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PWA

WORK IN PROGRESS


Features

  • Framework Agnostic
    Build with your preferred framework or with none at all!
    Official presets for Preact, React, Vue, and Svelte.

  • Plug 'n Play
    Don't worry about configuration, unless you want to.
    Presets and plugins are automatically applied. Just install and go!

  • Fully Extensible
    Includes a plugin system that allows for easy, fine-grain control of your configuration... when needed.

  • Feature Rich
    Supports Babel, Bublé, Browserslist, TypeScript, PostCSS, ESLint, Prettier, and Service Workers out of the box!

  • Instant Prototyping
    Quickly scaffold new projects with your preferred view library and toolkit.
    Kick it off with a perfect Lighthouse score!

  • Static Site Generator
    Export your routes as "pre-rendered" HTML.
    Great for SEO and works on any static hosting service.

Installation

PWA is split up into two main components (core and cli) in addition to its list of presets and plugins.

While most will opt for the CLI, the core module handles all configuration and can be used as a standalone module.

Please refer to each package for installation, API, and Usage information.

Quick Start

# Install globally
$ npm install --global @pwa/cli
# OR
$ yarn global add @pwa/cli

# Display CLI's help text
$ pwa --help

# Generate new project
$ pwa init

Note: The global modifiers are only required for global command-line usage!
Local devDependency installation will also work, but then pwa usage is limited to the project.

Concepts

Please read about Progressive Web Apps if the term is unfamiliar to you.

Presets

Presets are collections of plugins that are tailored for a particular framework.

While there may be "official" presets, this does not mean that PWA can only support these candidates! The current options are:

These packages are auto-loaded during PWA's initialization and are applied first, before any Plugins or custom configuration. This means that you always have the option to override a value or setting shipped within the Preset.

Plugins

Plugins are (typically) individual features or chunks of configuration that are encapsulated for easy/automatic application within your build process.

While there may be "official" plugins, this does not mean that PWA can only support these functionalities! The current plugins include:

These packages are auto-loaded during PWA's initialization and are applied second, after any Presets and before custom configuration. This allows Plugins to override settings from Presets.

Plugins may (sometimes) expose a new key on the config tree and then reference this value later in composition. This allows the end-user to change the Plugin's settings before running the build.

Please see @pwa/plugin-critters for an example of this practice.

Commands

This section applies to @pwa/cli specifically.

Build

Build your application for production

$ pwa build --help

  Description
    Build production assets

  Usage
    $ pwa build [src] [options]

  Options
    --analyze     Launch interactive Analyzer to inspect production bundle(s)
    -o, --dest    Path to output directory  (default build)
    -h, --help    Displays this message

Export

Export routes' HTML for static hosting

Instead of --routes, you may define a routes array within pwa.config.js config file.

If no routes are defined in either location, PWA will traverse your "@pages"-aliased directory (default: src/pages/**) and attempt to infer URL patterns from the file structure.

In the event that no files exist within that directory, PWA will show a warning but still scrape the index ("/") route.

$ pwa export --help

  Description
    Export pre-rendered pages

  Usage
    $ pwa export [src] [options]

  Options
    -o, --dest        Path to output directory  (default build)
    -w, --wait        Time (ms) to wait before scraping each route  (default 0)
    -r, --routes      Comma-delimited list of routes to export
    -i, --insecure    Launch Chrome Headless without sandbox
    -h, --help        Displays this message

Important: Using export requires a local version of Chrome installed! See chrome-launcher.
Additionally, the --insecure flag launches Chrome without sandboxing. See here and here for help.

Watch

Develop within a live-reload server

Within your pwa.config.js's webpack config, any/all devServer options are passed to Webpack Dev Server.

$ pwa watch --help

  Description
    Start development server

  Usage
    $ pwa watch [src] [options]

  Options
    -H, --host     A hostname on which to start the application  (default localhost)
    -p, --port     A port number on which to start the application  (default 8080)
    -q, --quiet    Disable logging to terminal, including errors and warnings
    --https        Run the application over HTTP/2 with HTTPS
    --key          Path to custom SSL certificate key
    --cert         Path to custom SSL certificate
    --cacert       Path to custom CA certificate override
    -h, --help     Displays this message

Build vs Export

Export can be thought of as "Build 2.0" — it spins up a Headless Chrome browser and programmatically scrapes your routes.

This is ideal for SEO, PWA behavior, and all-around performance purposes, as your content will exist on the page before the JavaScript application is downloaded, parsed, boots, and (finally) renders the content.

The generated HTML pages will be placed in your build directory. A /login route will be exported as build/login/index.html — this makes it compatible with even the "dumbest" of static hosting services!

Note: Running export will automatically run build before scraping.

Configuration

Overview

All configuration within the PWA tree is mutable! Presets, Plugins, and your custom config file write into the same object(s). This is great for composability and extensibility, but be warned that your custom config may break the build if you're not careful.

💡 Official presets & plugins are controlled releases and are ensured to play nicely with one another.

The config object(s) for your project are assembled in this sequence:

  1. Presets: All non-webpack config keys
  2. Plugins: All non-webpack config keys
  3. Custom: All non-webpack config keys
  4. Presets: The webpack config key, if any
  5. Plugins: The webpack config key, if any
  6. Custom: The webpack config key, if any

Because the final config object is passed to Webpack, internally, the webpack key always runs last as it composes & moves everything into its relevant loaders, plugins, etc.

Important: When defining a custom webpack key it must always be a function!

Mutations

Every config key can be defined or mutated in the same way!

Any non-Function key will overwrite the existing value. This allows strong opinions and/or allows a Plugin to define a new config key and reference it later on.

Any Function key will receive the existing, matching config-value for direct mutation. This is for fine-grain control over the existing config.

// defaults:
exports.hello = { foo:1, bar:2 };
exports.world = ['How', 'are', 'you?'];

// preset/plugin/custom:
exports.hello = function (config) {
  config.bar = 42;
  config.baz = [7, 8, 9];
}
exports.world = ['I', 'am', 'fine'];
exports.HOWDY = 'PARTNER!';

// result:
exports.hello = {
  foo: 1,
  bar: 42,
  baz: [7, 8, 9]
}
exports.world = ['I', 'am', 'fine'];
exports.HOWDY = 'PARTNER!';

Functions

Any config key that is a function will have the signature of (config, env, opts).

config

Type: Mixed

This will be the existing value for the current key. It will typically be an Object, but not always.

It will also be undefined if/when defining a new config key — if you know that to be the case, you shouldn't be using a Function~!

env

Type: Object

Will be the environmental values for this command.
This is passed from @pwa/core's options.

The env.cwd, env.src, env.dest, env.log, env.production and env.webpack keys are always defined.
Anything else is contextual information for the current command being run.

opts

Type: Object

Direct access to configuraton keys, except webpack.

As an example, this can be used within a Plugin for gaining insight or gaining access to other packages' settings.

The default config keys (except webpack) will always be present here.

Config Keys

The following keys are defined by default within every PWA instance. You may mutate or compose with them accordingly.

babel

Type: Object
Default: Link

Your Babel config object.

css

Type: Object
Default: Link

Core CSS behavior — see css-loader for options.

html

Type: Object
Default: Link

Your HTML plugin configuration — see html-webpack-plugin for options.

less

Type: Object
Default: Link

Any less-loader options — see less-loader for documentation.

Note: This is the entire loader config; you may need to include the lessOptions nested object.

postcss

Type: Object
Default: Link

Your PostCSS config — you may also use any config file/method that postcss-loader accepts.

Important: The postcss.plugins key cannot be a function!

sass

Type: Object
Default: Link

Any sass-loader options — see sass-loader for documentation.

This object will be used for both .scss and .sass file extensions.
The .sass extension will automatically enforce the indentedSyntax option.

Note: This is the entire loader config; you may need to include the sassOptions nested object.

stylus

Type: Object
Default: Link

Any stylus-loader options — see stylus-loader for documentation.

terser

Type: Object
Default: Link

The options for Terser Plugin.

Note: Expecting UglifyJS? It's no longer maintained!
The Terser configuration is nearly identical – simply rename uglifyOptions to terserOptions 👍

webpack

Type: Function

The main handler for all of PWA!
When you define a custom webpack, you are not overriding this function. Instead, you are manipulating Webpack's config immediately before PWA executes the build.

Browserslist

The preferred method for customizing your browser targets is thru the browserslist key within your package.json file.

Note: When creating a new project with pwa init, our recommended config is automatically added for you!

You may choose to change the default values, or use any configuration method that Browserslist accepts.

The resulting array of browser targets will be automatically applied to Autoprefixer, Babel, Bublé, PostCSS, Stylelint, ...etc.

Customizing

Presets and Plugins are just encapsulated config mutations — that's it!

Now, if you want to further customize your PWA build, beyond what your installed Presets & Plugins are giving you, then you can create a pwa.config.js in your project's root directory.

Note: Your new pwa.config.js file should sit alongside your package.json 👍

With this file, you may mutate or compose any of the config keys that either PWA or its Plugins exposes to you.

Here is an example custom config file:

// pwa.config.js
const OfflinePlugin = require('offline-plugin');

// Mutate "@pwa/plugin-eslint" config
exports.eslint = function (config) {
  config.formatter = require('eslint-friendly-formatter');
};

// Add new PostCSS Plugin
exports.postcss = function (config) {
  config.plugins.push(
    require('postcss-flexbugs-fixes')
  );
};

// Export these pages during "pwa export" command
exports.routes = ['/login', '/register', '/articles/hello-world'];

// Update Webpack config; ENV-dependent
exports.webpack = function (config, env) {
  let { production, webpack } = env;

  if (production) {
    config.plugins.push(
      new OfflinePlugin(),
      new webpack.DefinePlugin({
        MY_API: JSON.stringify('https://api.example.com')
      })
    );
  } else {
    config.devServer.https = true;
    config.plugins.push(
      new webpack.DefinePlugin({
        MY_API: JSON.stringify('http://staging.example.com')
      })
    );
  }
};

Credits

A huge thank-you to Jimmy Moon for donating the @pwa organization on npm! 🙌 Aside from being the perfect name, we wouldn't be able to have automatic preset/plugin resolution without a namespace!

Incredible thanks to the giants whose shoulders this project stands on~! ❤️

PWA was originally conceived in 2016 but at that time, it wasn't yet possible to build it with the feature set I had in mind. Since then, an amazing amount of work has been done on Webpack and its ecosystem, which now makes the project goals feasible.

There's no question that PWA takes inspiration from popular CLI applications, like Preact CLI, Vue CLI, and Create React App. They most definitely paved the way. I've used, learned from, and refined my wishlist over years while using these tools. Despite their greatness, I still found a need for a universal, framework-agnostic PWA builder that could unify all these great libraries.

License

MIT © Luke Edwards