All Projects β†’ catamphetamine β†’ React Pages

catamphetamine / React Pages

Licence: mit
A complete solution for building a React/Redux application: routing, page preloading, (optional) server-side rendering, asynchronous HTTP requests, document metadata, etc.

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react-pages

npm version npm downloads

A complete solution for building a React/Redux application

  • Routing
  • Page loading
  • (optional) Code splitting
  • (optional) Server-side rendering
  • Asynchronous HTTP requests
  • Easy and simplified Redux (no boilerplate code)
  • Document metadata (<title/>, <meta/>, social network sharing)
  • Webpack "hot reload"
  • HTTP Cookies
  • etc

react-pages vs react-website

Previously this library has been known as react-website but then I found a better (in my opinion) name for it and it's now called react-pages. For migrating from react-website to react-pages see the migration guide.

Introduction

Getting started

First, install Redux:

$ npm install redux react-redux --save

Then, install react-pages:

$ npm install react-pages --save

Start by creating react-pages configuration file.

./src/react-pages.js

import routes from './routes'

// Redux reducers, which will be combined into
// a single Redux reducer via `combineReducers()`.
import * as reducers from './redux/index'

export default {
  routes,
  reducers
}

The routes:

./src/routes.js

import React from 'react'
import { Route } from 'react-pages'

import App from '../pages/App'
import Home from '../pages/Home'
import About from '../pages/About'

export default (
  <Route path="/" component={ App }>
    <Route component={ Home }/>
    <Route path="about" component={ About }/>
  </Route>
)

./src/pages/App.js

import React from 'react'
import { Link } from 'react-pages'

export default ({ children }) => (
  <div>
    <h1> Web Application </h1>
    <ul>
      <li> <Link exact to="/"> Home </Link> </li>
      <li> <Link to="/about"> About </Link> </li>
    </ul>
    { children }
  </div>
)

./src/pages/Home.js

import React from 'react'

export default () => <div> This is a home page </div>

./src/pages/About.js

import React from 'react'

export default () => <div> Made using `react-pages` </div>

The reducers:

./src/redux/index.js

// For those who're unfamiliar with Redux,
// a reducer is a function `(state, action) => state`.
export { default as reducer1 } from './reducer1'
export { default as reducer2 } from './reducer2'
...

Then call render() in the main client-side javascript file.

./src/index.js

import { render } from 'react-pages'
import settings from './react-pages'

// Render the page in web browser
render(settings)

And the index.html would look like this:

<html>
  <head>
    <title>Example</title>
    <!-- Fix encoding. -->
    <meta charset="utf-8">
    <!-- Fix document width for mobile devices. -->
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
  </head>
  <body>
    <script src="/bundle.js"></script>
  </body>
</html>

Where bundle.js is the ./src/index.js file built with Webpack (or you could use any other javascript bundler).

Now, index.html and bundle.js files must be served over HTTP(S).

If you're using Webpack then add HtmlWebpackPlugin to generate index.html, and run webpack-dev-server with historyApiFallback to serve the generated index.html and bundle.js files over HTTP on localhost:8080.

See HtmlWebpackPlugin configuration example

webpack.config.js

const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin')

const buildOutputPath = '...'
const devServerPort = 8080 // Any port number.

module.exports = {
  output: {
    path: buildOutputPath,
    publicPath: `http://localhost:${devServerPort}`,
    ...
  },
  ...,
  plugins: [
    new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
      template: 'src/index.html' // Path to `index.html` file.
    }),
    ...
  ],
  devServer: {
    port: devServerPort,
    contentBase: buildOutputPath,
    historyApiFallback : true
  }
}

src/index.html

<html>
  <head>
    <title>Example</title>
    <!-- Fix encoding. -->
    <meta charset="utf-8">
    <!-- Fix document width for mobile devices. -->
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
  </head>
  <body>
    <!-- HtmlWebpackPlugin will insert a <script> tag here. -->
  </body>
</html>
webpack-dev-server --hot --config webpack.config.js

See the Webpack example project.

If you're using Parcel then it's much simpler than Webpack: see the basic example project for the setup required in order to generate and serve index.html and bundle.js files over HTTP on localhost:1234.

So now the website should be fully working.

The website (index.html, bundle.js, CSS stylesheets and images, etc) can now be deployed as-is in a cloud (e.g. on Amazon S3) and served statically for a very low price. The API can be hosted "serverlessly" in a cloud (e.g. Amazon Lambda) which is also considered cheap. No running Node.js server is required. Yes, it's not a Server-Side Rendered approach because a user is given a blank page first, then bundle.js script is loaded by the web browser, then bundle.js script is executed fetching some data from the API via an HTTP request, and only when that HTTP request comes back β€” only then the page is rendered (in the browser). Google won't index such websites, but if searchability is not a requirement (at all or yet) then that would be the way to go (e.g. startup "MVP"s or "internal applications"). Server-Side Rendering can be easily added to such setup should the need arise.

Server Side Rendering

Adding server-side rendering to the setup is quite simple though requiring a Node.js process running which increases hosting costs and maintenance complexity.

In case of server-side rendering index.html is being generated on-the-fly by page rendering server for each incoming HTTP request, so the index.html file may be deleted as it's of no use now.

./rendering-server.js

import webpageServer from 'react-pages/server'
import settings from './react-pages'

// Create webpage rendering server
const server = webpageServer(settings, {
  // Pass `secure: true` for HTTPS.
  //
  // These are the URLs of the "static" javascript and CSS files
  // which are injected in the resulting Html webpage
  // as <script src="..."/> and <link rel="style" href="..."/>.
  // (this is for the main application JS and CSS bundles only,
  //  for injecting 3rd party JS and CSS use `html` settings instead:
  //  https://github.com/catamphetamine/react-pages/blob/master/README-ADVANCED.md#all-webpage-rendering-server-options)
  assets() {
    return {
      // Assuming that it's being tested on a local computer first
      // therefore using "localhost" URLs.
      javascript: 'http://localhost:8080/bundle.js',
      // (optional) If using a separate CSS bundle:
      style: 'http://localhost:8080/bundle.css'
    }
  }
})

// Start webpage rendering server on port 3000
// (`server.listen(port, [host], [callback])`)
server.listen(3000, function(error) {
  if (error) {
    throw error
  }
  console.log(`Webpage rendering server is listening at http://localhost:3000`)
})

Run the rendering server:

$ npm install npx --global
$ npm install babel-cli
$ npx babel-node rendering-server.js

Now disable javascript in Chrome DevTools, go to localhost:3000 and the server should respond with a fully server-side-rendered page.

Conclusion

This concludes the introductory part of the README and the rest is the description of the various tools and techniques which come prepackaged with this library.

A working example illustrating Server-Side Rendering and all other things can be found here: webpack-react-redux-isomorphic-render-example.

A much simpler and smaller example (using Parcel instead of Webpack) can be found here: react-pages-basic-example.

Documentation

Loading pages

To "load" a page before it's rendered set a static load property on the page component.

import React from 'react'
import { useSelector, useDispatch } from 'react-redux'

// Redux "asynchronous action",
// explained later in this document.
function fetchUsers() {
  return {
    promise: ({ http }) => http.get('/api/users'),
    events: ['FETCH_USERS_PENDING', 'FETCH_USERS_SUCCESS', 'FETCH_USERS_FAILURE']
  }
}

function UsersPage({ users }) {
  const users = useSelector(state => state.usersPage.users)
  const dispatch = useDispatch()
  return (
    <div>
      <ul> { users.map(user => <li> { user.name } </li>) } </ul>
      <button onClick={ () => dispatch(fetchUsers) }> Refresh </button>
    </div>
  )
}

UsersPage.load = async ({ dispatch }) => {
  // Send HTTP request and wait for response
  await dispatch(fetchUsers())
}

In this example the static load property is used to "load" a page before it is displayed, i.e. before the page is rendered (both on server side and on client side).

The static load property is usually an async/await function that takes an object as an argument:

Page.load = async (utility) => {
  const {
    // Can `dispatch()` Redux actions.
    dispatch,
    // Returns Redux state.
    getState,
    // Current page location (object).
    location,
    // Route URL parameters.
    // For example, for route "/users/:id"
    // and URL "/users/barackobama"
    // `params` will be `{ id: "barackobama" }`.
    params,
    // Is this server-side rendering?
    server,
    // (utility)
    // Returns cookie value by name.
    getCookie
  } = utility

  // Send HTTP request and wait for response.
  await dispatch(fetchPageData(params.id))
}
Advanced topic: The static load property can also be an object having the load() function itself along with some options. It can also be an array of several loads.
// A single `load` example with options.
Page.load = {
  load: async () => { ... },
  ...options
}

// Multiple `load`s example.
Page.load = [
  {
    load: async () => { ... },
    ...options
  },
  {
    load: async () => { ... },
    ...options
  },
  ...
]

The available options are:

  • blocking β€” (defaults to false) If true then child route loads will wait for this load to finish in order to get called.

  • blockingSibling β€” (defaults to false) If true then all further adjacent (sibling) loads for the same route component will wait for this load to finish in order to get executed.

  • client β€” (defaults to false) If true then the load will be executed only on client side. If false then this load will be executed normally: if part of initial page "load" then on server side and if part of subsequent "load" (e.g. navigation) then on client side.

  • server β€” (defaults to false) If true then the load will be executed only on server side. If false then this load will be executed normally: if part of initial page "load" then on server side and if part of subsequent "load" (e.g. navigation) then on client side.

On client side, in order for load to work all links must be created as the <Link/> component imported from react-pages package. Upon a click on a <Link/> first it waits for the next page to load, and then, when the next page is fully loaded, the navigation itself takes place.

load also works for Back/Forward navigation. To disable page load on Back navigation pass instantBack property to a <Link/>.

For example, consider a search results page loading some data (could be search results themselves, could be anything else unrelated). A user navigates to this page, waits for load to finish and then sees a list of items. Without instantBack if the user clicks on an item he's taken to the item's page. Then the user clicks "Back" and is taken back to the search results page but has to wait for that load again. With instantBack though the "Back" transition occurs instantly without having to wait for that load again. Same goes then for the reverse "Forward" navigation from the search results page back to the item's page, but that's just a small complementary feature. The main benefit is the instantaneous "Back" navigation creating a much better UX where a user can freely explore a list of results without getting penalized for it with a waiting period on each click.

import React from 'react'
import { useSelector } from 'react-redux'
import { Link } from 'react-pages'

function SearchResultsPage() {
  const results = useSelector(state => state.searchPage.results)
  return (
    <ul>
      { results.map((item) => (
        <li>
          <Link to="/items/{item.id}" instantBack>
            {item.name}
          </Link>
        </li>
      ))) }
    </ul>
  )
}

SearchResultsPage.load = async () => await fetchSomeData()

There's also instantBack: true option available for goto(location, options) which has the same behavior.

instantBack is ignored when navigating to the same route: for example, if there's an <Article/> page component having a <Link instantBack/> to another <Article/> then instantBack is ignored β€” this feature was originally added for Redux because it made sense that way (in Redux there's only one slot for data of a route that gets rewritten every time the route is navigated to). For other data fetching frameworks like Relay I guess it would make sense to turn that off. Create an issue if that's the case.

One can also use the exported wasInstantNavigation() function (on client side) to find out if the current page was navigated to "instantly". This can be used, for example, to restore a "state" of a widget on instant "Back" navigation so that it renders immediately with the previously cached "results" or something.

There's also an canGoBackInstantly() function (on client side) that tells if the currently page can be navigated "Back" from instantly. This function can be used to render a custom "Go Back" button on a page only when an instant "Back" transition could be performed.

There's also an isInstantBackAbleNavigation() function (on client side) which tells if the currently ongoing navigation process is performed with instantBack option (for example, if <Link instantBack/> is clicked or goto(location, { instantBack: true }) is called). It can be used in componentWillUnmount() to save the current page state for later restoring it if the user navigates "Back" instantly.

load indicator

Sometimes loading a page can take some time so one may want to (and actually should) add some kind of a "spinner" to inform the user that the application isn't frozen and that the navigation process needs some more time to finish. This can be achieved by adding the built-in <Loading/> component on a page:

import { Loading } from 'react-pages'
// Using Webpack CSS loader
import 'react-pages/components/Loading.css'
import 'react-pages/components/LoadingIndicator.css'

export default function Application() {
  return (
    <div>
      ....
      <Loading/>
    </div>
  )
}

The <Loading/> component takes an optional indicator property which can be a React component accepting a className property and which is a white circular spinner by default.

Asynchronous actions

Implementing synchronous actions in Redux is straightforward. But what about asynchronous actions like HTTP requests? Redux itself doesn't provide any built-in solution for that leaving it to 3rd party middlewares. Therefore this library provides one.

Pure Promises

This is the lowest-level approach to asynchronous actions. It is described here just for academic purposes and most likely won't be used directly in any app.

If a Redux "action creator" returns an object with a promise (function) and events (array) then dispatch()ing such an action results in the following steps:

  • An event of type = events[0] is dispatched
  • promise function gets called and returns a Promise
  • If the Promise succeeds then an event of type = events[1] is dispatched having result property set to the Promise result
  • If the Promise fails then an event of type = events[2] is dispatched having error property set to the Promise error
function asynchronousAction() {
  return {
    promise: () => Promise.resolve({ success: true }),
    events: ['PROMISE_PENDING', 'PROMISE_SUCCESS', 'PROMISE_ERROR']
  }
}

dispatch(asynchronousAction()) call returns the Promise itself:

Page.load = async ({ dispatch }) => {
  await dispatch(asynchronousAction())
}

HTTP utility

Because in almost all cases dispatching an "asynchronous action" means "making an HTTP request", the promise function described above always takes an { http } argument: promise: ({ http }) => ....

The http utility has the following methods:

  • head
  • get
  • post
  • put
  • patch
  • delete

Each of these methods returns a Promise and takes three arguments:

  • the url of the HTTP request
  • data object (e.g. HTTP GET query or HTTP POST body)
  • options (described further)

So, API endpoints can be queried using http and ES6 async/await syntax like so:

function fetchFriends(personId, gender) {
  return {
    promise: ({ http }) => http.get(`/api/person/${personId}/friends`, { gender }),
    events: ['GET_FRIENDS_PENDING', 'GET_FRIENDS_SUCCESS', 'GET_FRIENDS_FAILURE']
  }
}

The possible options (the third argument of all http methods) are

  • headers β€” HTTP Headers JSON object.
  • authentication β€” Set to false to disable sending the authentication token as part of the HTTP request. Set to a String to pass it as an Authorization: Bearer ${token} token (no need to supply the token explicitly for every http method call, it is supposed to be set globally, see below).
  • progress(percent, event) β€” Use for tracking HTTP request progress (e.g. file upload).
  • onResponseHeaders(headers) – Use for examining HTTP response headers (e.g. Amazon S3 file upload).
To set custom HTTP headers or to change HTTP request Content-Type

For that use the http.onRequest(request, { url, originalUrl, getState }) setting in ./react-pages.js where:

  • request is a superagent request that can be modified. For example, to set an HTTP header: request.set(headerName, headerValue).
  • originalUrl is the URL argument of the http utility call.
  • url is the originalUrl transformed by http.transformUrl() settings function. If no http.transformUrl() is configured then url is the same as the originalUrl.

Redux module

Once one starts writing a lot of promise/http Redux actions it becomes obvious that there's a lot of copy-pasting and verbosity involved. To reduce those tremendous amounts of copy-pasta "redux module" tool may be used which:

  • Gives access to http.
  • Autogenerates Redux action status events (${actionName}_PENDING, ${actionName}_SUCCESS, ${actionName}_ERROR).
  • Automatically adds Redux reducers for the action status events.
  • Automatically populates the corresponding action status properties (${actionName}Pending: true/false, ${actionName}Error: Error) in Redux state.

For example, the fetchFriends() action from the previous section can be rewritten as:

Before:

// ./actions/friends.js
function fetchFriends(personId, gender) {
  return {
    promise: ({ http }) => http.get(`/api/person/${personId}/friends`, { gender }),
    events: ['FETCH_FRIENDS_PENDING', 'FETCH_FRIENDS_SUCCESS', 'FETCH_FRIENDS_FAILURE']
  }
}

// ./reducers/friends.js
export default function(state = {}, action = {}) {
  switch (action.type) {
    case 'FETCH_FRIENDS_PENDING':
      return {
        ...state,
        fetchFriendsPending: true,
        fetchFriendsError: null
      }
    case 'FETCH_FRIENDS_SUCCESS':
      return {
        ...state,
        fetchFriendsPending: false,
        friends: action.value
      }
    case 'FETCH_FRIENDS_ERROR':
      return {
        ...state,
        fetchFriendsPending: false,
        fetchFriendsError: action.error
      }
    default
      return state
  }
}

After:

import { ReduxModule } from 'react-pages'

const redux = new ReduxModule('FRIENDS')

export const fetchFriends = redux.action(
  'FETCH_FRIENDS',
  (personId, gender) => http => {
    return http.get(`/api/person/${personId}/friends`, { gender })
  },
  // The fetched friends list will be placed
  // into the `friends` Redux state property.
  'friends'
  //
  // Or write it like this:
  // { friends: result => result }
  //
  // Or write it as a Redux reducer:
  // (state, result) => ({ ...state, friends: result })
)

// This is the Redux reducer which now
// handles the asynchronous action defined above.
export default redux.reducer()

Much cleaner.

Also, when the namespace or the action name argument is omitted it is autogenerated, so this

const redux = new ReduxModule('FRIENDS')
...
redux.action('FETCH_ITEM', id => http => http.get(`/items/${id}`), 'item')

could be written as

const redux = new ReduxModule()
...
redux.action(id => http => http.get(`/items/${id}`), 'item')

and in this case redux will autogenerate the namespace and the action name, something like REACT_WEBSITE_12345 and REACT_WEBSITE_ACTION_12345.

A more complex example: a comments section for a blog post page.

redux/blogPost.js

import { ReduxModule } from 'react-pages'

const redux = new ReduxModule('BLOG_POST')

// Post comment Redux "action creator"
export const postComment = redux.action(
  // 'POST_COMMENT',
  (userId, blogPostId, commentText) => async http => {
    // The original action call looks like:
    // `dispatch(postComment(1, 12345, 'bump'))`
    return await http.post(`/blog/posts/${blogPostId}/comment`, {
      userId: userId,
      text: commentText
    })
  }
)

// Get comments Redux "action creator"
export const getComments = redux.action(
  // 'GET_COMMENTS',
  (blogPostId) => async http => {
    return await http.get(`/blog/posts/${blogPostId}/comments`)
  },
  // The fetched comments will be placed
  // into the `comments` Redux state property.
  'comments'
  //
  // Or write it like this:
  // { comments: result => result }
  //
  // Or write it as a Redux reducer:
  // (state, result) => ({ ...state, comments: result })
)

// A developer can listen to any Redux event via
// `redux.on('EVENT_NAME', (state, action) => state)`.
// If two string arguments are passed
// then the first one is namespace
// and the second one is the event name
// and the listener will be called in case of
// a "success" event of a `redux.action()`.
// If only one string argument is passed
// then it is a raw Redux `action.type`.
redux.on('BLOG_POST', 'CUSTOM_EVENT', (state, action) => ({
  ...state,
  reduxStateProperty: action.value
}))

// This is the Redux reducer which now
// handles the asynchronous actions defined above
// (and also the `handler.on()` events).
// Export it as part of the "main" reducer.
export default redux.reducer()

redux/index.js

// The "main" reducer composed of various reducers.
export { default as blogPost } from './blogPost'
...

The React Component would look like this

import React from 'react'
import { getBlogPost, getComments, postComment } from './redux/blogPost'

export default function BlogPostPage() {
  const userId = useSelector(state => state.user.id)
  const blogPost = useSelector(state => state.blogPost.blogPost)
  const comments = useSelector(state => state.blogPost.comments)
  return (
    <div>
      <article>
        { blogPost.text }
      </article>
      <ul>
        { comments.map(comment => <li>{comment}</li>) }
      </ul>
      <button onClick={() => postComment(userId, blogPost.id, 'text')}>
        Post comment
      </button>
    </div>
  )
}

// Load blog post and comments before showing the page
// (see "Page loading" section of this document)
BlogPostPage.load = async ({ dispatch, params }) => {
  // `params` are the URL parameters in route `path`.
  // For example, "/blog/:blogPostId".
  await dispatch(getBlogPost(params.blogPostId))
  await dispatch(getComments(params.blogPostId))
}

Redux module can also handle the conventional "synchronous" actions via export const action = redux.simpleAction()

A simple Redux action that simply updates Redux state.

action = redux.simpleAction((state, actionArgument) => newState)

A simple Redux action that performs some simple actions and then updates Redux state.

action = redux.simpleAction(
  (actionArgument)
  (state, actionArgument) => newState
)
import { ReduxModule } from 'react-pages'

const redux = new ReduxModule('NOTIFICATIONS')

// Displays a notification.
//
// The Redux "action" creator is gonna be:
//
// function(text) {
//   return {
//     type    : 'NOTIFICATIONS:NOTIFY',
//     message : formatMessage(text)
//   }
// }
//
// And the corresponding reducer is gonna be:
//
// case 'NOTIFICATIONS:NOTIFY':
//   return {
//     ...state,
//     message: action.message
//   }
//
// Call it as `dispatch(notify(text))`.
//
export const notify = redux.simpleAction(
  // (optional) Redux event name.
  'NOTIFY',
  // The Redux reducer:
  (state, message) => ({ ...state, message }),
  // The Redux reducer above could be also defined as:
  // 'message'
)

// This is the Redux reducer which now
// handles the actions defined above.
export default redux.reducer()
dispatch(notify('Test'))

Redux module can also listen for events from other redux modules via redux.on()

// A developer can listen to any Redux event via
// `redux.on('EVENT_NAME', (state, action) => state)`.
// If two string arguments are passed
// then the first one is namespace
// and the second one is the event name
// and the listener will be called in case of
// a "success" event of a `redux.action()`.
// If only one string argument is passed
// then it is a raw Redux `action.type`.
redux.on('BLOG_POST', 'CUSTOM_EVENT', (state, action) => ({
  ...state,
  reduxStateProperty: action.value
}))

HTTP authentication

In order for http utility to send an authentication token as part of an HTTP request (the Authorization: Bearer ${token} HTTP header) the authentication.accessToken() function must be specified in react-pages.js.

{
  authentication: {
    accessToken({ getState, getCookie }) {
      return localStorage.getItem('accessToken')
      return getCookie('accessToken')
      return getState().authentication.accessToken
    }
  }
}
Protecting the access token from being leaked to a 3rd party

{
  authentication: {
    accessToken({ getState, getCookie, url, originalUrl }) {
      // It's recommended to check the URL to make sure that the access token
      // is not leaked to a third party: only send it to your own servers.
      //
      // `originalUrl` is the URL argument of the `http` utility call.
      // `url` is the `originalUrl` transformed by `http.transformUrl()` settings function.
      // If no `http.transformUrl()` is configured then `url` is the same as the `originalUrl`.
      //
      if (url.indexOf('https://my.api.com/') === 0) {
        return localStorage.getItem('accessToken')
        return getCookie('accessToken')
        return getState().authentication.accessToken
      }
    }
  }
}

Authentication and authorization using access tokens

The accessToken is initially obtained when a user signs in: the web browser sends HTTP POST request to /sign-in API endpoint with { email, password } parameters and gets { userInfo, accessToken } as a response, which is then stored in localStorage (or in Redux state, or in a cookie) and all subsequent HTTP requests use that accessToken to call the API endpoints. The accessToken itself is usually a JSON Web Token signed on the server side and holding the list of the user's priviliges ("roles"). Hence authentication and authorization are completely covered. Refresh tokens are also supported.

This kind of an authentication and authorization scheme is self-sufficient and doesn't require "restricting" any routes: if a route's load uses http utility for querying an API endpoint then this API endpoint must check if the user is signed in and if the user has the necessary priviliges. If yes then the route is displayed. If not then the user is redirected to either a "Sign In Required" page or "Access Denied" page.

A real-world (advanced) example for handling "Unauthenticated"/"Unauthorized" errors happening in loads and during http calls:

./react-pages.js

{
  ...,
  onError(error, { path, url, redirect, getState, server }) {
    // Not authenticated
    if (error.status === 401) {
      return handleUnauthenticatedError(error, url, redirect);
    }
    // Not authorized
    if (error.status === 403) {
      return redirect('/unauthorized');
    }
    // Not found
    if (error.status === 404) {
      return redirect('/not-found');
    }
    // Redirect to a generic error page in production
    if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production') {
      // Prevents infinite redirect to the error page
      // in case of overall page rendering bugs, etc.
      if (path !== '/error') {
        // Redirect to a generic error page
        return redirect(`/error?url=${encodeURIComponent(url)}`);
      }
    } else {
      // Report the error
      console.error('--------------------------------');
      console.error(`Error while loading "${url}"`);
      console.error('--------------------------------');
      console.error(error.stack);
    }
  },
  http: {
    onError(error, { path, url, redirect, dispatch, getState }) {
      // JWT token expired, the user needs to relogin.
      if (error.status === 401) {
        return handleUnauthenticatedError(error, url, redirect);
      }
    },
    ...
  }
}

function handleUnauthenticatedError(error, url, redirect) {
  // Prevent double redirection to `/unauthenticated`.
  // (e.g. when two parallel `Promise`s load inside `load`
  //  and both get Status 401 HTTP Response)
  if (typeof window !== 'undefined' && window.location.pathname === '/unauthenticated') {
    return;
  }
  let unauthenticatedURL = '/unauthenticated';
  let parametersDelimiter = '?';
  if (url !== '/') {
    unauthenticatedURL += `${parametersDelimiter}url=${encodeURIComponent(url)}`;
    parametersDelimiter = '&';
  }
  switch (error.message) {
    case 'TokenExpiredError':
      return redirect(`${unauthenticatedURL}${parametersDelimiter}expired=βœ”`);
    case 'AuthenticationError':
      return redirect(`${unauthenticatedURL}`);
    default:
      return redirect(unauthenticatedURL);
  }
}

HTTP request URLs

When sending HTTP requests to API using the http utility it is recommended to set up http.transformUrl(url) configuration setting to make the code a bit cleaner.

Before:

// Actions.

export const getUser = redux.action(
  (id) => http => http.get(`https://my-api.cloud-provider.com/users/${id}`),
  'user'
)

export const updateUser = redux.action(
  (id, values) => http => http.put(`https://my-api.cloud-provider.com/users/${id}`, values)
)

After:

// Actions.

export const getUser = redux.action(
  (id) => http => http.get(`api://users/${id}`),
  'user'
)

export const updateUser = redux.action(
  (id, values) => http => http.put(`api://users/${id}`, values)
)

// Settings.

{
  ...
  http: {
    transformUrl: url => `https://my-api.cloud-provider.com/${url.slice('api://'.length)}`
  }
}

On server side, user's cookies are attached to all relative "original" URLs so http.transformUrl(originalUrl) must not transform relative URLs into absolute URLs, otherwise user's cookies would be leaked to a third party.

File upload

The http utility will also upload files if they're passed as part of data (see example below). The files passed inside data must have one of the following types:

  • In case of a File it will be a single file upload.
  • In case of a FileList with a single File inside it would be treated as a single File.
  • In case of a FileList with multiple Files inside a multiple file upload will be performed.
  • In case of an <input type="file"/> DOM element all its .files will be taken as a FileList parameter.

File upload progress can be metered by passing progress option as part of the options .

See example
// React component
class ItemPage extends React.Component {
  render() {
    return (
      <div>
        ...
        <input type="file" onChange={this.onFileSelected}/>
      </div>
    )
  }

  // Make sure to `.bind()` this handler
  onFileSelected(event) {
    const file = event.target.files[0]

    // Could also pass just `event.target.files` as `file`
    dispatch(uploadItemPhoto(itemId, file))

    // Reset the selected file
    // so that onChange would trigger again
    // even with the same file.
    event.target.value = null
  }
}

// Redux action creator
function uploadItemPhoto(itemId, file) {
  return {
    promise: ({ http }) => http.post(
      '/item/photo',
      { itemId, file },
      { progress(percent) { console.log(percent) } }
    ),
    events: ['UPLOAD_ITEM_PHOTO_PENDING', 'UPLOAD_ITEM_PHOTO_SUCCESS', 'UPLOAD_ITEM_PHOTO_FAILURE']
  }
}

JSON Date parsing

By default, when using http utility all JSON responses get parsed for javascript Dates which are then automatically converted from Strings to Dates. This is convenient, and also safe because such date Strings have to be in a very specific ISO format in order to get parsed (year-month-dayThours:minutes:seconds[timezone], e.g. 2017-12-22T23:03:48.912Z), but if someone still prefers to disable this feature and have their stringified dates untouched then there's the parseDates: false flag in the configuration to opt-out of this feature.

Snapshotting

Server-Side Rendering is good for search engine indexing but it's also heavy on CPU not to mention the bother of setting up a Node.js server itself and keeping it running.

In many cases data on a website is "static" (doesn't change between redeployments), e.g. a personal blog or a portfolio website, so in these cases it will be beneficial (much cheaper and faster) to host a statically generated version a website on a CDN as opposed to hosting a Node.js application just for the purpose of real-time webpage rendering. In such cases one should generate a static version of the website by snapshotting it on a local machine and then host the snapshotted pages in a cloud (e.g. Amazon S3) for a very low price.

Snapshotting instructions

First run the website in production mode (for example, on localhost).

Then run the following Node.js script which is gonna snapshot the currently running website and put it in a folder which can then be hosted anywhere.

# If the website will be hosted on Amazon S3
npm install @auth0/s3 --save
import path from 'path'

import {
  // Snapshots website pages.
  snapshot,
  // Uploads files.
  upload,
  // Uploads files to Amazon S3.
  S3Uploader,
  // Copies files/folders into files/folders.
  // Same as Linux `cp [from] [to]`.
  copy,
  // Downloads data from a URL into an object
  // of shape `{ status: Number, content: String }`.
  download
} from 'react-pages/static-site-generator'

import configuration from '../configuration'

// Temporary generated files path.
const generatedSitePath = path.resolve(__dirname, '../static-site')

async function run() {
  // Snapshot the website.
  await snapshot({
    // The host and port on which the website
    // is currently running in production mode.
    // E.g. `localhost` and `3000`.
    host: configuration.host,
    port: configuration.port,
    pages: await generatePageList(),
    outputPath: generatedSitePath,
    //
    // Set this flag to `true` to re-run all `load`s on page load.
    // For example, if the data used on the page can be updated
    // in-between the static site deployments.
    // reloadData: true
  })

  // Copy assets (built by Webpack).
  await copy(path.resolve(__dirname, '../build/assets'), path.resolve(generatedSitePath, 'assets'))
  await copy(path.resolve(__dirname, '../robots.txt'), path.resolve(generatedSitePath, 'robots.txt'))

  // Upload the website to an Amazon S3 bucket.
  await upload(generatedSitePath, S3Uploader({
    // Setting an `ACL` for the files being uploaded is optional.
    // Alternatively a bucket-wide policy could be set up instead:
    //
    // {
    //   "Version": "2012-10-17",
    //   "Statement": [{
    //     "Sid": "AddPerm",
    //     "Effect": "Allow",
    //     "Principal": "*",
    //     "Action": "s3:GetObject",
    //     "Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::[bucket-name]/*"
    //   }]
    // }
    //
    // If not setting a bucket-wide policy then the ACL for the
    // bucket itself should also have "List objects" set to "Yes",
    // otherwise the website would return "403 Forbidden" error.
    //
    ACL: 'public-read',
    bucket: confiugration.s3.bucket,
    accessKeyId: configuration.s3.accessKeyId,
    secretAccessKey: configuration.s3.secretAccessKey,
    region: configuration.s3.region
  }))

  console.log('Done');
}

run().catch((error) => {
  console.error(error)
  process.exit(1)
})

// Get the list of all page URLs.
async function generatePageList() {
  const pages = [
    '/',
    '/about',
    // Error pages need a `status` property
    // to indicate that it shouldn't throw on such errors
    // and should proceed with snapshotting the next pages.
    { url: '/unauthenticated', status: 401 },
    { url: '/unauthorized', status: 403 },
    { url: '/not-found', status: 404 },
    { url: '/error', status: 500 }
  ]

  // (optional) Add some dynamic page URLs, like `/items/123`.

  // Query the database for the list of items.
  const { status, content } = JSON.parse(await download(`https://example.com/api/items`))

  if (status !== 200) {
    throw new Error('Couldn\'t load items')
  }

  // Add item page URLs.
  const items = JSON.parse(content)
  return pages.concat(items.map(item => `/items/${item.id}`))
}

The snapshot() function snapshots the list of pages to .html files and then the upload() function uploads them to the cloud (in this case to Amazon S3). The snapshot() function also snapshots a special base.html page which is an empty page that should be used as the "fallback", i.e. the cloud should respond with base.html file contents when the file for the requested URL is not found: in this case base.html will see the current URL and perform all the routing neccessary on the client side to show the correct page. If the snapshot() function isn't passed the list of pages to snapshot (e.g. if pages argument is null or undefined) then it will only snapshot base.html. The static website will work with just base.html, the only point of snapshotting other pages is for Google indexing.

The snapshotting approach works not only for classical web "documents" (a blog, a book, a portfolio, a showcase) but also for dynamic applications. Consider an online education portal where users (students) can search for online courses and the prices are different for each user (student) based on their institution. Now, an online course description itself is static (must be indexed by Google) and the actual course price is dynamic (must not be indexed by Google).

The solution is to add two loads for the course page: one for static data (which runs while snapshotting) and another for dynamic data (which runs only in a user's web browser).
import React from 'react'

export default function CoursePage() {
  ...
}

CoursePage.load = [
  async ({ dispatch }) => await dispatch(loadCourseInfo()),
  {
    load: async ({ dispatch }) => await dispatch(loadCoursePrice()),
    client: true
  }
]

In this example loadCourseInfo() will be executed while snapshotting and therefore course info will be present on the snapshotted page. But course price won't be present on the snapshotted page because it's being loaded inside the client: true load that only gets called in a user's web browser. When a user opens the course page in his web browser it will show the snapshotted page with course info with a "loading" spinner on top of it as it is loading the course price. After the course price has been loaded the "loading" spinner disappears and the user sees the fully rendered course page.

Page HTTP response status code

To set a custom HTTP response status code for a specific route set the status property of that route.

export default [{
  path: '/',
  Component: Application,
  children: [
    { Component: Home },
    { path: 'blog', Component: Blog },
    { path: 'about', Component: About },
    { path: '*', Component: PageNotFound, status: 404 }
  ]
}]

Setting <title/> and tags

Set meta: (state) => object static function on a page component to add <title/> and <meta/> tags to the page:

function Page() {
  return (
    <section>
      ...
    </section>
  )
}

Page.meta = (state) => ({
  // `<meta property="og:site_name" .../>`
  siteName: 'International Bodybuilders Club',

  // Webpage `<title/>` will be replaced with this one
  // and also `<meta property="og:title" .../>` will be added.
  title: `${state.user.name}`,

  // `<meta property="og:description" .../>`
  description: 'Muscles',

  // `<meta property="og:image" .../>`
  // https://iamturns.com/open-graph-image-size/
  image: 'https://cdn.google.com/logo.png',

  // Objects are expanded.
  //
  // `<meta property="og:image" content="https://cdn.google.com/logo.png"/>`
  // `<meta property="og:image:width" content="100"/>`
  // `<meta property="og:image:height" content="100"/>`
  // `<meta property="og:image:type" content="image/png"/>`
  //
  image: {
    _: 'https://cdn.google.com/logo.png',
    width: 100,
    height: 100,
    type: 'image/png'
  },

  // Arrays are expanded (including arrays of objects).
  image: [{...}, {...}, ...],

  // `<meta property="og:audio" .../>`
  audio: '...',

  // `<meta property="og:video" .../>`
  video: '...',

  // `<meta property="og:locale" content="ru_RU"/>`
  locale: state.user.locale,

  // `<meta property="og:locale:alternate" content="en_US"/>`
  // `<meta property="og:locale:alternate" content="fr_FR"/>`
  locales: ['ru_RU', 'en_US', 'fr_FR'],

  // `<meta property="og:url" .../>`
  url: 'https://google.com/',

  // `<meta property="og:type" .../>`
  type: 'profile',

  // `<meta charset="utf-8"/>` tag is added automatically.
  // The default "utf-8" encoding can be changed
  // by passing custom `charset` parameter.
  charset: 'utf-16',

  // `<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"/>`
  // tag is added automatically
  // (prevents downscaling on mobile devices).
  // This default behaviour can be changed
  // by passing custom `viewport` parameter.
  viewport: '...',

  // All other properties will be transformed directly to
  // either `<meta property="{property_name}" content="{property_value}/>`
  // or `<meta name="{property_name}" content="{property_value}/>`
})

Setting meta property on a page component discards all other <meta/> set by any other means, e.g. if there are any <meta/> tags in index.html template then all of them will be dicarded if setting meta property so don't mix meta property with <meta/> tags in index.html.

To set default <meta/> (for example, og:site_name, og:description, og:locale) define meta property in react-pages.js settings file:

{
  routes: ...,
  reducers: ...,
  meta: {
    siteName: 'WebSite',
    description: 'A generic web application',
    locale: 'en_US'
  }
}

Google Analytics

To report website navigation to Google Analytics supply onNavigate() function option to client-side render() function call:

See code example

import { render } from 'react-pages'

await render(settings, {
  // Runs on the initial page load, and then on each navigation.
  onNavigate(url, location, { dispatch, getState }) {
    if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production') {
      // Set up Google Analytics via `gtag`.
      gtag('config', configuration.googleAnalytics.id, {
        // Anonymize IP for all Google Analytics events.
        // https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/collection/gtagjs/ip-anonymization
        // This makes Google Analytics compliant with GDPR:
        // https://www.jeffalytics.com/gdpr-ip-addresses-google-analytics/
        'anonymize_ip': true,
        // Google Analytics can get users' "Demographics" (age, sex)
        // from "3rd party" data sources if "Advertising Reporting Features"
        // are enabled in Google Analytics admin panel.
        // Such data could be considered "Personal Identifiable Information"
        // which falls under the terms of GDPR.
        // There's also "Remarketing" feature that could also
        // fall under the terms of GDPR.
        'allow_display_features': false,
        // Specifies what percentage of users should be tracked.
        // This defaults to 100 (no users are sampled out) but
        // large sites may need to use a lower sample rate
        // to stay within Google Analytics processing limits.
        // 'sample_rate': 1,
        // Report "page view" event to Google Analytics.
        // https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37655898/tracking-google-analytics-page-views-in-angular2
        // https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/collection/gtagjs/single-page-applications
        'page_path': location.pathname
      })
    }
  }
})

Get current location

Inside a load function: use the location parameter.

Anywhere in a React component: use the found property in Redux state.

@connect(({ found }) => ({
  location: found.resolvedMatch.location,
  params: found.resolvedMatch.params
}))

Changing current location

Dispatch goto/redirect Redux action to change current location (both on client and server).

import { goto, redirect } from 'react-pages'
import { connect } from 'react-redux'

// Usage example
// (`goto` navigates to a URL while adding a new entry in browsing history,
//  `redirect` does the same replacing the current entry in browsing history)
@connect(state = {}, { goto, redirect })
class Page extends Component {
  handleClick(event) {
    const { goto, redirect } = this.props
    goto('/items/1?color=red')
    // redirect('/somewhere')
  }
}

If the current location needs to be changed while still staying at the same page (e.g. a checkbox has been ticked and the corresponding URL query parameter must be added), then use dispatch(pushLocation(location)) or dispatch(replaceLocation(location)) Redux actions.

import { pushLocation, replaceLocation } from 'react-pages'

@connect(() => ({
  ...
}), {
  pushLocation
})
class Page extends Component {
  onSearch(query) {
    const { pushLocation } = this.props

    pushLocation({
      pathname: '/'
      query: {
        query
      }
    })
  }
}

To go "Back"

import { goBack } from 'react-pages'

@connect(() => ({
  ...
}), {
  goBack
})
class Page extends Component {
  render() {
    const { goBack } = this.props

    return (
      <button onClick={goBack}>
        Back
      </button>
    )
  }
}

If someone prefers interacting with found router directly instead then it is available on all pages as a router property, or via useRouter hook.

import React from 'react'
import { useRouter } from 'react-pages'

export default function Component() {
  const { match, router } = useRouter()
  ...
}

Monitoring

For each page being rendered stats are reported if stats() parameter is passed as part of the rendering service settings.

{
  ...

  stats({ url, route, time: { load } }) {
    if (load > 1000) { // in milliseconds
      db.query('insert into server_side_rendering_stats ...')
    }
  }
}

The arguments for the stats() function are:

  • url β€” The requested URL (without the protocol://host:port part)
  • route β€” The route path (e.g. /user/:userId/post/:postId)
  • time.load β€” The time for executing all loads.

Rendering a complex React page (having more than 1000 components) takes about 30ms (as of 2017).

One could also set up overall Server Side Rendering performance monitoring using, for example, StatsD
{
  ...

  stats({ url, route, time: { initialize, load, total } }) {
    statsd.increment('count')

    statsd.timing('initialize', initialize)
    statsd.timing('load', load)
    statsd.timing('total', total)

    if (total > 1000) { // in milliseconds
      db.query('insert into server_side_rendering_stats ...')
    }
  }
}

Where the metrics collected are

  • count β€” rendered pages count
  • initialize β€” server side initialize() function execution time (if defined)
  • load β€” page loading time
  • time - total time spent loading and rendering the page

Speaking of StatsD itself, one could either install the conventional StatsD + Graphite bundle or, for example, use something like Telegraf + InfluxDB + Grafana.

Telegraf starter example:

# Install Telegraf (macOS).
brew install telegraf
# Generate Telegraf config.
telegraf -input-filter statsd -output-filter file config > telegraf.conf
# Run Telegraf.
telegraf -config telegraf.conf
# Request a webpage and see rendering stats being output to the terminal.

Webpack HMR

Webpack's Hot Module Replacement (aka Hot Reload) works for React components and Redux reducers and Redux action creators (it just doesn't work for page loads).

HMR setup for Redux reducers is as simple as adding store.hotReload() (as shown below). For enabling HMR on React Components (and Redux action creators) use react-hot-loader:

application.js

import { render } from 'react-pages'
import settings from './react-pages'

render(settings).then(({ store, rerender }) => {
  if (module.hot) {
    module.hot.accept('./react-pages', () => {
      rerender()
      // Update reducer
      store.hotReload(settings.reducers)
    })
  }
})

Container.js

import React from 'react'
import { Provider } from 'react-redux'
import { hot } from 'react-hot-loader'

function Container({ store, children }) {
  return (
    <Provider store={store}>
      {children}
    </Provider>
  )
}

export default hot(module)(Container)

.babelrc

{
  "presets": [
    "react",
    ["env", { modules: false }],
  ],

  "plugins": [
    // `react-hot-loader` Babel plugin
    "react-hot-loader/babel"
  ]
}

./src/index.js

// An ES6 polyfill is required for `react-hot-loader`.
require('babel-polyfill')
...

Then start webpack-dev-server or webpack-serve with --hot option.

WebSocket

websocket() helper sets up a WebSocket connection.

import { render } from 'react-pages'
import websocket from 'react-pages/websocket'

render(settings).then(({ store }) => {
  websocket({
    host: 'localhost',
    port: 80,
    // secure: true,
    store,
    token: localStorage.getItem('token')
  })
})

If token parameter is specified then it will be sent as part of every message (providing support for user authentication).

How to use WebSocket

WebSocket will autoreconnect (with "exponential backoff") emitting open event every time it does.

After the websocket() call a global websocket variable is created exposing the following methods:

  • listen(eventName, function(event, store))
  • onOpen(function(event, store)) – is called on open event
  • onClose(function(event, store)) – is called on close event
  • onError(function(event, store)) – is called on error event (close event always follows the corresponding error event)
  • onMessage(function(message, store))
  • send(message)
  • close()

The store argument can be used to dispatch() Redux "actions".

websocket.onMessage((message, store) => {
  if (message.command) {
    switch (message.command) {
      case 'initialized':
        store.dispatch(connected())
        return console.log('Realtime service connected', message)
      case 'notification':
        return alert(message.text)
      default:
        return console.log('Unknown message type', message)
    }
  }
})

websocket.onOpen((event, store) => {
  websocket.send({ command: 'initialize' })
})

websocket.onClose((event, store) => {
  store.dispatch(disconnected())
})

The global websocket object also exposes the socket property which is the underlying robust-websocket object (for advanced use cases).

As for the server-side counterpart I can recommend using uWebSockets

import WebSocket from 'uws'

const server = new WebSocket.Server({ port: 8888 })

const userConnections = {}

server.on('connection', (socket) => {
  console.log('Incoming WebSocket connection')

  socket.sendMessage = (message) => socket.send(JSON.stringify(message))

  socket.on('close', async () => {
    console.log('Client disconnected')

    if (socket.userId) {
      userConnections[socket.userId].remove(socket)
    }
  })

  socket.on('message', async (message) => {
    try {
      message = JSON.parse(message)
    } catch (error) {
      return console.error(error)
    }

    try {
      switch (message.command) {
        case 'initialize':
          // If a user connected (not a guest)
          // then store `userId` for push notifications.
          // Using an authentication token here
          // instead of simply taking `userId` out of the `message`
          // because the input can't be trusted (could be a hacker).
          if (message.userAuthenticationToken) {
            // (make sure `socket.userId` is a `String`)
            // The token could be a JWT token (jwt.io)
            // and `authenticateUserByToken` function could
            // check the token's authenticity (by verifying its signature)
            // and then extract `userId` out of the token payload.
            socket.userId = authenticateUserByToken(message.userAuthenticationToken)

            if (!userConnections[socket.userId]) {
              userConnections[socket.userId] = []
            }

            userConnections[socket.userId].push(socket)
          }

          return socket.sendMessage({
            command: 'initialized',
            data: ...
          })

        default:
          return socket.sendMessage({
            status: 404,
            error: `Unknown command: ${message.command}`
          })
      }
    } catch (error) {
      console.error(error)
    }
  })
})

server.on('error', (error) => {
  console.error(error)
})

// Also an HTTP server is started and a REST API endpoint is exposed
// which can be used for pushing notifications to clients via WebSocket.
// The HTTP server must only be accessible from the inside
// (i.e. not listening on an external IP address, not proxied to)
// otherwise an attacker could push any notifications to all users.
// Therefore, only WebSocket connections should be proxied (e.g. using NginX).
httpServer().handle('POST', '/notification', ({ to, text }) => {
  if (userConnections[to]) {
    for (const socket of userConnections[to]) {
      socket.sendMessage({
        command: 'notification',
        text
      })
    }
  }
})

Feature: upon receiving a message (on the client side) having a type property defined such a message is dispatch()ed as a Redux "action" (this can be disabled via autoDispatch option). For example, if { type: 'PRIVATE_MESSAGE', content: 'Testing', from: 123 } is received on a websocket connection then it is automatically dispatch()ed as a Redux "action". Therefore, the above example could be rewritten as

// Server side (REST API endpoint)
socket.sendMessage({
  type: 'DISPLAY_NOTIFICATION',
  text
})

// Client side (Redux reducer)
function reducer(state, action) {
  switch (action.type) {
    case 'DISPLAY_NOTIFICATION':
      return {
        ...state,
        notifications: state.notifications.concat([action.text])
      }
    default:
      return state
  }
}

Server-Side Rendering and bundlers

If the application is being built with a bundler (most likely Webpack) and Server-Side Rendering is enabled then make sure to build the server-side code with the bundler too so that require() calls for assets (images, styles, fonts, etc) inside React components don't break (see universal-webpack, for example).

Code splitting

Code splitting is supported. See README-CODE-SPLITTING

Accept-Language and User-Agent HTTP headers

When server-side rendering is enabled Accept-Language and User-Agent HTTP headers are accessible inside getInitialState({ cookies, headers, locales }) function which can be passed as an option to webpageServer(settings, options). locales are parsed from the Accept-Language HTTP header.

Advanced

At some point in time this README became huge so I extracted some less relevant parts of it into README-ADVANCED (including the list of all possible settings and options). If you're a first timer then just skip that one - you don't need it for sure.

License

MIT

Note that the project description data, including the texts, logos, images, and/or trademarks, for each open source project belongs to its rightful owner. If you wish to add or remove any projects, please contact us at [email protected].