Wuxt combines WordPress, the worlds biggest CMS with nuxt.js, the most awesome front-end application framework yet.
The goal of Wuxt is to provide a ready to use development environment, which makes the full power of WordPress easily available to your front-and app. Included in Wuxt are:
-
Fully dockerized WordPress and nuxt.js container configuration,
docker-compose up -d
sets up everything needed in one command and you can start working -
Extended Rest API to give the front-end easy access to meta-fields, featured media menus or the front-page configuration.
-
The newest nuxt.js version, extended with a WordPress
$wp
object, to connect to the extended WordPress Rest API.
All together the Wuxt features get you started with your front-end with just one command, you just need to work with the intuitive WordPress admin interface and can skip all back-end coding. But if you know your way around WordPress you are able to easily extend the back-end as well.
First clone this repository to a directory you want, then change to that directory and simply start your containers (you need to have a running Docker installation of course):
docker-compose up -d
That starts the following containers:
-
MySql (
mysql.wuxt
) Database for your WordPress installation. The data-folder of the database-container is mirrored to the _db-folder of your host system, to keep the data persistent. -
WordPress (
wp.wuxt
) on a Apache server with the newest PHP version and the Wuxt Rest API extension theme, ACF and other good-to-have plugins pre-installed. The wp-content directory of the WordPress directory is mirrored to the wp-content directory on your host. -
nuxt.js (
front.wuxt
) started in development mode with file-monitoring and browser-sync and extended by a complete WordPress Rest API wrapper and a starter application, mimicing base functions of a WordPress theme.
Your containers are available at
- front-end:
http://localhost:3000
- back-end:
http://localhost:3080
,http://localhost:3080/wp-admin
- database:
docker exec -ti mysql.wuxt bash
In short:
- Install WordPress (
http://localhost:3080/install.php
) - Set permalinks to Post name (
http://localhost:3080/wp-admin/options-permalink.php
) - Activate wuxt-theme (
http://localhost:3080/wp-admin/themes.php
)
Do a common WordPress installation at
http://localhost:3080/install.php
, then login to wp-admin and select the
wuxt theme to activate all the API extensions. Additionally you might want
to activate the ACF plugin to make your meta-value work easier. Last but
not least you have to set the permalink structure to "Post Name" in the
WordPress settings.
To check if everything is running, visit http://localhost:3080
and verify
that the wuxt info screen is showing.
Then check that the Rest API at http://localhost:3080/wp-json
is returning
a JSON-object you are good to go.
Nuxt should have been started automatically inside the docker container. The
command we use for running the nuxt.js server is yarn dev
. Check
if the front-end is running by opening http://localhost:3000
. You should
be greeted by the Wuxt intro-screen.
Check even if BrowserSync is running, by doing a minor change to the front-page. The change should directly be visible on the front-page as well.
The WordPress Rest API gives you access to a wide range of native
endpoints. Find the docs at: https://developer.wordpress.org/rest-api/reference/. To easily access the
endpoints from nuxt.js you can use the $wp
extension, which integrates
the node-wpapi library. You can find the full documentation here.
To make wuxt even more easy to use, there are a bunch of endpoint extensions to the WordPress Rest API.
$wp.frontPage()
$wp.frontPage().embed()
or
GET: /wp-json/wuxt/v1/front-page
GET: /wp-json/wuxt/v1/front-page?_embed
You can use the WordPress front-page settings to build your front-ends first page. If you setup the front-page in WordPress as static page, the endpoint will return the corresponing page object.
If there is no front-page configured, the query automatically returns the result of the default posts query
GET
/wp-json/wp/v2/posts
Note that the _embed
parameter works for the front-page query, which gives you
access to featured media (post-thumbnails), author information and more.
$wp.menu()
$wp.menu().location(<location>)
or
GET: /wp-json/wuxt/v1/menu
GET: /wp-json/wuxt/v1/menu?location=<location>
The WordPress Rest API is not providing an endpoint for menus by default,
so we added one. We have also registered a standard menu with the location main
,
which is returned as complete menu-tree, when you request the endpoint without
parameters.
Don't forget to create a menu and adding it to a location in wp-admin
when you
want to use this endpoint.
If you want to use multiple menus, you can request them by providing the menu location to the endpoint.
$wp.slug().name('<post-or-page-slug>')
$wp.slug().name('<post-or-page-slug>').embed()
or
GET: /wp-json/wuxt/v1/slug/<post-or-page-slug>
GET: /wp-json/wuxt/v1/slug/<post-or-page-slug>?_embed
The WordPress Rest API is not providing an endpoint to get posts or pages by slug. That doesn't mirror the WordPress theme default behaviour, where the url-slug can point to both a page or a post.
With the slug
endpoint we add that function, which is first looking for a post
with the given slug and then for a page. The embed
parameter is working for
the slug
endpoint.
The WordPress Rest API does not include meta fields in the post objects by
default. For two of the most common plugins, ACF and Yoast WordPress SEO, we
have automatically added the values of these fields. They are located in the
meta
section of the response objects.
Taxonomy queries are limited of the simple WordPress Rest API url structure. Especially with filtering queries, we struggled with the missing relation parameter in queries for posts by taxonomy. We added this feature with a new parameter to the WordPress API:
GET: /wp-json/wp/v2/posts/?categories=1,2&and=true
Note: Setting the relation to "and" will cause all taxonomy queries to use it. Right now you cant query one taxonomy with "and" and another with "or".
In Nuxt you just have to use the "and" param after a post query for categories.
$wp.posts().categories([1,2]).param('and', true)
The WordPress Rest API is providing endpoints for custom post types, as long as they are registered the right way (see the Scaffolding section for generating cpt-definitions).
To make querying of your custom post types as easy as everything else, we added the cpt
method to the $wp
object. See post type queries for a
fictional 'Movies' post type, below
$wp.cpt('movies')
$wp.cpt('movies').id( 7 )
The cpt
function returns cpt-objects similar to the posts()
or pages()
queries, meta fields are included.
To help you with some of the common tasks in wuxt, we integrated a bunch of gulp tasks. Just install the needed packages in the root directory and you are ready to run.
npm install
All available tasks are listed below.
Working with Docker is awesome, but has some drawbacks. One of them is that you have to make some changes from inside the container. Two of the most common tasks are managing WordPress and installing new packages in the front-end.
Managing WordPress wuxt provides you with the full power of the
WP-CLI tool. Check out all documentation at https://developer.wordpress.org/cli/commands/. To run any WP-CLI command inside the wp.wuxt
container, just use the following gulp-task:
gulp wuxt-wp -c "<command>"
Examples: gulp wuxt-wp -c "plugin list"
, gulp wuxt-wp -c "plugin install advanced-custom-fields"
, gulp wuxt-wp -c "user create wuxt me@wuxt.io"
The same concept we use for yarn in the front container:
gulp wuxt-yarn -c "<command>"
Example: gulp wuxt-yarn -c "add nuxt-webfontloader"
The commands are checking if the containers are running and installing needed
dependencies automatically. So if WP-CLI is not installed in the container it will be installed before running a wp
command.
There are some tasks you repeat in every WordPress project. One of them is creating post types. To make that task easy, we added the wuxt-generate-cpt
task. You just have to input post type slug and name,
everything else is taken care of:
gulp wuxt-generate-cpt
The custom post type definition is copied into the cpts
folder of the wuxt
theme and loaded automatically by the theme.
To query the new post-type you can use the cpt
method of the wuxt $wp
object.
@yashha for the excelent idea with the $wp
object, first implemented in https://github.com/yashha/wp-nuxt