In short: dont try to run js code, and produce a react tree matching pre-rendered one, but use pre-rendered html until js code will be ready to replace it. Make it live.
What else could be done on HTML level? Caching, templatization, and other good things to 🚀, just in a 3kb*.
Render something on server, and use it as HTML on the client
- Server side render data
- call
thisIsServer
somewhere, to setup enviroment. - React-prerendered-component
will leave trails
, wrapping each block with div with known id.
- call
- Hydrate the client side
- React-prerendered-component will search for known ids, and
read rendered HTML
back from a page.
- React-prerendered-component will search for known ids, and
- You site is ready!
- React-prerendered-components are ready. They are rendering a pre-existing HTML you send from a server.
- Once any component ready to be replaced - hydrate
- But not before. That's the point - partial hydration, step by step
Bonus - you can store and restore component state.
More details - https://twitter.com/theKashey/status/1021739948536295424
- Restore data from HTML
<PrerenderedComponent
// restore - access DIV and get "counter" from HTML
restore={(el) => this.setState({counter: +el.querySelector('i').innerHTML})}
// once we read anything - go live!
live={!!this.state.counter}
>
<p>Am I alive?</p>
<i>{this.props.counter}</i>
</PrerenderedComponent>
Is components HTML was not generated during SSR, and it would be not present in the page code -
component will go live
automatically, unless strict
prop is set.
- To do a partial hydrating
You may keep some pieces of your code as "raw HTML" until needed. This needed includes:
- code splitting. You may decrease time to _First Meaningful Paint code splitting JS code needed by some blocks, keeping those blocks visible. Later, after js-chunk loaded, it will rehydrate existing HTML.
- deferring content below the fold. The same code splitting, where loading if component might be triggered using interception observer.
If your code splitting library (not React.lazy) supports "preload" - you may use it to control code splitting
const AsyncLoadedComponent = loadable(() => import('./deferredComponent'));
const AsyncLoadedComponent = imported(() => import('./deferredComponent'));
<PrerenderedComponent
live={AsyncLoadedComponent.preload()} // once Promise resolved - component will go live
>
<AsyncLoadedComponent />
</PrerenderedComponent>
- Restore state from JSON stored among.
<PrerenderedComponent
// restore - access DIV and get "counter" from HTML
restore={(_,state) => this.setState(state)}
store={ this.state }
// once we read anything - go live!
live={!!this.state.counter}
>
<p>Am I alive?</p>
<i>{this.props.counter}</i>
</PrerenderedComponent>
Wrap your application with PrerenderedControler
. This would provide context for all nested components, and "scope" counters used to
represent nodes.
This is more Server Side requirement.
import {PrerenderedControler} from 'react-prerendered-component';
ReactDOM.renderToString(<PrerenderedControler><App /></PrerenderedControler>);
!!!!
Without PrerenderedControler
SSR will always produce an unique HTML, you will be not able to match on Client Side.
!!!!
It could be a case - some components should live only client-side, and completely skipped during SSR.
import {render} from 'react-dom';
import { ClientSideComponent } from "react-prerendered-component";
const controller = cacheControler(cache);
const result = render(
<ClientSideComponent>
Will be rendered only on client
</ClientSideComponent>
);
const result = hydrate(
<PrerenderedControler hydrated>
<ClientSideComponent>
Will be rendered only on client __AFTER__ hydrate
</ClientSideComponent>
</PrerenderedControler>
);
- There is the same component for
ServerSideComponent
s - There are hoc version for both cases
import {clientSideComponent} from 'react-prerendered-component';
export default clientSideComponent(MyComponent);
Partial rehydration could benefit not only SSR-enhanced applications, but provide a better experience for simple code splitting.
In the case of SSR it's quite important, and quite hard, to load all the used chunks before
triggering hydrate
method, or some unloaded parts would be replaced by "Loaders".
Preloaded could help here, if your code-splitting library support preloading
, even if it does not support SSR.
import imported from 'react-imported-component';
import {PrerenderedComponent} from "react-prerendered-component";
const AsyncComponent = imported(() => import('./myComponent.js'));
<PrerenderedComponent
// component will "go live" when chunk loading would be done
live={AsyncComponent.preload()}
>
// until component is not "live" prerendered HTML code would be used
// that's why you need to `preload`
<AsyncComponent/>
</PrerenderedComponent>
Yet again - it works with any library which could preload
, which is literally any library except
React.lazy
.
Prerendered component could also work as a component-level cache. Component caching is completely safe, compatible with any React version, but - absolutely synchronous, thus no Memcache or Redis are possible.
import {renderToString, renderToNodeStream} from 'react-dom/server';
import {
PrerenderedControler,
cacheControler,
CachedLocation,
cacheRenderedToString,
createCacheStream
} from "react-prerendered-component";
const controller = cacheControler(cache);
const result = renderToString(
<PrerenderedControler control={control}>
<CachedLocation cacheKey="the-key">
any content
</CachedLocation>
</PrerenderedControler>
)
// DO NOT USE result! It contains some system information
result === <x-cachedRANDOM_SEED-store-1>any content</x-cachedRANDOM_SEED-store-1>
// actual caching performed in another place
const theRealResult = cacheRenderedToString(result);
theRealResult === "any content";
// Better use streams
renderToNodeStream(
<PrerenderedControler control={control}>
<CachedLocation cacheKey="the-key">
any content
</CachedLocation>
</PrerenderedControler>
)
.pipe(createCacheStream(control)) // magic here
.pipe(res)
Stream API is completely stream and would not delay Time-To-First-Byte
PrerenderedControler
- top level controller for a cache. Requirescontroler
to be setCachedLocation
- location to be cached.-
cacheKey
- string - they key -
ttl
- number - time to live -
refresh
- boolean - flag to ignore cache -
clientCache
- boolean - flag to enable cache on clientSide (disabled by default) -
noChange
- boolean - disables cache at all -
variables
- object - varibles to use in templatization -
as=span
- string, used only for client-side cache to define awrapper
tag -
className
- string, used only for client-side cache -
rehydrate
- boolean, used only for client-side cache, false values would keep content as a dead html.
-
Placeholder
- a template valuename
- a variable name
WithPlaceholder
- renderprop version ofPlaceholder
NotCacheable
- mark location as non-cacheable, preventing memoizationcacheControler(cache)
- a cache controller factor, requires object withcache
interface to work.- cache interface is
{ get(key): string, set(key, ttl):void }
- cache implimentation is NOT provided by this library.
- cache interface is
To optimize rendering performance and reduce memory usage you might use cache templates:
import {CachedLocation, Placeholder, WidthPlaceholder} from 'react-prerendered-component';
const Component = () => (
<CachedLocation key="myKey" variabes={{name: "GitHub", secret: 42 }}>
the <Placeholder name="name"/>`s secret is <Placeholder name="secret"/>
// it's easy to use placeholders in a plain HTML
<WithPlaceholder>
{ placeholder => (
<img src="./img.jpg" alt={placeholder("name") + placeholder("secret")}/>
// but to use it in "string" attribures you have to use render props
)}
</WithPlaceholder>
</CachedLocation>
)
Sometimes you might got something, which is not cacheable. Sometimes cos you better not cache like - like personal information. Sometimes cos it reads data from variable sources and could not be "just cached". It is always hard to manage it. So - just dont cache. It's a one line fix.
import {NotCacheable, notCacheable} from 'react-prerendered-component';
const SafeCache = () => (
<NotCacheable>
<YourComponent />
</NotCacheable>
);
const SafeComponent = notCacheable(YourComponent);
Any network based caches are not supported, the best cache you can use - LRU, is bound to single process, while you probably want multi-threaded(workers) rendering, but dont want to maintain per-instance cache.
You may use nodejs shared-memory libraries (not supported by nodejs itself), like:
Results from rendering a single page 1000 times. All tests executed twice to mitigate possible v8 optimizations.
dry 1013 - dry render to kick off HOT
base 868 - the __real__ rendering speed, about 1.1ms per page
cache 805 - with `cacheRenderedToString` used on uncachable appp
cache 801 - second run (probably this is the "real" speed)
partial 889 - with `cacheRenderedToString` used lightly cached app (the cost of caching)
partial 876 - second run
half 169 - page content cached
half 153 - second run
full 22 - full page caching
full 19 - second run
- full page cache is 42x faster. 0.02ms per page render
- half page render is 5x faster.
- partial page render is 1.1x slower.
It is safe to have prerendered
component inside a cached location.
ServerSideComponent
- component to be rendered only on server. Basically this is PrerenderedComponent withlive=false
ClientSideComponent
- component to be rendered only on client. Some things are not subject for SSR.ClientSideComponent
would not be initially rendered withhydrated
prop enabledthisIsServer(flag)
- override server/client flagisThisServer()
- get current environment.
Prerendered component is work only once. Once it mounted for a first time.
Next time another UID will be generated, and it will not find component to match. If prerendered-component could not find corresponding component - it goes live automatically.
Idea about PrerenderedComponent is to render something, and rehydrate it back. You should be able to render the same, using rehydrated data.
- render
- restore
- render
- compare. If result is equal - you did it right.
Until component go live - it's dead HTML code. You may be make it more alive by transforming HTML to React, using html-to-react, and go live in a few steps.
Is this package 25kb? What are you thinking about?
- no, this package is just 3kb or less - tree shaking is great (but not in a dev mode) It is bigger only on server.
react-progressive-hydration - Google IO19 demo is quite similar to react-prerendered-component
, but has a few differences.
- does not use stable uids, utilizing
__html:''
+sCU
hack to prevent HTML update - uses
React.hydrate
to make component live, breaking connectivity between React Trees - while it has some benefits (no real HTML update), it might not be production ready right now
MIT