32 KiB
Node.js API
App
Create a Loopback application.
var loopback = require('loopback');
var app = loopback();
app.get('/', function(req, res){
res.send('hello world');
});
app.listen(3000);
Notes
- extends express
- see express docs for details
- supports express / connect middleware
app.boot([options])
Initialize an application from an options object or a set of JSON and JavaScript files.
What happens during an app boot?
- DataSources are created from an
options.dataSources
object ordatasources.json
in the current directory - Models are created from an
options.models
object ormodels.json
in the current directory - Any JavaScript files in the
./models
directory are loaded withrequire()
.
Options
cwd
- optional - the directory to use when loading JSON and JavaScript filesmodels
- optional - an object containingModel
definitionsdataSources
- optional - an object containingDataSource
definitions
NOTE: mixing
app.boot()
andapp.model(name, config)
in multiple files may result in models being undefined due to race conditions. To avoid this when usingapp.boot()
make sure all models are passed as part of themodels
definition.
The following is an example of an object containing two Model
definitions: "location" and "inventory".
{
"dealership": {
// a reference, by name, to a dataSource definition
"dataSource": "my-db",
// the options passed to Model.extend(name, properties, options)
"options": {
"relationships": {
"cars": {
"type": "hasMany",
"model": "Car",
"foreignKey": "dealerId"
}
},
"remoteMethods": {
"nearby": {
"description": "Find nearby locations around the geo point",
"accepts": [
{"arg": "here", "type": "GeoPoint", "required": true, "description": "geo location (lat & lng)"}
],
"returns": {"arg": "locations", "root": true}
}
}
},
// the properties passed to Model.extend(name, properties, options)
"properties": {
"id": {"id": true},
"name": "String",
"zip": "Number",
"address": "String"
}
},
"car": {
"dataSource": "my-db"
"properties": {
"id": {
"type": "String",
"required": true,
"id": true
},
"make": {
"type": "String",
"required": true
},
"model": {
"type": "String",
"required": true
}
}
}
}
Model Definition Properties
dataSource
- required - a string containing the name of the data source definition to attach theModel
tooptions
- optional - an object containingModel
optionsproperties
optional - an object defining theModel
properties in LoopBack Definition Language
DataSource Definition Properties
connector
- required - the name of the connector
app.model(name, definition)
Define a Model
and export it for use by remote clients.
// declare a DataSource
app.boot({
dataSources: {
db: {
connector: 'mongodb',
url: 'mongodb://localhost:27015/my-database-name'
}
}
});
// describe a model
var modelDefinition = {dataSource: 'db'};
// create the model
var Product = app.model('product', modelDefinition);
// use the model api
Product.create({name: 'pencil', price: 0.99}, console.log);
Note - this will expose all shared methods on the model.
You may also export an existing Model
by calling app.model(Model)
like the example below.
app.models.MyModel
All models are avaialbe from the loopback.models
object. In the following
example the Product
and CustomerReceipt
models are accessed using
the models
object.
NOTE: you must call
app.boot()
in order to build the app.models object.
var loopback = require('loopback');
var app = loopback();
app.boot({
dataSources: {
db: {connector: 'memory'}
}
});
app.model('product', {dataSource: 'db'});
app.model('customer-receipt', {dataSource: 'db'});
// available based on the given name
var Product = app.models.Product;
// also available as camelCase
var product = app.models.product;
// multi-word models are avaiable as pascal cased
var CustomerReceipt = app.models.CustomerReceipt;
// also available as camelCase
var customerReceipt = app.models.customerReceipt;
app.models()
Get the app's exported models. Only models defined using app.model()
will show up in this list.
var models = app.models();
models.forEach(function (Model) {
console.log(Model.modelName); // color
});
app.docs(options)
Enable swagger REST API documentation.
Options
basePath
The basepath for your API - eg. 'http://localhost:3000'.
Example
// enable docs
app.docs({basePath: 'http://localhost:3000'});
Run your app then navigate to the api explorer. Enter your API basepath to view your generated docs.
app.use( router )
Expose models over specified router.
For example, to expose models over REST using the loopback.rest
router:
app.use(loopback.rest());
View generated REST documentation by visiting: http://localhost:3000/_docs.
Middleware
LoopBack comes bundled with several connect
/ express
style middleware.
loopback.token(options)
Options
cookies
- AnArray
of cookie namesheaders
- AnArray
of header namesparams
- AnArray
of param names
Each array is used to add additional keys to find an accessToken
for a request
.
The following example illustrates how to check for an accessToken
in a custom cookie, query string parameter
and header called foo-auth
.
app.use(loopback.token({
cookies: ['foo-auth'],
headers: ['foo-auth', 'X-Foo-Auth'],
cookies: ['foo-auth', 'foo_auth']
}));
Defaults
By default the following names will be checked. These names are appended to any optional names. They will always be checked, but any names specified will be checked first.
params.push('access_token');
headers.push('X-Access-Token');
headers.push('authorization');
cookies.push('access_token');
cookies.push('authorization');
NOTE: The
loopback.token()
middleware will only check for signed cookies.
Model
A Loopback Model
is a vanilla JavaScript class constructor with an attached set of properties and options. A Model
instance is created by passing a data object containing properties to the Model
constructor. A Model
constructor will clean the object passed to it and only set the values matching the properties you define.
// valid color
var Color = loopback.createModel('color', {name: String});
var red = new Color({name: 'red'});
console.log(red.name); // red
// invalid color
var foo = new Color({bar: 'bat baz'});
console.log(foo.bar); // undefined
Properties
A model defines a list of property names, types and other validation metadata. A DataSource uses this definition to validate a Model
during operations such as save()
.
Options
Some DataSources may support additional Model
options.
Define A Loopbackmodel.
var User = loopback.createModel('user', {
first: String,
last: String,
age: Number
});
Validation (expiremental)
Model.validatesFormatOf(property, options)
Require a model to include a property that matches the given format.
User.validatesFormat('name', {with: /\w+/});
Model.validatesPresenceOf(properties...)
Require a model to include a property to be considered valid.
User.validatesPresenceOf('first', 'last', 'age');
Model.validatesLengthOf(property, options)
Require a property length to be within a specified range.
User.validatesLengthOf('password', {min: 5, message: {min: 'Password is too short'}});
Model.validatesInclusionOf(property, options)
Require a value for property
to be in the specified array.
User.validatesInclusionOf('gender', {in: ['male', 'female']});
Model.validatesExclusionOf(property, options)
Require a value for property
to not exist in the specified array.
User.validatesExclusionOf('domain', {in: ['www', 'billing', 'admin']});
Model.validatesNumericalityOf(property, options)
Require a value for property
to be a specific type of Number
.
User.validatesNumericalityOf('age', {int: true});
Model.validatesUniquenessOf(property, options)
Ensure the value for property
is unique in the collection of models.
User.validatesUniquenessOf('email', {message: 'email is not unique'});
Note: not available for all connectors.
Currently supported in these connectors:
myModel.isValid()
Validate the model instance.
user.isValid(function (valid) {
if (!valid) {
console.log(user.errors);
// => hash of errors
// => {
// => username: [errmessage, errmessage, ...],
// => email: ...
// => }
}
});
Model.properties
An object containing a normalized set of properties supplied to loopback.createModel(name, properties)
.
Example:
var props = {
a: String,
b: {type: 'Number'},
c: {type: 'String', min: 10, max: 100},
d: Date,
e: loopback.GeoPoint
};
var MyModel = loopback.createModel('foo', props);
console.log(MyModel.properties);
Outputs:
{
"a": {type: String},
"b": {type: Number},
"c": {
"type": String,
"min": 10,
"max": 100
},
"d": {type: Date},
"e": {type: GeoPoint},
"id": {
"id": 1
}
}
Model.attachTo(dataSource)
Attach a model to a DataSource. Attaching a DataSource updates the model with additional methods and behaviors.
var oracle = loopback.createDataSource({
connector: require('loopback-connector-oracle'),
host: '111.22.333.44',
database: 'MYDB',
username: 'username',
password: 'password'
});
User.attachTo(oracle);
Note: until a model is attached to a data source it will not have any attached methods.
CRUD and Query Mixins
Mixins are added by attaching a vanilla model to a data source with a connector. Each connector enables its own set of operations that are mixed into a Model
as methods. To see available methods for a data source call dataSource.operations()
.
Log the available methods for a memory data source.
var ops = loopback
.createDataSource({connector: loopback.Memory})
.operations();
console.log(Object.keys(ops));
Outputs:
[ 'create',
'updateOrCreate',
'upsert',
'findOrCreate',
'exists',
'findById',
'find',
'all',
'findOne',
'destroyAll',
'deleteAll',
'count',
'include',
'relationNameFor',
'hasMany',
'belongsTo',
'hasAndBelongsToMany',
'save',
'isNewRecord',
'destroy',
'delete',
'updateAttribute',
'updateAttributes',
'reload' ]
Here is the definition of the count()
operation.
{
accepts: [ { arg: 'where', type: 'object' } ],
http: { verb: 'get', path: '/count' },
remoteEnabled: true,
name: 'count'
}
Static Methods
Note: These are the default mixin methods for a Model
attached to a data source. See the specific connector for additional API documentation.
Model.create(data, [callback])
Create an instance of Model with given data and save to the attached data source. Callback is optional.
User.create({first: 'Joe', last: 'Bob'}, function(err, user) {
console.log(user instanceof User); // true
});
Note: You must include a callback and use the created model provided in the callback if your code depends on your model being saved or having an id
.
Model.count([query], callback)
Query count of Model instances in data source. Optional query param allows to count filtered set of Model instances.
User.count({approved: true}, function(err, count) {
console.log(count); // 2081
});
Model.find(filter, callback)
Find all instances of Model, matched by query. Fields used for filter and sort should be declared with {index: true}
in model definition.
filter
-
where
Object
{ key: val, key2: {gt: 'val2'}} The search criteria- Format: {key: val} or {key: {op: val}}
- Operations:
- gt: >
- gte: >=
- lt: <
- lte: <=
- between
- inq: IN
- nin: NOT IN
- neq: !=
- like: LIKE
- nlike: NOT LIKE
-
include
String
,Object
orArray
Allows you to load relations of several objects and optimize numbers of requests.- Format:
- 'posts': Load posts
- ['posts', 'passports']: Load posts and passports
- {'owner': 'posts'}: Load owner and owner's posts
- {'owner': ['posts', 'passports']}: Load owner, owner's posts, and owner's passports
- {'owner': [{posts: 'images'}, 'passports']}: Load owner, owner's posts, owner's posts' images, and owner's passports
- Format:
-
order
String
The sorting order- Format: 'key1 ASC, key2 DESC'
-
limit
Number
The maximum number of instances to be returned -
skip
Number
Skip the number of instances -
offset
Number
Alias for skip -
fields
Object|Array|String
The included/excluded fields -
['foo']
or'foo'
- include only the foo property -
['foo', 'bar']
- include the foo and bar properties -
{foo: true}
- include only foo -
{bat: false}
- include all properties, exclude bat
Find the second page of 10 users over age 21 in descending order exluding the password property.
User.find({
where: {
age: {gt: 21}},
order: 'age DESC',
limit: 10,
skip: 10,
fields: {password: false}
},
console.log
);
Note: See the specific connector's docs for more info.
Model.destroyAll(callback)
Delete all Model instances from data source. Note: destroyAll method does not perform destroy hooks.
Model.findById(id, callback)
Find instance by id.
User.findById(23, function(err, user) {
console.info(user.id); // 23
});
Model.findOne(where, callback)
Find a single instance that matches the given where expression.
User.findOne({id: 23}, function(err, user) {
console.info(user.id); // 23
});
Model.upsert(data, callback)
Update when record with id=data.id found, insert otherwise. Note: no setters, validations or hooks applied when using upsert.
Custom Static Methods
Define a static model method.
User.login = function (username, password, fn) {
var passwordHash = hashPassword(password);
this.findOne({username: username}, function (err, user) {
var failErr = new Error('login failed');
if(err) {
fn(err);
} else if(!user) {
fn(failErr);
} else if(user.password === passwordHash) {
MyAccessTokenModel.create({userId: user.id}, function (err, accessToken) {
fn(null, accessToken.id);
});
} else {
fn(failErr);
}
});
}
Setup the static model method to be exposed to clients as a remote method.
loopback.remoteMethod(
User.login,
{
accepts: [
{arg: 'username', type: 'string', required: true},
{arg: 'password', type: 'string', required: true}
],
returns: {arg: 'accessTokenId', type: 'any'},
http: {path: '/sign-in'}
}
);
Instance Methods
Note: These are the default mixin methods for a Model
attached to a data source. See the specific connector for additional API documentation.
model.save([options], [callback])
Save an instance of a Model to the attached data source.
var joe = new User({first: 'Joe', last: 'Bob'});
joe.save(function(err, user) {
if(user.errors) {
console.log(user.errors);
} else {
console.log(user.id);
}
});
model.updateAttributes(data, [callback])
Save specified attributes to the attached data source.
user.updateAttributes({
first: 'updatedFirst',
name: 'updatedLast'
}, fn);
model.destroy([callback])
Remove a model from the attached data source.
model.destroy(function(err) {
// model instance destroyed
});
Custom Instance Methods
Define an instance method.
User.prototype.logout = function (fn) {
MyAccessTokenModel.destroyAll({userId: this.id}, fn);
}
Define a remote model instance method.
loopback.remoteMethod(User.prototype.logout)
Remote Methods
Both instance and static methods can be exposed to clients. A remote method must accept a callback with the conventional fn(err, result, ...)
signature.
loopback.remoteMethod(fn, [options])
Expose a remote method.
Product.stats = function(fn) {
var statsResult = {
totalPurchased: 123456
};
var err = null;
// callback with an error and the result
fn(err, statsResult);
}
loopback.remoteMethod(
Product.stats,
{
returns: {arg: 'stats', type: 'object'},
http: {path: '/info', verb: 'get'}
}
);
Options
- accepts - (optional) an arguments description specifying the remote method's arguments.
- returns - (optional) an arguments description specifying the remote methods callback arguments.
- http - (advanced / optional, object) http routing info
- http.path - the path relative to the model the method will be exposed at. May be a path fragment (eg. '/:myArg') which will be populated by an arg of the same name in the accepts description. For example the stats method above will be at the whole path
/products/stats
. - http.verb - (get, post, put, del, all) - the route verb the method will be available from.
Argument Description
An arguments description defines either a single argument as an object or an ordered set of arguments as an array.
// examples
{arg: 'myArg', type: 'number'}
[
{arg: 'arg1', type: 'number', required: true},
{arg: 'arg2', type: 'array'}
]
Types
Each argument may define any of the loopback types.
Notes:
- The callback is an assumed argument and does not need to be specified in the accepts array.
- The err argument is also assumed and does not need to be specified in the returns array.
Remote Hooks
Run a function before or after a remote method is called by a client.
// *.save === prototype.save
User.beforeRemote('*.save', function(ctx, user, next) {
if(ctx.user) {
next();
} else {
next(new Error('must be logged in to update'))
}
});
User.afterRemote('*.save', function(ctx, user, next) {
console.log('user has been saved', user);
next();
});
Remote hooks also support wildcards. Run a function before any remote method is called.
// ** will match both prototype.* and *.*
User.beforeRemote('**', function(ctx, user, next) {
console.log(ctx.methodString, 'was invoked remotely'); // users.prototype.save was invoked remotely
next();
});
Other wildcard examples
// run before any static method eg. User.find
User.beforeRemote('*', ...);
// run before any instance method eg. User.prototype.save
User.beforeRemote('prototype.*', ...);
// prevent password hashes from being sent to clients
User.afterRemote('**', function (ctx, user, next) {
if(ctx.result) {
if(Array.isArray(ctx.result)) {
ctx.result.forEach(function (result) {
result.password = undefined;
});
} else {
ctx.result.password = undefined;
}
}
next();
});
Context
Remote hooks are provided with a Context ctx
object which contains transport specific data (eg. for http: req
and res
). The ctx
object also has a set of consistent apis across transports.
ctx.user
A Model
representing the user calling the method remotely. Note: this is undefined if the remote method is not invoked by a logged in user.
ctx.result
During afterRemote
hooks, ctx.result
will contain the data about to be sent to a client. Modify this object to transform data before it is sent.
Rest
When loopback.rest is used the following ctx
properties are available.
ctx.req
The express ServerRequest object. See full documentation.
ctx.res
The express ServerResponse object. See full documentation.
Relationships
Model.hasMany(Model, options)
Define a "one to many" relationship.
// by referencing model
Book.hasMany(Chapter);
// specify the name
Book.hasMany('chapters', {model: Chapter});
Query and create the related models.
Book.create(function(err, book) {
// create a chapter instance
// ready to be saved in the data source
var chapter = book.chapters.build({name: 'Chapter 1'});
// save the new chapter
chapter.save();
// you can also call the Chapter.create method with
// the `chapters` property which will build a chapter
// instance and save the it in the data source
book.chapters.create({name: 'Chapter 2'}, function(err, savedChapter) {
// this callback is optional
});
// query chapters for the book using the
book.chapters(function(err, chapters) {
// all chapters with bookId = book.id
console.log(chapters);
});
book.chapters({where: {name: 'test'}, function(err, chapters) {
// all chapters with bookId = book.id and name = 'test'
console.log(chapters);
});
});
Model.belongsTo(Model, options)
A belongsTo
relation sets up a one-to-one connection with another model, such
that each instance of the declaring model "belongs to" one instance of the other
model. For example, if your application includes users and posts, and each post
can be written by exactly one user.
Post.belongsTo(User, {as: 'author', foreignKey: 'userId'});
The code above basically says Post has a reference called author
to User using
the userId
property of Post as the foreign key. Now we can access the author
in one of the following styles:
post.author(callback); // Get the User object for the post author asynchronously
post.author(); // Get the User object for the post author synchronously
post.author(user) // Set the author to be the given user
Model.hasAndBelongsToMany(Model, options)
A hasAndBelongsToMany
relation creates a direct many-to-many connection with
another model, with no intervening model. For example, if your application
includes users and groups, with each group having many users and each user
appearing in many groups, you could declare the models this way,
User.hasAndBelongsToMany('groups', {model: Group, foreignKey: 'groupId'});
user.groups(callback); // get groups of the user
user.groups.create(data, callback); // create a new group and connect it with the user
user.groups.add(group, callback); // connect an existing group with the user
user.groups.remove(group, callback); // remove the user from the group
Shared Methods
Any static or instance method can be decorated as shared
. These methods are exposed over the provided transport (eg. loopback.rest).
Data Source
A Loopback DataSource
provides Models with the ability to manipulate data. Attaching a DataSource
to a Model
adds instance methods and static methods to the Model
. The added methods may be remote methods.
Define a data source for persisting models.
var oracle = loopback.createDataSource({
connector: 'oracle',
host: '111.22.333.44',
database: 'MYDB',
username: 'username',
password: 'password'
});
dataSource.createModel(name, properties, options)
Define a model and attach it to a DataSource
.
var Color = oracle.createModel('color', {name: String});
dataSource.discoverModelDefinitions([username], fn)
Discover a set of model definitions (table or collection names) based on tables or collections in a data source.
oracle.discoverModelDefinitions(function (err, models) {
models.forEach(function (def) {
// def.name ~ the model name
oracle.discoverSchema(null, def.name, function (err, schema) {
console.log(schema);
});
});
});
dataSource.discoverSchema([owner], name, fn)
Discover the schema of a specific table or collection.
Example schema from oracle connector:
{
"name": "Product",
"options": {
"idInjection": false,
"oracle": {
"schema": "BLACKPOOL",
"table": "PRODUCT"
}
},
"properties": {
"id": {
"type": "String",
"required": true,
"length": 20,
"id": 1,
"oracle": {
"columnName": "ID",
"dataType": "VARCHAR2",
"dataLength": 20,
"nullable": "N"
}
},
"name": {
"type": "String",
"required": false,
"length": 64,
"oracle": {
"columnName": "NAME",
"dataType": "VARCHAR2",
"dataLength": 64,
"nullable": "Y"
}
},
"audibleRange": {
"type": "Number",
"required": false,
"length": 22,
"oracle": {
"columnName": "AUDIBLE_RANGE",
"dataType": "NUMBER",
"dataLength": 22,
"nullable": "Y"
}
},
"effectiveRange": {
"type": "Number",
"required": false,
"length": 22,
"oracle": {
"columnName": "EFFECTIVE_RANGE",
"dataType": "NUMBER",
"dataLength": 22,
"nullable": "Y"
}
},
"rounds": {
"type": "Number",
"required": false,
"length": 22,
"oracle": {
"columnName": "ROUNDS",
"dataType": "NUMBER",
"dataLength": 22,
"nullable": "Y"
}
},
"extras": {
"type": "String",
"required": false,
"length": 64,
"oracle": {
"columnName": "EXTRAS",
"dataType": "VARCHAR2",
"dataLength": 64,
"nullable": "Y"
}
},
"fireModes": {
"type": "String",
"required": false,
"length": 64,
"oracle": {
"columnName": "FIRE_MODES",
"dataType": "VARCHAR2",
"dataLength": 64,
"nullable": "Y"
}
}
}
}
dataSource.enableRemote(operation)
Enable remote access to a data source operation. Each connector has its own set of set remotely enabled and disabled operations. You can always list these by calling dataSource.operations()
.
dataSource.disableRemote(operation)
Disable remote access to a data source operation. Each connector has its own set of set enabled and disabled operations. You can always list these by calling dataSource.operations()
.
// all rest data source operations are
// disabled by default
var oracle = loopback.createDataSource({
connector: require('loopback-connector-oracle'),
host: '...',
...
});
// or only disable it as a remote method
oracle.disableRemote('destroyAll');
Notes:
- disabled operations will not be added to attached models
- disabling the remoting for a method only affects client access (it will still be available from server models)
- data sources must enable / disable operations before attaching or creating models
dataSource.operations()
List the enabled and disabled operations.
console.log(oracle.operations());
Output:
{
find: {
remoteEnabled: true,
accepts: [...],
returns: [...]
enabled: true
},
save: {
remoteEnabled: true,
prototype: true,
accepts: [...],
returns: [...],
enabled: true
},
...
}
Connectors
Create a data source with a specific connector. See available connectors for specific connector documentation.
var memory = loopback.createDataSource({
connector: loopback.Memory
});
Database Connectors
- In Memory
- Oracle
- MongoDB
- MySQL - In Development
- SQLite3 - In Development
- Postgres - In Development
- Redis - In Development
- CouchDB - In Development
- Firebird - In Development
Other Connectors
- REST
- JSON RPC - In Development
- SOAP - In Development
- Push Notifications - In Development
- File Storage - In Development
Installing Connectors
Include the connector in your package.json dependencies and run npm install
.
{
"dependencies": {
"loopback-connector-oracle": "latest"
}
}
Memory Connector
The built-in memory connector allows you to test your application without connecting to an actual persistent data source, such as a database. Although the memory connector is very well tested it is not recommended to be used in production. Creating a data source using the memory connector is very simple.
// use the built in memory function
// to create a memory data source
var memory = loopback.memory();
// or create it using the standard
// data source creation api
var memory = loopback.createDataSource({
connector: loopback.Memory
});
// create a model using the
// memory data source
var properties = {
name: String,
price: Number
};
var Product = memory.createModel('product', properties);
Product.create([
{name: 'apple', price: 0.79},
{name: 'pear', price: 1.29},
{name: 'orange', price: 0.59},
], count);
function count() {
Product.count(console.log); // 3
}
CRUD / Query
The memory connector supports all the standard query and crud operations to allow you to test your models against an in memory data source.
GeoPoint Filtering
The memory connector also supports geo-filtering when using the find()
operation with an attached model. See GeoPoint for more information on geo-filtering.
GeoPoint
Use the GeoPoint
class.
var GeoPoint = require('loopback').GeoPoint;
Embed a latitude / longitude point in a Model.
var CoffeeShop = loopback.createModel('coffee-shop', {
location: 'GeoPoint'
});
Loopback Model's with a GeoPoint property and an attached DataSource may be queried using geo spatial filters and sorting.
Find the 3 nearest coffee shops.
CoffeeShop.attachTo(oracle);
var here = new GeoPoint({lat: 10.32424, lng: 5.84978});
CoffeeShop.find({where: {location: {near: here}}, limit:3}, function(err, nearbyShops) {
console.info(nearbyShops); // [CoffeeShop, ...]
});
geoPoint.distanceTo(geoPoint, options)
Get the distance to another GeoPoint
.
var here = new GeoPoint({lat: 10, lng: 10});
var there = new GeoPoint({lat: 5, lng: 5});
console.log(here.distanceTo(there, {type: 'miles'})); // 438
GeoPoint.distanceBetween(a, b, options)
Get the distance between two points.
GeoPoint.distanceBetween(here, there, {type: 'miles'}) // 438
Distance Types
Note: all distance methods use miles
by default.
miles
radians
kilometers
meters
miles
feet
degrees
geoPoint.lat
The latitude point in degrees. Range: -90 to 90.
geoPoint.lng
The longitude point in degrees. Range: -180 to 180.