I am working on a single page web app using Node + Express and Handlebars for templating. Everything currently works well from index.html, which is served from a pretty standard server.js file:
var express = require('express');
var server = express();
server.use(express.static(__dirname + '/public'));
var port = 10001;
server.listen(port, function() {
console.log('server listening on port ' + port);
});
This works perfectly when loading from http://localhost:10001/
. My issue is that I'm using push states in the app, so the browser may show a URL like http://localhost:10001/foo/bar
and then if I refresh the page, I get the error Cannot GET /foo/bar
since there is no route for this.
So my question, and pardon my incredible noobishness when it comes to Node, can I make it so all requests route to index.html? The JavaScript in my app can handle showing the right content based on URL params on page load. I don't want to define custom routes as the number would be large, and the paths for them can change dynamically.
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