lite-server
Lightweight development only node server that serves a web app, opens it in the browser, refreshes when html or javascript change, injects CSS changes using sockets, and has a fallback page when a route is not found.
Why
BrowserSync does most of what we want in a super fast lightweight development server. It serves the static content, detects changes, refreshes the browser, and offers many customizations.
When creating a SPA there are routes that are only known to the browser. For example, /customer/21
may be a client side route for an Angular app. If this route is entered manually or linked to directly as the entry point of the Angular app (aka a deep link) the static server will receive the request, because Angular is not loaded yet. The server will not find a match for the route and thus return a 404. The desired behavior in this case is to return the index.html
(or whatever starting page of the app we have defined). BrowserSync does not automatically allow for a fallback page. But it does allow for custom middleware. This is where lite-server
steps in.
lite-server
is a simple customized wrapper around BrowserSync to make it easy to serve SPAs.
Installation and Usage
The recommended installation method is a local NPM install for your project:
$ npm install lite-server --save-dev
...and add a "script" entry within your project's package.json
file:
# Inside package.json...
"scripts": {
"dev": "lite-server"
},
With the above script entry, you can then start lite-server
via:
$ npm run dev
Other options for running locally installed NPM binaries is discussed in this Stack Overflow question: How to use package installed locally in node_modules
Global Installation
lite-server can be also installed globally, if preferred:
$ npm install -g lite-server
$ lite-server
Custom Configuration
The default behavior serves from the current folder, opens a browser, and applies a HTML5 route fallback to ./index.html
.
lite-server uses BrowserSync, and allows for configuration overrides via a local bs-config.json
or bs-config.js
file in your project.
You can provide custom path to your config file via -c
or --config=
run time options:
lite server -c configs/my-bs-config.js
For example, to change the server port, watched file paths, and base directory for your project, create a bs-config.json
in your project's folder:
{
"port": 8000,
"files": ["./src/**/*.{html,htm,css,js}"],
"server": { "baseDir": "./src" }
}
A more complicated example with modifications to the server middleware can be done with a bs-config.js
file, which requires the module.exports = { ... };
syntax:
module.exports = {
server: {
middleware: {
1: require('connect-history-api-fallback')({index: '/index.html', verbose: true})
}
}
};
NOTE: Keep in mind that when using middleware overrides the specific middleware module must be installed in your project. For the above example, you'll need to do:
$ npm install connect-history-api-fallback --save-dev
...otherwise you'll get an error similar to:
Error: Cannot find module 'connect-history-api-fallback'
Another example: To remove one of the default middlewares, such as connect-logger
, you can set it's array index to null
:
module.exports = {
server: {
middleware: {
0: null
}
}
};
A list of the entire set of BrowserSync options can be found in its docs: http://www.browsersync.io/docs/options/
Known Issues
CSS with Angular 2 is embedded thus even though BrowserSync detects the file change to CSS, it does not inject the file via sockets. As a workaround, injectChanges
defaults to false
.
License
Code released under the MIT license.