Sitecore XM Cloud Preview

NOTE: THIS SOLUTION IS NOT SUPPORTED BY SITECORE, CONTAINS PRE-RELEASE REFERENCES, AND WILL CONTAIN BUGS

TLDR; QUICK START

  1. In an ADMIN terminal:

    .\init.ps1 -InitEnv -LicenseXmlPath "C:\path\to\license.xml" -AdminPassword "DesiredAdminPassword"
  2. Restart your terminal and run:

    .\up.ps1
  3. Follow the instructions to deploy to XM Cloud

  4. Create Edge token and query from edge


About this Solution

This solution is designed to help developers learn and get started quickly with Sitecore Containers, the Sitecore Next.js SDK, and Sitecore Content Serialization.

For simplicity, this solution does not implement Sitecore Helix conventions for solution architecture. As you begin building your Sitecore solution, you should review Sitecore Helix and the Sitecore Helix Examples for guidance on implementing a modular solution architecture.

Configured for Sitecore-based workflow

On first run, the JSS Styleguide sample will be imported via jss deploy items, then serialized via sitecore ser pull. It is intended that you work directly in Sitecore to define templates and renderings, instead of using the code-first approach. This is also known as "Sitecore-first" JSS workflow. To support this:

  • The JSS content workflow is disabled
  • Imported items will not be marked as 'protected'
  • JSS import warnings in the Content Editor and Experience Editor have been disabled

The code-first Sitecore definitions and routes remain in the JSS project, in case you wish to use them for local development / mocking. You can remove these from /data and /sitecore if desired. You may also wish to remove the initial import logic in the up.ps1 script.

Support

The template output as provided is supported by Sitecore. Once changed or amended, the solution becomes a custom implementation and is subject to limitations as defined in Sitecore's scope of support.

Prerequisites

  • NodeJs 16.x
  • .NET 6.0 SDK
  • .NET Framework 4.8 SDK
  • Visual Studio 2019
  • Docker for Windows, with Windows Containers enabled

See Sitecore Containers documentation for more information on system requirements.

What's Included

  • A docker-compose environment.

    The containers structure is organized by specific topology environment (see run\sitecore-xp0, run\sitecore-xp1, run\sitecore-xm1). The included docker-compose.yml is a stock environment from the Sitecore Container Support Package. All changes/additions for this solution are included in the docker-compose.override.yml.

  • Scripted invocation of jss create and jss deploy to initialize a Next.js application.

  • Sitecore Content Serialization configuration.

  • An MSBuild project for deploying configuration and code into the Sitecore Content Management role. (see src\platform).

Running this Solution

  1. If your local IIS is listening on port 443, you'll need to stop it.

    This requires an elevated PowerShell or command prompt.

    iisreset /stop
    
  2. Before you can run the solution, you will need to prepare the following for the Sitecore container environment:

    • A valid/trusted wildcard certificate for *.xmcloudpreview.localhost
    • Hosts file entries for xmcloudpreview.localhost
    • Required environment variable values in .env for the Sitecore instance
      • (Can be done once, then checked into source control.)

    See Sitecore Containers documentation for more information on these preparation steps. The provided init.ps1 will take care of them, but you should review its contents before running.

    You must use an elevated/Administrator Windows PowerShell 5.1 prompt for this command, PowerShell 7 is not supported at this time.

    .\init.ps1 -InitEnv -LicenseXmlPath "C:\path\to\license.xml" -AdminPassword "DesiredAdminPassword"

    If you check your .env into source control, other developers can prepare a certificate and hosts file entries by simply running:

    .\init.ps1

    Out of the box, this example does not include .env in the .gitignore. Individual users may override values using process or system environment variables. This file does contain passwords that would provide access to the running containers in the developer's environment. If your Sitecore solution and/or its data are sensitive, you may want to exclude these from source control and provide another means of centrally configuring the information within.

  3. If this is your first time using mkcert with NodeJs, you will need to set the NODE_EXTRA_CA_CERTS environment variable. This variable must be set in your user or system environment variables. The init.ps1 script will provide instructions on how to do this.

    • Be sure to restart your terminal or VS Code for the environment variable to take effect.
  4. After completing this environment preparation, run the startup script from the solution root:

    .\up.ps1
  5. When prompted, log into Sitecore via your browser, and accept the device authorization.

    • To log in via client credentials flow, set the environment variable SITECORE_FedAuth_dot_Auth0_dot_ClientCredentialsLogin to "true" and update values of the correspond environment variables (SITECORE_FedAuth_dot_Auth0_dot_Domain, SITECORE_FedAuth_dot_Auth0_dot_ClientCredentialsLogin_ClientId, SITECORE_FedAuth_dot_Auth0_dot_ClientCredentialsLogin_ClientSecret, SITECORE_FedAuth_dot_Auth0_dot_ClientCredentialsLogin_Audience, SITECORE_XmCloud_dot_OrganizationId)
  6. Wait for the startup script to open browser tabs for the rendered site and Sitecore Launchpad.

Using the Solution

  • A Visual Studio / MSBuild publish of the Platform project will update the running cm service.
  • The running rendering service uses next dev against the mounted Next.js application, and will recompile automatically for any changes you make.
  • You can also run the Next.js application directly using npm commands within src\rendering.
  • Debugging of the Next.js application is possible by using the start:connected or start scripts from the Next.js package.json, and the pre-configured Attach to Process VS Code launch configuration.
  • Review README's found in the projects and throughout the solution for additional information.
## Deploy your environment to XM Cloud
  • Login to XM Cloud
dotnet sitecore cloud login
  • Create a Project
dotnet sitecore cloud project create -n {PROJECT_NAME}
  • Create an Environment
dotnet sitecore cloud environment create --project-id {PROJECT_ID} -n {ENVIRONMENT_NAME}
  • NOTE THE ENVIRONMENT ID

  • Provision and Deploy the Environment with the Starter Kit source code

dotnet sitecore cloud deployment create --environment-id {ENVIRONMENT_ID} --upload
  • Connect to the environment
dotnet sitecore cloud environment connect --environment-id {ENVIRONMENT_ID}
  • Publish the edge content
$connectionName = (dotnet sitecore cloud environment info -id {ENVIRONMENT_ID} --json | ConvertFrom-Json).name
dotnet sitecore publish --pt Edge -n $connectionName
## Create an Edge Token and Query from Edge

Running the following script with the environment id from the previous steps will create an Edge access token and launch the GraphQL Playground so that you can query content.

After publishing, you can also use this key in order to run the JSS site against.

.\New-EdgeToken.ps1 -EnvironmentId {ENVIRONMENT_ID}

Example GraphQL Query:

query {
  item(path:"/sitecore/content", language:"en") {
    id
  }
  layout(language:"en", routePath:"/",site:"xmcloudpreview"){
    item {
      rendered
    }
  }
  site {
    siteInfoCollection{
      name
    }
  }
}

Rebuild Indexes

After running .\up.ps1 for the first time, or if you ever run \docker\clean.ps1, you will need to rebuild the search indexes. You can rebuild indexes by running:

dotnet sitecore index rebuild

You should now be able to view the XmCloudPreview site at https://www.xmcloudpreview.localhost.

Stop Sitecore

When you're done, stop and remove the containers using the following command.

docker-compose down

or

.\down.ps1