npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@worklit/ssr

v2.3.0-worklit.2

Published

SSR for Lit

Downloads

4

Readme

@lit-labs/ssr

A package for server-side rendering Lit templates and components.

Status

@lit-labs/ssr is pre-release software, not quite ready for public consumption. As we develop it we are using it as a test bed to ensure that new versions of lit (lit-html and lit-element) are SSR-ready. We expect that the foundational SSR support in this package will support a wide variety of use cases, from full-blown app rendering frameworks built on top of web components, to framework-specific plugins for rendering custom elements in e.g. React or Angular, to pre-rendering plugins for static site generators like 11ty. Please stay tuned and file issues with use cases you'd like to see covered.

Server Usage

Rendering in the Node.js global scope

The easiest way to get started is to import your Lit template modules (and any LitElement definitions they may use) into the node global scope and render them to a stream (or string) using the render(value: unknown): Iterable<string> function provided by the render-with-global-dom-shim.js module. Since Lit-authored code may rely on DOM globals, the render-with-global-dom-shim.js module will install a minimal DOM shim into the Node.js global scope, which should be sufficient for typical use cases. As such, render-with-global-dom-shim.js should be imported before any modules containing Lit code.

// Example: server.js:

import {render} from '@lit-labs/ssr/lib/render-with-global-dom-shim.js';
import {myTemplate} from './my-template.js';

//...

const ssrResult = render(myTemplate(data));
context.body = Readable.from(ssrResult);

Rendering in a separate VM context

To avoid polluting the Node.js global object with the DOM shim and ensure each request receives a fresh global object, we also provide a way to load app code into, and render from, a separate VM context with its own global object. Note that using this feature requires Node 14+ and passing the --experimental-vm-modules flag to node on because of its use of experimental VM modules for creating a module-compatible VM context.

To render in a VM context, the renderModule function from the render-module.js module will import a given module into a server-side VM context shimmed with the minimal DOM shim required for Lit server rendering, execute a given function exported from that module, and return its value.

Within that module, you can call the render method from the render-lit-html.js module to render lit-html templates and return an iterable that incrementally emits the serialized strings of the given template.

// Example: render-template.js

import {render} from '@lit-labs/ssr/lib/render-lit-html.js';
import {myTemplate} from './my-template.js';
export const renderTemplate = (someData) => {
  return render(myTemplate(someData));
};
// Example: server.js:

import {renderModule} from '@lit-labs/ssr/lib/render-module.js';

// Execute the above `renderTemplate` in a separate VM context with a minimal DOM shim
const ssrResult = await (renderModule(
  './render-template.js',  // Module to load in VM context
  import.meta.url,         // Referrer URL for module
  'renderTemplate',        // Function to call
  [{some: "data"}]         // Arguments to function
) as Promise<Iterable<unknown>>);

// ...

context.body = Readable.from(ssrResult);

Client usage

Hydrating lit templates

"Hydration" is the process of having lit re-associate the expressions of a lit template with the nodes they should update in the DOM. In order to "hydrate" lit templates, the hydrate method from the experimental-hydrate module is provided in the lit package. Prior to updating a server-rendered container using render, you should first call hydrate on that container using the same template and data that was used to render on the server:

import {myTemplate} from './my-template.js';
import {render} from 'lit';
import {hydrate} from 'lit/experimental-hydrate.js';
// Initial hydration required before render:
// (must be same data used to render on the server)
const initialData = getInitialAppData();
hydrate(myTemplate(initialData), document.body);

// After hydration, render will efficiently update the server-rendered DOM:
const update = (data) => render(myTemplate(data), document.body);

Hydrating LitElements

When LitElements are server rendered, their shadow root contents are emitted inside a <template shadowroot>, also known as a Declarative Shadow Root, a new browser feature that is shipping Chrome. Declarative shadow roots automatically attach their contents to a shadow root on the template's parent element when parsed. For browsers that do not yet implement declarative shadow root, there is a template-shadowroot polyfill, described below.

Because the hydrate function above does not descend into shadow roots, it only works on one scope of the DOM at a time. To hydrate LitElement shadow roots, load the lit/hydrate-support.js module, which installs support for LitElement automatically hydrating itself when it detects it was server-rendered with declarative shadow DOM. This module should be loaded before the lit module is loaded, to ensure hydration support is properly installed.

Put together, an HTML page that was server rendered and containing LitElements in the main document might look like this:

import {render} from '@lit-labs/ssr/lib/render-with-global-dom-shim.js';
import './app-components.js';

const ssrResult = render(html`
  <html>
    <head> </head>
    <body>
      <app-shell>
        <app-page-one></app-page-one>
        <app-page-two></app-page-two>
      </app-shell>

      <script type="module">
        // Hydrate template-shadowroots eagerly after rendering (for browsers without
        // native declarative shadow roots)
        import {
          hasNativeDeclarativeShadowRoots,
          hydrateShadowRoots,
        } from './node_modules/@webcomponents/template-shadowroot/template-shadowroot.js';
        if (!hasNativeDeclarativeShadowRoots()) {
          hydrateShadowRoots(document.body);
        }
        // ...
        // Load and hydrate components lazily
        import('./app-components.js');
      </script>
    </body>
  </html>
`);

// ...

context.body = Readable.from(ssrResult);

Note that as a simple example, the code above assumes a static top-level template that does not need to be hydrated on the client, and that top-level components individually hydrate themselves using data supplied either by attributes or via a side-channel mechanism. This is in no way fundamental; the top-level template can be used to pass data to the top-level components, and that template can be loaded and hydrated on the client to apply the same data.

Notes and limitations

Please note the following current limitations with the SSR package:

  • Browser support: Support for hydrating elements on browsers that require the ShadyCSS polyfill (IE11) is not currently tested or supported.
  • DOM shim: The DOM shim used by default is very minimal; because the server-rendering code for Lit relies largely on its declarative nature and string-based templates, we are able to incrementally stream the contents of a template and its sub-elements while avoiding the cost of a full DOM shim by not actually using the DOM for rendering. As such, the DOM shim used provides only enough to load and register element definitions, namely things like a minimal HTMLElement base class and customElements registry.
  • DOM access: The above point means care should be taken to avoid interacting directly with the DOM in certain lifecycle callbacks. Concretely, you should generally only interact directly with the DOM (like accessing child/parent nodes, querying, imperatively adding event listeners, dispatching events, etc.) in the following lifecycle callbacks, which are not called on the server:
    • LitElement's update, updated, firstUpdated, or event handlers
    • Directive's update
  • Patterns for usage: As mentioned above under "Status", we intend to flesh out a number of common patterns for using this package, and provide appropriate APIs and documentation for these as the package reaches maturity. Concerns like server/client data management, incremental loading and hydration, etc. are currently beyond the scope of what this package offers, but we believe it should support building these patterns on top of it going forward. Please file issues for ideas, suggestions, and use cases you may encounter.