React Snapshot
A zero-configuration static pre-renderer for React apps. Starting by targetting Create React App (because it's great)
The Premise
Server-side rendering is a big feature of React, but for most apps it can be more trouble than its worth. Personally, I think the sweet spot is taking static site snapshots of all your publicly-accessible pages & leaving anything requiring authentication as a normal, JS-driven Single Page App.
This is a project to do that. Automatically, without any configuration, just smart defaults. Retrospective progressive enhancement.
The snapshots still have the normal JS bundle included, so once that downloads the site will function exactly as before (i.e. instantaneous page transitions), but you serve real, functional HTML & CSS as soon as possible. It's good for SEO (yes Google crawls SPAs now but they still reward perf and this perfs like a banshee), it's good if your JS is broken or something render-blocking has a network fail, it's good for accessibility, it's good for Slackbot or Facebook to read your opengraph tags, it's just good.
The How To
- First,
npm i -D react-snapshot
- Second, open your package.json and change
"scripts"
from
- "build": "react-scripts build"
+ "build": "react-scripts build && react-snapshot"
- Third, change your usage of
react-dom
:
- import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
+ import { render } from 'react-snapshot';
- ReactDOM.render(
+ render(
<App/>,
document.getElementById('root')
);
This calls ReactDOM.render
in development and ReactDOMServer.renderToString
when prerendering. If I can make this invisible I will but I can't think how at the moment.
The Demo
Check out create-react-app-snapshot.surge.sh for a live version or geelen/create-react-app-snapshot for how it was built, starting from create-react-app's awesome baseline. No ejecting necessary, either.
The diff from the original create-react-app code might be enlightening to you as well.
The Implementation
It's pretty simple in principle:
- Fire up the home page in a fake browser and snapshot the HTML once the page is rendered
- Follow every relative URL to crawl the whole site
- Repeat.
There's a few more steps to it, but not much.
- We move
build/index.html
to build/200.html
at the beginning, because it's a nice convention. Hosts like surge.sh understand this, serving 200.html
if no snapshot exists for a URL. If you use a different host I'm sure you can make it do the same. pushstate-server
is used to serve the build
directory & serving 200.html
by default- The fake browser is JSDOM, set to execute any local scripts (same origin) in order to actually run your React code, but it'll ignore any third-party scripts (analytics or social widgets)
- We start a new JSDOM session for each URL to ensure that each page gets the absolute minimum HTML to render it.
The Caveats
This is a hacky experiment at the moment. I would really like to see how far we can take this approach so things "just work" without ever adding config. Off the top of my head:
The Alternatives
This should work for simple cases. For less simple cases, go with:
- Webpack Static Site Generator Plugin
- Gatsby or Phenomic if you're doing something bigger or more structured. Phenomic has service worker support & minimal bundles and all kinds of things, Gatsby is getting that stuff too.
- Actually run a server-side React node server because you have more complex stuff to do, like pre-rendering stuff behind a login.
License
MIT