@laffery/webpack-react18-ssr-ts
v0.1.5
Published
template for webpack + react18 + ssr + typescript
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Webpack React SSR Typescript Template
Server-Side Render is supported
Available Scripts
In the project directory, you can run:
npm run dev
Runs the app in the development mode.
Open http://localhost:3000 to view it in the browser.
The page will reload if you make edits.
You will also see any lint errors in the console.
npm run start
Runs the app in the production mode.
Open http://localhost:3000 to view it in the browser.
npm run build
Builds the app for production to the dist
folder.
The client side code is built in dist/client
folder, and the server side code is built in dist/server
folder.
It correctly bundles React in production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance.
The build is minified and the filenames include the hashes.
Your app is ready to be deployed!
SSR
There are several pages in the example project.
You can try them on their own page.
Even though the SSR pages are rendered on the server side, they can response to events as the CSR pages do after hydrating
on the client side.
Developing SSR page
You need do nothing to define a SSR page, but only to export an async function named getServerSideProps
, and define data-fetch logic in it, we will automatically fetch the data and inject to somewhere client can access directly, which will be seen as a props
argument to invoke the relative page component.
import { GetServerSideProps } from "app";
import HelloWorld from "@/components/hello-world";
export default function Homepage(props: { mode?: "CSR" | "SSR" }) {
return <HelloWorld page="src/pages/ssr/index.tsx" {...props} />;
}
export const getServerSideProps: GetServerSideProps = async () => {
return { props: { mode: "SSR" } };
};
As the above page says, you will see "CSR" on the page while the page is rendered in client side, otherwise you will see "SSR" on the page while the page is rendered in server side.
Route
Conventional routing is supported
Similar to Next.js
, we also have a file-system based router built on the concept of pages.
When a file is added to the pages directory, it's automatically available as a route.
The files inside the pages directory can be used to define most common patterns.
Serverless API is supported
Write your API handlers in server/services
, then visit http://localhost:3000/api/echo
router.get("/echo", (req, res) => {
return res.end("hello world");
});
// hello world