Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
76 lines (41 loc) · 4.01 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

76 lines (41 loc) · 4.01 KB

ServiceStack .NET 5.0 Next JS Template

.NET 5.0 Next.js App Template

Browse source code and install with dotnet-new:

$ dotnet tool install -g x

$ x new geooot/ss-next <your app name>

Description

Next.js is an opinionated structured React framework for rapidly developing Web Applications.

Next also enables the development of high-performance responsive Web Apps by employing advanced packaging techniques like automatic code spliting, link prefetching, SPA navigation of statically-generated cacheable assets and integrated support for ES6/7 transpilation and js/css bundling and minification.

This was created based of the vue-next service stack template and the next typescript template.

Install Dependencies

After creating your project go to your MyApp folder and install your client App dependencies with:

$ npm install

If your IDE doesn't automatically install your .NET NuGet Dependencies, you can manually install them with:

$ dotnet restore

Important Considerations

  • Next JS API handlers will not work out of the box
  • Dynamic Routes generate the corresponding ServiceStack routes on npm run build (or really npm run generate) using the template in MyApp.ServiceInterface/MyAppRouteServices.cs.template and the generate script in MyApp/next.config.js
  • The priority in which routes are handled is up to ServiceStack's routing rules but they mostly match Next.js's routing rules
  • Optional catch all routes are supported in terms of syntax but don't really work as documented in next js.
  • Catch all routes are supported with the addition of the fact that they act like optional catch all routes if no index page is there
    • For example: /pathto/[[..slug]].tsx will accept requests from /pathto and /pathto/wherever/you/want unless there exists a /pathto/index.tsx in which /pathto goes to /pathto/index.tsx

Dev Workflow

Start a watched .NET Core build in the background from the command-line with:

$ npm run dotnet-watch

In a new terminal window start a watched next dev server build with:

$ npm run dev

Then open http://localhost:3000 in your browser to view your App served directly from Nuxt.js dev server and will proxy all Server requests to ServiceStack Server running on https://localhost:5001. The url dotnet binds to is configurable in .env.

Update DTOs

Whilst Next.js is a JavaScript (ES 6/7) App it still benefits from ServiceStack's TypeScript Add Reference where you can generate typed DTOs with the dtos npm script:

$ npm run dtos

This will update the Servers interfaces/dtos.ts

Generate Static Production Build

Most of the time during development you'll be viewing your App through Next.js dev server to take advantage of it's Hot Module Replacement for instant UI updates. At any time you can also view a production build of your App with:

$ npm run build

Which will generate an encapsulated production build of your App in /wwwroot which you can view running from your ServiceStack Server App directly (npm run dotnet):

Publishing App for Deployment

To create a release client and server build of your App run:

$ npm run publish

Which will publish your App to bin/Release/net5/publish which you can deploy as a standard .NET Core App.