Mono TS
Introduction
This is a personal quest for the perfect Typescript monorepo setup.
There is an accompanying article
"My quest for the perfect TS monorepo"
that you might want to read for context.
It is the best I could come up with given the tooling that is available, so
expect this repository to change over time as the ecosystem around Typescript
evolves.
My current projects are based on Node.js, Next.js, and Firebase, so that is what
I am focussing on primarily. If you use different a different stack, I believe
this can still be a great reference, as the approach itself does not depend on
it.
Contributions and suggestions are welcome within the scope of this example, but
I doubt there ever will be a one-size-fits-all solution, so this code should be
viewed as opinionated.
I ended up basing a lot of things on the
Turborepo starter,
and I recommend reading
their monorepo handbook.
For demonstration purposes, mono-ts uses the "internal packages approach" for
@repo/common
and a traditional built approach for @repo/core
. Read below
for more info.
Features
- Turborepo to orchestrate the build process and
dependencies, including the v2 watch task.
- Multiple isolated Firebase deployments, using
firebase-tools-with-isolate
- Firebase emulators with hot reloading
- A web app based on Next.js with ShadCN and
Tailwind CSS
- Working IDE go-to-definition and go-to-type-definition using
.d.ts.map
files - ESM everything
- Path aliases
- Shared configurations for ESLint
- Simple standard configuration for TypeScript
- Vitest
- Clean, strongly-typed Firestore code for both React (using
@typed-firestore/react
) and Node.js (using @typed-firestore/server
)
Install
In the main branch of this repo, packages are managed with PNPM.
There is also a branch for NPM
Originally, I included branches for
Yarn classic (v1),
and modern (v4), but I
stopped updating them as Yarn is not that commonly used anymore.
I recommended using pnpm
over npm
or yarn
. Apart from being fast and
efficient, I believe PNPM has better support for monorepos.
You can install PNPM with corepack
which is part of modern Node.js versions:
corepack enable
(if you have not used it before)corepack prepare pnpm@latest --activate
Then run pnpm install
from the repository root.
Usage
To get started, execute the following 3 scripts with pnpm [script name]
from
the root of the monorepo:
Script | Description |
---|
watch | Continuously builds everything using the Turborepo watch task, except for the web app which has its own dev server |
emulate | Starts the Firebase emulators. |
dev | Starts the Next.js dev server to build the app on request. |
The web app should become available on http://localhost:3000 and the emulators
UI on http://localhost:4000.
You should now have a working local setup, in which code changes to any package
are picked up.
Monorepo Setup
There is an accompanying article
"My quest for the perfect TS monorepo"
that you might want to read for context.
Namespace
Typically in a monorepo, you will never publish the packages to NPM, and because
of that, the namespace you use to prefix your package names does not matter. You
might as well pick a generic one that you can use in every private codebase.
At first I used @mono
, and later I switched to @repo
when I discovered that
in the Turborepo examples. I like both, because they are equally short and
clear, but I went with @repo
because I expect it will become the standard.
Packages
- common Code that can shared across both front-end and
back-end environments.
- core Code that is shared between server environments like
cloud functions.
Apps
- web A Next.js based web application configured to use Tailwind
CSS and ShadCN components.
Services
- fns Various Firebase functions that execute on document
writes, pubsub events etc.
- api A 2nd gen Firebase function (based on Cloud Run) serving
as an API endpoint. This package also illustrates how to use secrets.
Firebase
In their
documentation for monorepos,
Firebase recommends putting all configurations in the root of the monorepo. This
makes it possible to deploy all packages at once, and easily start the emulators
shared between all packages.
Demo Project
Throughout this repository, we use a Firebase demo project called demo-mono-ts
A demo project allows you to run emulators for the different components like
database without creating a Firebase projects with resources. To make this work
you pass the --project
flag when starting the emulator, and you need to use a
name that starts with demo-
.
When passing configuration to initializeApp you can use any non-empty string for
the API keys as you can see in
apps/web/.env.development.
Deploying
Firebase does not natively support monorepos where packages used shared code
from other packages. The Firebase deploy pipeline wants to upload a
self-contained package that can be treated similarly to an NPM package, so that
it can run an install and execute the main entry from the manifest.
To support shared packages, this repo uses
firestore-tools-with-isolate,
which is a firebase-tools fork I created to integrate
isolate-package. I wrote an
article
explaining what it does and why it is needed.
This demo can be run using only the emulators, but if you would like to see the
deployment to Firebase working you can simply execute
npx firebase deploy --project your-project-name
the root of the monorepo.
You might notice @google-cloud/functions-framework
as a dependency in the
service package even though it is not being used in code imports. It is
currently required for Firebase to be able to deploy a PNPM workspace. Without
it you will get an error asking you to install the dependency. I don't quite
understand how the two are related, but it works.
Running Emulators
With the firebase config in the root of the monorepo, you can configure and
start the emulators for all packages at once with pnpm emulate
.
I have stored these in .env
files in the respective service packages. Normally
you would want to store them in a file that is not part of the repository like
.env.local
but by placing them in .env
I prevent having to give instructions
for setting them up just for running the demo.
Secrets
The api service uses a secret for DEMO_API_KEY. To make secrets work with the
emulator you currently have to add the secret to .secret.local
and also a
.env
or .env.local
file. See
this issue for more
info. I have placed it in .env
which is part of the repo, so you don't have to
set anything up, but .env.local is the proper location probably because that
file is not checked into git.