/remix-gospel-stack

Remix monorepo template with pnpm, TypeScript and Turborepo. The remix app deploys to fly.io or build to Docker image. Example packages for Database with Prisma, UI, and internal TypeScript packages.

Primary LanguageTypeScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Remix Gospel stack with Turborepo

The Remix Gospel Stack

Remix TypeScript monorepo with Turborepo pipelines, Prisma, PostgreSQL OR SQLite (Litefs), Docker deploy to Fly.io, pnpm, shadcn/ui TailwindCSS.

Quickstart (recommended)

pnpm create remix@latest --init-script --install --template https://github.com/PhilDL/remix-gospel-stack

💽 This repository is opiniated:

  • TypeScript only.
  • Only compatible with pnpm package manager to handle monorepo workspaces.
  • Uses turborepo pipelines + cache to build, lint, typecheck, and test the monorepo.

(Alternative) Cloning the repository

git clone git@github.com:PhilDL/remix-gospel-stack.git
cd remix-gospel-stack
pnpm add -w @remix-run/dev
pnpm remix init

What's in the stack

This stack is a Remix oriented Monorepo powered by turborepo and pnpm workspaces. Containing a ready-to-deploy Remix App on fly.io via the building of a Docker container.

This Package uses pnpm as the package manager of choice to manage workspaces. It may work with yarn and npm if you put the workspace definitions in the package.json file but there is no guarantee.

Monorepo architecture powered by Turborepo and pnpm workspaces:

  • apps Folder containing the applications

  • packages Folder containing examples

    • ui: a React UI package example powered by shadcn/ui. Some example components and shadcn/ui Tailwind config exported as Tailwind plugin and preset.
    • database: a Prisma wrapper ready to be used in other packages, or apps. Bundled with tsup. Can be PostgreSQL or SQLite // Litefs dependening of what you choose during installation.
    • business: an example package using the Prisma database as a dependency and using a repository pattern like example.
    • internal-nobuild: an example package that is pure TypeScript with no build steps. The main entrypoint to the package is directly src/index.ts. Remix takes care of compiling with its own build step (with esbuild). This packages also contains unit test with Vitest. Remix uses tsconfig.json paths to reference to that project and its types. I would recommend these types of internal packages when you don't plan on publishing the package.
  • config-packages:

    • Eslint packages with different preset configs.
    • TS Configs, also with different presets.
    • Tailwind configs.

What else ?

Warning All the following commands should be launched from the monorepo root directory

Developement

  • Install the dependencies.

    pnpm install

    You also have to copy the example .env.example:

    cp .env.example .env
    cp .env.example .env.docker
  • Start the postgresql docker container

    pnpm run docker:db

    Note: The npm script will complete while Docker sets up the container in the background. Ensure that Docker has finished and your container is running before proceeding.

  • Generate prisma schema

    pnpm run generate
  • Run the Prisma migration to the database

    pnpm run db:migrate:deploy
  • Run the first build (with dependencies via the ... option)

    pnpm run build --filter=@remix-gospel-stack/remix-app...

    Running simply pnpm run build will build everything, including the NextJS app.

  • Run the Remix dev server

    pnpm run dev --filter=@remix-gospel-stack/remix-app

Switch between PostgreSQL and SQLite (Litefs)

  • To switch between PostgreSQL and SQLite (Litefs), there is a turbo generator you can use from the root of the repository.

    pnpm turbo gen scaffold-database

    Then follow the prompts. Be careful though, prisma migrations are linked to a specific database, so you will have to delete the migrations folder.

    Note: You will have to run pnpm i --fix-lockfile again after switching to SQLite (Litefs) that require another package (litefs-js). You will probably also have to run pnpm run setup again to generate the first migration.

Create packages

Internal package

turbo gen workspace --name @remix-gospel-stack/foobarbaz --type package --copy

Then follow the prompts

Tests, Typechecks, Lint, Install packages...

Check the turbo.json file to see the available pipelines.

  • Run the Cypress tests and Dev
    pnpm run test:e2e:dev --filter=@remix-gospel-stack/remix-app
  • Lint everything
    pnpm run lint
  • Typecheck the whole monorepo
    pnpm run typecheck
  • Test the whole monorepo
    pnpm run test
    or
    pnpm run test:dev
  • How to install an npm package in the Remix app ?
    pnpm add dayjs --filter @remix-gospel-stack/remix-app
  • Tweak the tsconfigs, eslint configs in the config-package folder. Any package or app will then extend from these configs.

Deployement on fly.io – PostgreSQL

Warning All the following commands should be launched from the monorepo root directory

Prior to your first deployment, you'll need to do a few things:

  • First singup the fly CLI

    fly auth signup
  • Create two apps on Fly, one for staging and one for production:

    fly apps create remix-gospel-stack
    fly apps create remix-gospel-stack-staging

    Note: Once you've successfully created an app, double-check the fly.toml file to ensure that the app key is the name of the production app you created. This Stack automatically appends a unique suffix at init which may not match the apps you created on Fly. You will likely see 404 errors in your Github Actions CI logs if you have this mismatch.

  • Initialize Git.

    git init
  • Create a new GitHub Repository, and then add it as the remote for your project. Do not push your app yet!

    git remote add origin <ORIGIN_URL>
  • Add a FLY_API_TOKEN to your GitHub repo. To do this, go to your user settings on Fly and create a new token, then add it to your repo secrets with the name FLY_API_TOKEN.

  • Create a database for both your staging and production environments:

Database creation:

fly postgres create --name remix-gospel-stack-db
fly postgres attach --app remix-gospel-stack remix-gospel-stack-db

fly postgres create --name remix-gospel-stack-staging-db
fly postgres attach --app remix-gospel-stack-staging remix-gospel-stack-staging-db

Note: You'll get the same warning for the same reason when attaching the staging database that you did in the fly set secret step above. No worries. Proceed!

Fly will take care of setting the DATABASE_URL secret for you.

Deployement on fly.io – SQLite Litefs

Warning All the following commands should be launched from the monorepo root directory

Prior to your first deployment, you'll need to do a few things:

  • First singup the fly CLI

    fly auth signup
  • Create two apps on Fly, one for staging and one for production:

    fly apps create remix-gospel-stack
    fly apps create remix-gospel-stack-staging

    Note: Once you've successfully created an app, double-check the fly.toml file to ensure that the app key is the name of the production app you created. This Stack automatically appends a unique suffix at init which may not match the apps you created on Fly. You will likely see 404 errors in your Github Actions CI logs if you have this mismatch.

  • Initialize Git.

    git init
  • Create a new GitHub Repository, and then add it as the remote for your project. Do not push your app yet!

    git remote add origin <ORIGIN_URL>
  • Add a FLY_API_TOKEN to your GitHub repo. To do this, go to your user settings on Fly and create a new token, then add it to your repo secrets with the name FLY_API_TOKEN.

Create a persistent volume for the sqlite database for both your staging and production environments. Run the following (feel free to change the GB size based on your needs and the region of your choice (https://fly.io/docs/reference/regions/). If you do change the region, make sure you change the primary_region in fly.toml as well):

fly volumes create data --region cdg --size 1 --app remix-gospel-stack
fly volumes create data --region cdg --size 1 --app remix-gospel-stack-staging

Then attach the volumes to the apps:

fly consul attach --app remix-gospel-stack
fly consul attach --app remix-gospel-stack-staging

Start coding!

Now that everything is set up you can commit and push your changes to your repo. Every commit to your main branch will trigger a deployment to your production environment, and every commit to your dev branch will trigger a deployment to your staging environment.

If you run into any issues deploying to Fly, make sure you've followed all of the steps above and if you have, then post as many details about your deployment (including your app name) to the Fly support community. They're normally pretty responsive over there and hopefully can help resolve any of your deployment issues and questions.

Multi-region deploys

Once you have your site and database running in a single region, you can add more regions by following Fly's Scaling and Multi-region PostgreSQL docs.

Make certain to set a PRIMARY_REGION environment variable for your app. You can use [env] config in the fly.toml to set that to the region you want to use as the primary region for both your app and database.

Testing your app in other regions

Install the ModHeader browser extension (or something similar) and use it to load your app with the header fly-prefer-region set to the region name you would like to test.

You can check the x-fly-region header on the response to know which region your request was handled by.

GitHub Actions

We use GitHub Actions for continuous integration and deployment. Anything that gets into the main branch will be deployed to production after running tests/build/etc. Anything in the dev branch will be deployed to staging.

Manually Build The Docker Image to deploy with Fly.io

  • Create a docker network
    docker network create app_network
    
  • Build the docker image
    pnpm docker:build:remix-app
  • Run the docker Image
    pnpm docker:run:remix-app
  • (Optionnal) If you want to manually deploy to fly.io:
    DOCKER_DEFAULT_PLATFORM=linux/amd64 flyctl deploy --config ./apps/remix-app/fly.toml --dockerfile ./apps/remix-app/Dockerfile

Useful Turborepo Links

Learn more about the power of Turborepo:

Thanks

Support

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Disclaimer

I am in no way an expert on Monorepo, Docker or CI. The setup proposed here is one of many and probably could be improved 10x, but I am learning by myself along the way, so if you see any possible improvement please submit a PR. I will appreciate it greatly !