• Stars
    star
    517
  • Rank 85,558 (Top 2 %)
  • Language
    TypeScript
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created over 5 years ago
  • Updated 10 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

A progressive micro frontends framework for building Web applications

Fronts Logo


Node CI npm version license

Fronts is a progressive micro frontends framework for building Web applications, and it's based on the module federation of Webpack.

Motivation

Among the many micro frontends solutions, single-spa and Module Federation are the best of them.

single-spa is a micro frontends framework based on router configuration. The centralization of configuration brings some limitations, such as it is difficult to granulate nestable micro frontends, module granularity control, module sharing, and so on.

In 2019, Zack Jackson proposed and implemented Module Federation. Module Federation is a completely different concept from single-spa, and allows a JavaScript application to dynamically load code from another application. It completely solves the problem of code dependency sharing and runtime modularity. The idea is true - A game-changer in JavaScript architecture as mentioned in Zack Jackson's article. And it's currently supported by Webpack, Next.js, and Rollup.

Although the Module Federation concept is so amazing, it has not yet gone further to provide a more complete and fully targeted micro frontends framework implementation, and this is what Fronts is trying to do.

Features

  • Non-module-federation - Although Fronts is based on the concept of module federation, it also supports non-module-federation mode.
  • Decentralized configuration - Configure site.json for dependency management in each Fronts app, support for nested micro frontends.
  • Cross frameworks - No framework or technology stack is restricted.
  • Code splitting & lazy loading - Support code splitting within the Fronts app as a module, it can be lazy loaded by other Fronts app as a dependent module.
  • CSS isolation - Optional CSS isolation solution.
  • Lifecycle - Fronts provide concise lifecycle for Fronts app entry.
  • Web Components & iFrame - Support for multiple frontend containers.
  • Multiple patterns - Support for building micro-frontends app and non-micro-frontends app.
  • Monorepo & TypeScript - Friendly support for Monorepo and TypeScript, which are mutually appropriate technology stack.
  • Version control - It's used for efficient and dynamic delivery apps such as canary release.
  • Zero hijacking - Fronts didn't do any hijacking, maintaining originality and possible loss of performance and security.
  • Generic Communication - Fronts provides concise and generic communication APIs, which supports almost all frontend environments.

Getting Started

You can follow this article(React without create-react-app Webpack 5) to quickly create app1 and app2 React projects.

Assuming you've completed these steps, let's get started with a quick taste of the wonderful micro frontends development of Fronts.

  1. Install fronts-react and fronts-bundler in the projects.
# with NPM
npm install fronts-react fronts-bundler

# or with Yarn
yarn add fronts-react fronts-bundler
  1. Set up site.json and webpack.config.js in the projects

We define app1 as a parent micro frontend and it depends on app2.

app1/site.json:

{
  "name": "app1",
  "exports": [],
  "dependencies": {
    "app2": "http://localhost:3002/remoteEntry.js"
  }
}

app2 doesn't have any dependencies, it acts as a micro frontend and we define it to export ./src/bootstrap as a micro frontends entry, this entry of app2 end will be used by app1.

app2/site.json:

{
  "name": "app2",
  "exports": ["./src/bootstrap"],
  "dependencies": {}
}

Wrap the Webpack config with createWebpackConfig() in config/webpack.config.js in the projects.

const { createWebpackConfig } = require('fronts-bundler');

module.exports = createWebpackConfig(originalWebpackConfig);
  1. Define the default exported bootstrap function in app2/src/bootstrap.jsx and use boot() to get it booted.
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
import { boot } from 'fronts-react';
import App from './App';

export default function render(element) {
  ReactDOM.render(<App />, element);
  return () => {
    ReactDOM.unmountComponentAtNode(element);
  };
}

boot(render, document.getElementById('root'));
  1. Load app1/src/App.jsx with useApp() to import app2.
import React from 'react';
import { useApp } from 'fronts-react';

export const App = () => {
  const App2 = useApp({
    name: 'app2',
    loader: () => import('app2/src/bootstrap'),
  });
  return <App2 />;
};

Examples

APIs

API Isolation
useApp() CSS(loose/optional)
useWebComponents() CSS
useIframe() CSS, JavaScript

Built-in packages

The most popular frontend frameworks are React, Vue and Angular. When the micro frontends uses one of these frameworks, it is recommended to use Fronts built-in package for this framework, such as fronts-react, fronts-vue and fronts-ng, otherwise please use fronts.

Packages Support Framework Status
fronts Any Framework Completed βœ…
fronts-react React Completed βœ…
fronts-vue Vue In Progress πŸ’‘
fronts-ng Angular -
fronts-svelte svelte -
fronts-ng Angular -

Running Type

Type Requirement Support
Non-Module-Federation - Dependency Management ❌
Monorepo ❌
Version Management ❌
Module Federation Webpack
site.json
Dependency Management βœ…
Monorepo βœ…
Version Management ❌
Version Control Webpack
site.json
Registry Server
Dependency Management βœ…
Monorepo βœ…
Version Management βœ…

Debugger/Logger

Use getMeta(), it helps you to get the dependency mapping information.

import { getMeta } from 'fronts';

console.log(getMeta());

// {
//   "name": "app3",
//   "meta": {
//       "__main__": "app1",
//       "__entry__": "http://localhost:3001/#/app2",
//       "app2": {
//           "dependencies": {
//               "app3": "http://localhost:3003"
//           }
//       },
//       "app5": {
//           "dependencies": {
//               "app6": "http://localhost:3006"
//           }
//       },
//       "app3": {
//           "dependencies": {}
//       },
//       "app6": {
//           "dependencies": {}
//       },
//       "app1": {
//           "dependencies": {
//               "app2": "http://localhost:3002",
//               "app4": "http://localhost:3004",
//               "app5": "http://localhost:3005"
//           }
//       }
//   }
// }

Testing

fronts-test provides an runner for function step, and any micro frontends IT and E2E can use it for reusable testing. It also provides other APIs, such as useContext(), beforeHook and afterHook in createRunner().

import { $, useContext, Given, When, Then } from 'fronts-test';

const addTodo = $(() => {
  const { page } = useContext();
  await page.type('.text', 'Use Fronts');
  await page.click('.add');
});

test('base', async () => {
  await Given('user open the page').then(entry);
  await When('user add todo text').then(addTodo);
  await Then('user should see that todo list has a new item').then(checkTodo);
});

CLI

todo

Version Control

Set up the registry server URL in the registry field.

It supports dynamic import(), and it does not support static import.

{
  "name": "app1",
  "exports": [],
+ "registry": "http://localhost:3000/dev.json",
  "dependencies": {
-    "app2": "http://localhost:3002/remoteEntry.js"
+    "app2": "1.0.0"
  }
}

Start the registry server and make sure that http://localhost:3000/dev.json?scope=app2%401.0.0 request gets a response data with the version specification.

{
  "app2": "http://localhost:3002/remoteEntry.js"
}

Tutorial

todo

Q&A

Q: Can Non-Module-Federation, Module Federation, and Version Control be compatible with each other?

A: Yes

Q: How to use SPA development mode in micro frontends codebase?

A: Use SPA=true yarn start instead of yarn start, make sure the current codebase is Monorepo and module federation or version control is enabled, and it just works with useApp() and useWebComponent().

License

Fronts is MIT licensed.

More Repositories

1

mutative

Efficient immutable updates, 2-6x faster than naive handcrafted reducer, and more than 10x faster than Immer.
TypeScript
1,601
star
2

usm

πŸ– A concise & flexible state model for Redux/MobX/Vuex, etc.
TypeScript
297
star
3

reactant

A framework for building React applications
TypeScript
250
star
4

iflow

Concise & powerful state management framework for Javascript.
JavaScript
79
star
5

use-mutative

A 2-6x faster alternative to useState with spread operation
TypeScript
45
star
6

data-transport

A simple and responsible universal transport
TypeScript
41
star
7

mutability

A JavaScript library for transactional mutable updates
TypeScript
28
star
8

react-native-css-tree

Inheritable dynamic style tree.
JavaScript
26
star
9

tees

Universal test framework for front-end with WebDriver, Puppeteer and Enzyme
JavaScript
24
star
10

origin-storage

A same-origin storage(IndexedDB/WebSQL/localStorage) for cross-domain access
TypeScript
22
star
11

crius

A testing tool for behavior-driven development
TypeScript
22
star
12

react-native-px2dp

Pixels convert to density-independent pixels.
JavaScript
22
star
13

ssh-webpack-plugin

Webpack SSH deployment plugin.
JavaScript
19
star
14

jsdoc-tests

A JSDoc test tool for documentation-driven quality
TypeScript
12
star
15

typescript-tutorial

TypeScript
10
star
16

fronts-example

TypeScript
9
star
17

react-iflow

Connector for React and iFlow.
JavaScript
9
star
18

capturer

Log tracker for debugging
TypeScript
7
star
19

marten

A Process Controller Library
JavaScript
7
star
20

openapi-client-codegen

Node.js library that generates Typescript function chaining clients based on the OpenAPI specification.
TypeScript
7
star
21

awesome-micro-frontends

Awesome lists about micro frontends.
6
star
22

use-immutable

A hook for creating the immutable state with mutations on React
TypeScript
5
star
23

be-type

be-type is based on ECMAScript2015+ proxy feature
JavaScript
3
star
24

invariance

Utils for immutable data structures Records & Tuples
TypeScript
3
star
25

usm-redux-demo

Todo + Counter example with usm-redux and react-navigation
TypeScript
3
star
26

glaive

Trying to build a new dependency module injector
JavaScript
3
star
27

reactant-examples

Just reactant examples
TypeScript
3
star
28

usm-examples

Todo Examples for USM
JavaScript
3
star
29

crius-react-example

React test example with crius-test
JavaScript
2
star
30

installation

An installation template tool
TypeScript
2
star
31

iflow-docs-cn

The Chinese version of iFlow documents.
2
star
32

alias-webpack-plugin

Webpack alias batch relative paths configuration plugin
JavaScript
2
star
33

crius-examples

JavaScript
1
star
34

reactant-todomvc

Reactant TodoMVC Example
TypeScript
1
star
35

reactant-base-example

Just reactant base example
TypeScript
1
star
36

use-transport

A React hook with simple and responsible universal transports
TypeScript
1
star
37

unadlib.github.io

unadlib's Notes
HTML
1
star
38

acting

🎏Acting is a tiny agent model tool.
TypeScript
1
star