authentication, and automatically load a user. Keep in mind
that these callbacks do not have to act as end-points: loadUser
can perform a task, then call next()
to continue matching subsequent
routes.
app.all('*', requireAuthentication, loadUser)
Or the equivalent:
app.all('*', requireAuthentication)
app.all('*', loadUser)
Another example is white-listed “global” functionality. The example is similar to the ones above, but it only restricts paths that start with “/api”:
app.all('/api/*', requireAuthentication)
app.delete(path, callback [, callback ...])
Routes HTTP DELETE requests to the specified path with the specified callback functions. For more information, see the routing guide.
Arguments
Argument | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
path |
The path for which the middleware function is invoked; can be any of:
|
'/' (root path) |
callback |
Callback functions; can be:
You can provide multiple callback functions that behave just like middleware, except
that these callbacks can invoke Since router and app implement the middleware interface, you can use them as you would any other middleware function. For examples, see Middleware callback function examples. |
None |
Example
app.delete('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('DELETE request to homepage')
})
app.disable(name)
Sets the Boolean setting name
to false
, where name
is one of the properties from the app settings table.
Calling app.set('foo', false)
for a Boolean property is the same as calling app.disable('foo')
.
For example:
app.disable('trust proxy')
app.get('trust proxy')
// => false
app.disabled(name)
Returns true
if the Boolean setting name
is disabled (false
), where name
is one of the properties from
the app settings table.
app.disabled('trust proxy')
// => true
app.enable('trust proxy')
app.disabled('trust proxy')
// => false
app.enable(name)
Sets the Boolean setting name
to true
, where name
is one of the properties from the app settings table.
Calling app.set('foo', true)
for a Boolean property is the same as calling app.enable('foo')
.
app.enable('trust proxy')
app.get('trust proxy')
// => true
app.enabled(name)
Returns true
if the setting name
is enabled (true
), where name
is one of the
properties from the app settings table.
app.enabled('trust proxy')
// => false
app.enable('trust proxy')
app.enabled('trust proxy')
// => true
app.engine(ext, callback)
Registers the given template engine callback
as ext
.
By default, Express will require()
the engine based on the file extension.
For example, if you try to render a “foo.pug” file, Express invokes the
following internally, and caches the require()
on subsequent calls to increase
performance.
app.engine('pug', require('pug').__express)
Use this method for engines that do not provide .__express
out of the box,
or if you wish to “map” a different extension to the template engine.
For example, to map the EJS template engine to “.html” files:
app.engine('html', require('ejs').renderFile)
In this case, EJS provides a .renderFile()
method with
the same signature that Express expects: (path, options, callback)
,
though note that it aliases this method as ejs.__express
internally
so if you’re using “.ejs” extensions you don’t need to do anything.
Some template engines do not follow this convention. The consolidate.js library maps Node template engines to follow this convention, so they work seamlessly with Express.
var engines = require('consolidate')
app.engine('haml', engines.haml)
app.engine('html', engines.hogan)
app.get(name)
Returns the value of name
app setting, where name
is one of the strings in the
app settings table. For example:
app.get('title')
// => undefined
app.set('title', 'My Site')
app.get('title')
// => "My Site"
app.get(path, callback [, callback ...])
Routes HTTP GET requests to the specified path with the specified callback functions.
Arguments
Argument | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
path |
The path for which the middleware function is invoked; can be any of:
|
'/' (root path) |
callback |
Callback functions; can be:
You can provide multiple callback functions that behave just like middleware, except
that these callbacks can invoke Since router and app implement the middleware interface, you can use them as you would any other middleware function. For examples, see Middleware callback function examples. |
None |
For more information, see the routing guide.
Example
app.get('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('GET request to homepage')
})
app.listen(path, [callback])
Starts a UNIX socket and listens for connections on the given path. This method is identical to Node’s http.Server.listen().
var express = require('express')
var app = express()
app.listen('/tmp/sock')
app.listen([port[, host[, backlog]]][, callback])
Binds and listens for connections on the specified host and port. This method is identical to Node’s http.Server.listen().
If port is omitted or is 0, the operating system will assign an arbitrary unused port, which is useful for cases like automated tasks (tests, etc.).
var express = require('express')
var app = express()
app.listen(3000)
The app
returned by express()
is in fact a JavaScript
Function
, designed to be passed to Node’s HTTP servers as a callback
to handle requests. This makes it easy to provide both HTTP and HTTPS versions of
your app with the same code base, as the app does not inherit from these
(it is simply a callback):
var express = require('express')
var https = require('https')
var http = require('http')
var app = express()
http.createServer(app).listen(80)
https.createServer(options, app).listen(443)
The app.listen()
method returns an http.Server object and (for HTTP) is a convenience method for the following:
app.listen = function () {
var server = http.createServer(this)
return server.listen.apply(server, arguments)
}
Note
All the forms of Node’s http.Server.listen() method are in fact actually supported.
app.METHOD(path, callback [, callback ...])
Routes an HTTP request, where METHOD is the HTTP method of the request, such as GET,
PUT, POST, and so on, in lowercase. Thus, the actual methods are app.get()
,
app.post()
, app.put()
, and so on. See Routing methods below for the complete list.
Arguments
Argument | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
path |
The path for which the middleware function is invoked; can be any of:
|
'/' (root path) |
callback |
Callback functions; can be:
You can provide multiple callback functions that behave just like middleware, except
that these callbacks can invoke Since router and app implement the middleware interface, you can use them as you would any other middleware function. For examples, see Middleware callback function examples. |
None |
Routing methods
Express supports the following routing methods corresponding to the HTTP methods of the same names:
|
|
|
The API documentation has explicit entries only for the most popular HTTP methods app.get()
,
app.post()
, app.put()
, and app.delete()
.
However, the other methods listed above work in exactly the same way.
To route methods that translate to invalid JavaScript variable names, use the bracket notation. For example, app['m-search']('/', function ...
.
The app.get()
function is automatically called for the HTTP HEAD
method in addition to the GET
method if app.head()
was not called for the path before app.get()
.
The method, app.all()
, is not derived from any HTTP method and loads middleware at
the specified path for all HTTP request methods.
For more information, see app.all.
For more information on routing, see the routing guide.
app.param([name], callback)
Add callback triggers to route parameters, where name
is the name of the parameter or an array of them, and callback
is the callback function. The parameters of the callback function are the request object, the response object, the next middleware, the value of the parameter and the name of the parameter, in that order.
If name
is an array, the callback
trigger is registered for each parameter declared in it, in the order in which they are declared. Furthermore, for each declared parameter except the last one, a call to next
inside the callback will call the callback for the next declared parameter. For the last parameter, a call to next
will call the next middleware in place for the route currently being processed, just like it would if name
were just a string.
For example, when :user
is present in a route path, you may map user loading logic to automatically provide req.user
to the route, or perform validations on the parameter input.
app.param('user', function (req, res, next, id) {
// try to get the user details from the User model and attach it to the request object
User.find(id, function (err, user) {
if (err) {
next(err)
} else if (user) {
req.user = user
next()
} else {
next(new Error('failed to load user'))
}
})
})
Param callback functions are local to the router on which they are defined. They are not inherited by mounted apps or routers, nor are they triggered for route parameters inherited from parent routers. Hence, param callbacks defined on app
will be triggered only by route parameters defined on app
routes.
All param callbacks will be called before any handler of any route in which the param occurs, and they will each be called only once in a request-response cycle, even if the parameter is matched in multiple routes, as shown in the following examples.
app.param('id', function (req, res, next, id) {
console.log('CALLED ONLY ONCE')
next()
})
app.get('/user/:id', function (req, res, next) {
console.log('although this matches')
next()
})
app.get('/user/:id', function (req, res) {
console.log('and this matches too')
res.end()
})
On GET /user/42
, the following is printed:
CALLED ONLY ONCE
although this matches
and this matches too
app.param(['id', 'page'], function (req, res, next, value) {
console.log('CALLED ONLY ONCE with', value)
next()
})
app.get('/user/:id/:page', function (req, res, next) {
console.log('although this matches')
next()
})
app.get('/user/:id/:page', function (req, res) {
console.log('and this matches too')
res.end()
})
On GET /user/42/3
, the following is printed:
CALLED ONLY ONCE with 42
CALLED ONLY ONCE with 3
although this matches
and this matches too
The following section describes app.param(callback)
, which is deprecated as of v4.11.0.
The behavior of the app.param(name, callback)
method can be altered entirely by passing only a function to app.param()
. This function is a custom implementation of how app.param(name, callback)
should behave - it accepts two parameters and must return a middleware.
The first parameter of this function is the name of the URL parameter that should be captured, the second parameter can be any JavaScript object which might be used for returning the middleware implementation.
The middleware returned by the function decides the behavior of what happens when a URL parameter is captured.
In this example, the app.param(name, callback)
signature is modified to app.param(name, accessId)
. Instead of accepting a name and a callback, app.param()
will now accept a name and a number.
var express = require('express')
var app = express()
// customizing the behavior of app.param()
app.param(function (param, option) {
return function (req, res, next, val) {
if (val === option) {
next()
} else {
next('route')
}
}
})
// using the customized app.param()
app.param('id', 1337)
// route to trigger the capture
app.get('/user/:id', function (req, res) {
res.send('OK')
})
app.listen(3000, function () {
console.log('Ready')
})
In this example, the app.param(name, callback)
signature remains the same, but instead of a middleware callback, a custom data type checking function has been defined to validate the data type of the user id.
app.param(function (param, validator) {
return function (req, res, next, val) {
if (validator(val)) {
next()
} else {
next('route')
}
}
})
app.param('id', function (candidate) {
return !isNaN(parseFloat(candidate)) && isFinite(candidate)
})
The ‘.
’ character can’t be used to capture a character in your capturing regexp. For example you can’t use '/user-.+/'
to capture 'users-gami'
, use [\\s\\S]
or [\\w\\W]
instead (as in '/user-[\\s\\S]+/'
.
Examples:
// captures '1-a_6' but not '543-azser-sder'
router.get('/[0-9]+-[[\\w]]*', function (req, res, next) { next() })
// captures '1-a_6' and '543-az(ser"-sder' but not '5-a s'
router.get('/[0-9]+-[[\\S]]*', function (req, res, next) { next() })
// captures all (equivalent to '.*')
router.get('[[\\s\\S]]*', function (req, res, next) { next() })
app.path()
Returns the canonical path of the app, a string.
var app = express()
var blog = express()
var blogAdmin = express()
app.use('/blog', blog)
blog.use('/admin', blogAdmin)
console.dir(app.path()) // ''
console.dir(blog.path()) // '/blog'
console.dir(blogAdmin.path()) // '/blog/admin'
The behavior of this method can become very complicated in complex cases of mounted apps: it is usually better to use req.baseUrl to get the canonical path of the app.
app.post(path, callback [, callback ...])
Routes HTTP POST requests to the specified path with the specified callback functions. For more information, see the routing guide.
Arguments
Argument | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
path |
The path for which the middleware function is invoked; can be any of:
|
'/' (root path) |
callback |
Callback functions; can be:
You can provide multiple callback functions that behave just like middleware, except
that these callbacks can invoke Since router and app implement the middleware interface, you can use them as you would any other middleware function. For examples, see Middleware callback function examples. |
None |
Example
app.post('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('POST request to homepage')
})
app.put(path, callback [, callback ...])
Routes HTTP PUT requests to the specified path with the specified callback functions.
Arguments
Argument | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
path |
The path for which the middleware function is invoked; can be any of:
|
'/' (root path) |
callback |
Callback functions; can be:
You can provide multiple callback functions that behave just like middleware, except
that these callbacks can invoke Since router and app implement the middleware interface, you can use them as you would any other middleware function. For examples, see Middleware callback function examples. |
None |
Example
app.put('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('PUT request to homepage')
})
app.render(view, [locals], callback)
Returns the rendered HTML of a view via the callback
function. It accepts an optional parameter
that is an object containing local variables for the view. It is like res.render(),
except it cannot send the rendered view to the client on its own.
Think of app.render()
as a utility function for generating rendered view strings.
Internally res.render()
uses app.render()
to render views.
The view
argument performs file system operations like reading a file from
disk and evaluating Node.js modules, and as so for security reasons should not
contain input from the end-user.
The locals
object is used by view engines to render a response. The object
keys may be particularly sensitive and should not contain user-controlled
input, as it may affect the operation of the view engine or provide a path to
cross-site scripting. Consult the documentation for the used view engine for
additional considerations.
The local variable cache
is reserved for enabling view cache. Set it to true
, if you want to
cache view during development; view caching is enabled in production by default.
app.render('email', function (err, html) {
// ...
})
app.render('email', { name: 'Tobi' }, function (err, html) {
// ...
})
app.route(path)
Returns an instance of a single route, which you can then use to handle HTTP verbs with optional middleware.
Use app.route()
to avoid duplicate route names (and thus typo errors).
var app = express()
app.route('/events')
.all(function (req, res, next) {
// runs for all HTTP verbs first
// think of it as route specific middleware!
})
.get(function (req, res, next) {
res.json({})
})
.post(function (req, res, next) {
// maybe add a new event...
})
app.set(name, value)
Assigns setting name
to value
. You may store any value that you want,
but certain names can be used to configure the behavior of the server. These
special names are listed in the app settings table.
Calling app.set('foo', true)
for a Boolean property is the same as calling
app.enable('foo')
. Similarly, calling app.set('foo', false)
for a Boolean
property is the same as calling app.disable('foo')
.
Retrieve the value of a setting with app.get()
.
app.set('title', 'My Site')
app.get('title') // "My Site"
Application Settings
The following table lists application settings.
Note that sub-apps will:
- Not inherit the value of settings that have a default value. You must set the value in the sub-app.
- Inherit the value of settings with no default value; these are explicitly noted in the table below.
Exceptions: Sub-apps will inherit the value of trust proxy
even though it has a default value (for backward-compatibility);
Sub-apps will not inherit the value of view cache
in production (when NODE_ENV
is “production”).
Property | Type | Description | Default |
---|---|---|---|
|
Boolean | Enable case sensitivity. When enabled, "/Foo" and "/foo" are different routes. When disabled, "/Foo" and "/foo" are treated the same. NOTE: Sub-apps will inherit the value of this setting. |
N/A (undefined) |
|
String |
Environment mode. Be sure to set to “production” in a production environment; see Production best practices: performance and reliability. |
|
|
Varied |
Set the ETag response header. For possible values, see the |
|
|
String | Specifies the default JSONP callback name. |
“callback” |
|
Boolean |
Enable escaping JSON responses from the NOTE: Sub-apps will inherit the value of this setting. |
N/A (undefined) |
|
Varied | The 'replacer' argument used by `JSON.stringify`.
NOTE: Sub-apps will inherit the value of this setting. |
N/A (undefined) |
|
Varied | The 'space' argument used by `JSON.stringify`.
This is typically set to the number of spaces to use to indent prettified JSON.
NOTE: Sub-apps will inherit the value of this setting. |
N/A (undefined) |
|
Varied |
Disable query parsing by setting the value to The simple query parser is based on Node’s native query parser, querystring. The extended query parser is based on qs. A custom query string parsing function will receive the complete query string, and must return an object of query keys and their values. |
"extended" |
|
Boolean | Enable strict routing. When enabled, the router treats "/foo" and "/foo/" as different. Otherwise, the router treats "/foo" and "/foo/" as the same. NOTE: Sub-apps will inherit the value of this setting. |
N/A (undefined) |
|
Number | The number of dot-separated parts of the host to remove to access subdomain. | 2 |
|
Varied |
Indicates the app is behind a front-facing proxy, and to use the When enabled, Express attempts to determine the IP address of the client connected through the front-facing proxy, or series of proxies. The `req.ips` property, then contains an array of IP addresses the client is connected through. To enable it, use the values described in the trust proxy options table. The `trust proxy` setting is implemented using the proxy-addr package. For more information, see its documentation. NOTE: Sub-apps will inherit the value of this setting, even though it has a default value. |
|
|
String or Array | A directory or an array of directories for the application's views. If an array, the views are looked up in the order they occur in the array. |
|
|
Boolean | Enables view template compilation caching. NOTE: Sub-apps will not inherit the value of this setting in production (when `NODE_ENV` is "production"). |
|
|
String | The default engine extension to use when omitted.
NOTE: Sub-apps will inherit the value of this setting. |
N/A (undefined) |
|
Boolean | Enables the "X-Powered-By: Express" HTTP header. |
|
Options for `trust proxy` setting
Read Express behind proxies for more information.
Type | Value |
---|---|
Boolean |
If If |
String String containing comma-separated values Array of strings |
An IP address, subnet, or an array of IP addresses, and subnets to trust. Pre-configured subnet names are:
Set IP addresses in any of the following ways: Specify a single subnet:
Specify a subnet and an address:
Specify multiple subnets as CSV:
Specify multiple subnets as an array:
When specified, the IP addresses or the subnets are excluded from the address determination process, and the untrusted IP address nearest to the application server is determined as the client’s IP address. |
Number |
Trust the nth hop from the front-facing proxy server as the client. |
Function |
Custom trust implementation. Use this only if you know what you are doing.
|
Options for `etag` setting
NOTE: These settings apply only to dynamic files, not static files. The express.static middleware ignores these settings.
The ETag functionality is implemented using the etag package. For more information, see its documentation.
Type | Value |
---|---|
Boolean |
|
String |
If "strong", enables strong ETag. If "weak", enables weak ETag. |
Function |
Custom ETag function implementation. Use this only if you know what you are doing.
|
app.use([path,] callback [, callback...])
Mounts the specified middleware function or functions
at the specified path:
the middleware function is executed when the base of the requested path matches path
.
Arguments
Argument | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
path |
The path for which the middleware function is invoked; can be any of:
|
'/' (root path) |
callback |
Callback functions; can be:
You can provide multiple callback functions that behave just like middleware, except
that these callbacks can invoke Since router and app implement the middleware interface, you can use them as you would any other middleware function. For examples, see Middleware callback function examples. |
None |
Description
A route will match any path that follows its path immediately with a “/
”.
For example: app.use('/apple', ...)
will match “/apple”, “/apple/images”,
“/apple/images/news”, and so on.
Since path
defaults to “/”, middleware mounted without a path will be executed for every request to the app.
For example, this middleware function will be executed for every request to the app:
app.use(function (req, res, next) {
console.log('Time: %d', Date.now())
next()
})
NOTE
Sub-apps will:
- Not inherit the value of settings that have a default value. You must set the value in the sub-app.
- Inherit the value of settings with no default value.
For details, see Application settings.
Middleware functions are executed sequentially, therefore the order of middleware inclusion is important.
// this middleware will not allow the request to go beyond it
app.use(function (req, res, next) {
res.send('Hello World')
})
// requests will never reach this route
app.get('/', function (req, res) {
res.send('Welcome')
})
Error-handling middleware
Error-handling middleware always takes four arguments. You must provide four arguments to identify it as an error-handling middleware function. Even if you don’t need to use the next
object, you must specify it to maintain the signature. Otherwise, the next
object will be interpreted as regular middleware and will fail to handle errors. For details about error-handling middleware, see: Error handling.
Define error-handling middleware functions in the same way as other middleware functions, except with four arguments instead of three, specifically with the signature (err, req, res, next)
):
app.use(function (err, req, res, next) {
console.error(err.stack)
res.status(500).send('Something broke!')
})
Path examples
The following table provides some simple examples of valid path
values for
mounting middleware.
Type | Example |
---|---|
Path |
This will match paths starting with
|
Path Pattern |
This will match paths starting with
This will match paths starting with
This will match paths starting with
This will match paths starting with
|
Regular Expression |
This will match paths starting with
|
Array |
This will match paths starting with
|
Middleware callback function examples
The following table provides some simple examples of middleware functions that
can be used as the callback
argument to app.use()
, app.METHOD()
, and app.all()
.
Usage | Example |
---|---|
Single Middleware |
You can define and mount a middleware function locally.
A router is valid middleware.
An Express app is valid middleware.
|
Series of Middleware |
You can specify more than one middleware function at the same mount path.
|
Array |
Use an array to group middleware logically.
|
Combination |
You can combine all the above ways of mounting middleware.
|
Following are some examples of using the express.static middleware in an Express app.
Serve static content for the app from the “public” directory in the application directory:
// GET /style.css etc
app.use(express.static(path.join(__dirname, 'public')))
Mount the middleware at “/static” to serve static content only when their request path is prefixed with “/static”:
// GET /static/style.css etc.
app.use('/static', express.static(path.join(__dirname, 'public')))
Disable logging for static content requests by loading the logger middleware after the static middleware:
app.use(express.static(path.join(__dirname, 'public')))
app.use(logger())
Serve static files from multiple directories, but give precedence to “./public” over the others:
app.use(express.static(path.join(__dirname, 'public')))
app.use(express.static(path.join(__dirname, 'files')))
app.use(express.static(path.join(__dirname, 'uploads')))