/iso-auth-boilerplate

Boilerplate example of shared client/server code and routing with auth flow using Fluxible, react-router, passport, and Express.

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Isomorphic React Authentication Flow Boilerplate

This repository is a simple boilerplate for an "isomorphic" (shared client and server code) single page web application, or "SPA".

This repo uses the following technologies:

Also for development, these tools are used:

####Goals There are a ton of boilerplates for React and a ton of isomorphic boilerplates, but I've been disappointed with most of them as they don't really address the problems with server rendering, async, and mostly auth flow. I wanted to make an SPA with shared routes and shared views to cut down on code duplication, but still have the realistic expectation that there will be async operations and auth to manage and bake that into a boilerplate.

React is a great library for this since it has exactly zero browser specific APIs cooked in, so it can run on both the client and server. For sanity, I used Yahoo's implementation of the Flux flow with their Fluxible library.

Baseline features I wanted to cover:

  1. Shared client and server routes
  2. Shared client and server view and view logic
  3. Shared utilities, configuration, and constants
  4. Fully asynchronous authentication flow without full page loads
  5. Session persistence handoff from server to client on first load
  6. Public, authenticated, and authorized routes
  • Unauthenticated flow with server and client redirection
  • Separate unauthorized flow
  • Flash messaging for all scenarios
  • Store auth state on client to selectively render elements (eg. navigation)
  • "Double" protection from direct navigation (server redirect, client react-router redirect )
  1. Functional parity with client JavaScript omitted
  2. Robust & fun development workflow

####Notes

  • I've set an artificial lag on XHRs of 500ms to highlight the asynchronous server requests. This gives us the opportunity to verify that all navigation Flux actions are async, and can trigger a "loading" application state, as is always needed.

  • I have set the babel experimental stage to 1 to support Object Rest/Spread Properties as this can be used very handily in React components. Since a transpiler is already running, I decided to practice and use as much ECMA 6 syntax as possible.

  • I'm using a branch of react-router to support fluxible's context inside of the willTransitionTo() hook. This is a known issue for the two technologies, as discussed in this issue. The branch can be found here coutesy of bobpace. I plan to regularly rebase against the react-router master branch if they don't decide accept bobpace's PR.

  • Bonus feature: Functional parity without any JavaScript in the browser! Yes, this is an app written in JavaScript that doesn't need JavaScript to run. Obviously, in npm run server-only mode, History.pushState functionality doesn't apply.

This is very much a work in progress, and I'm open to accepting issues or considering pull requests.

##Getting started If you don't have mongoDB installed already, this is required for authentication and data persistence. Setup will fail if you don't already have a mongo instance running. Also, you're going to need to install npm if you haven't already.

If you want to just get started, simply type this in the command line:

npm start

If you want to go step by step, see the following sub processes that are all run by npm start:

npm install

Start setup script:

npm run setup --no-spin

Side note: I hate the npm task spinner, and in this case, it actually interferes with the prompt. You can turn it off globally with npm config set spin=false for reference :)

Follow the prompts to populate a config file and enter a few users into the mongoDB. Now, you can run any of the following:

npm run client

Starts a development server with client-side rendering only, with hot-loading react modules enabled. Editing React components updates in the browser without refreshing the page, as well as editing any *.less files inside of the /src directory. nodemon will still restart if you save changes to server files, but not if you changed anything within /shared. I've found this environment the most productive for rapid development.

npm run iso

Starts a development server that renders both server and client side, and restarts the server on any change. Good for checking to see if checksums are in order, but can be a little cumbersome to develop in.

npm run server

Starts a development server with client rendering turned off. The client asset application JavaScript file will not be included in the rendering of the document. Good test for "progressive enhancement" and is indicitive of what users will see with JavaScript disabled.

npm run prod

Starts a server in production mode. Optimized and gzipped assets with debugging disabled.

####A note on debugging This repo utilizes the NPM package debug for shared debugging messaging. Many packages within node_modules adhere to this standard, so having all messaging on can be a bit of a firehose of messaging. debug looks for the environment variable DEBUG for whitelist and blacklist values. npm run client and npm run server and npm run iso set DEBUG=[some sane defaults] upon execution. Client-side debugging configuration can be found in /config/index.js after setup.

####Goodies In development modes, gulp is running two development servers. The first one is on port 3002, which is webpack's dev server with hot module replacement enabled, which works swimmingly with React components. As of yet, Flux stores and and action dispatchers are not hot loadable, so the page will automatically refresh if you edit and save one of those modules. What is especially handy during HMR is component state is maintained between module replacements, so your app state stays intact while you live-edit.

I decided to use BrowerSync for style live editing, as webpack was markedly slower. I may change this after some config tweaking but BrowserSync has a few more features that are nice, which are configurable on port 3001.

##TODO

  • Test coverage
  • Generalize file patterns, action constants, move to config
  • Create minimally styled version
  • Create deploy script
  • Add gulp tasks deploying assets to AWS with revisioning for production
  • Host demo on heroku or other free service

Thank you for browsing, contributions and issues are welcome.