This project is part of ASP.NET Core. You can find samples, documentation and getting started instructions for ASP.NET Core at the Home repo.
JavaScriptServices
is a set of technologies for ASP.NET Core developers. It provides infrastructure that you'll find useful if you use Angular 2 / React / Knockout / etc. on the client, or if you build your client-side resources using Webpack, or otherwise want to execute JavaScript on the server at runtime.
This repo contains:
- A set of NuGet/NPM packages that implement functionality for:
- Invoking arbitrary NPM packages at runtime from .NET code (docs)
- Server-side prerendering of SPA components (docs)
- Webpack dev middleware (docs)
- Hot module replacement (HMR) (docs)
- Server-side and client-side routing integration (docs)
- Server-side and client-side validation integration
- "Cache priming" for Angular 2 apps
- "Lazy loading" for Knockout apps
- A Yeoman generator that creates preconfigured app starting points (guide)
- Samples and docs
Everything here is cross-platform, and works with .NET Core 1.0.1 or later on Windows, Linux, or OS X.
If you want to build a brand-new ASP.NET Core app that uses Angular 2 / React / Knockout on the client, consider starting with the aspnetcore-spa
generator. This lets you choose your client-side framework, and generates a starting point that includes applicable features such as Webpack dev middleware, server-side prerendering, and efficient production builds. It's much easier than configuring everything to work together manually!
To do this, first install Yeoman and these generator templates:
npm install -g yo generator-aspnetcore-spa
Then you can generate your new application starting point:
cd some-empty-directory
yo aspnetcore-spa
Finally, once the generator has run and restored all the dependencies, you can start up your new ASP.NET Core Single Page Application:
dotnet run
For a more detailed walkthrough, see getting started with the aspnetcore-spa
generator.
If you have an existing ASP.NET Core application, or if you just want to use the underlying JavaScriptServices packages directly, you can install these packages using NuGet and NPM:
Microsoft.AspNetCore.NodeServices
- This provides a fast and robust way for .NET code to run JavaScript on the server inside a Node.js environment. You can use this to consume arbitrary functionality from NPM packages at runtime in your ASP.NET Core app.
- Most applications developers don't need to use this directly, but you can do so if you want to implement your own functionality that involves calling Node.js code from .NET at runtime.
- Find documentation and usage examples here.
Microsoft.AspNetCore.SpaServices
- This provides infrastructure that's generally useful when building Single Page Applications (SPAs) with technologies such as Angular 2 or React (for example, server-side prerendering and webpack middleware). Internally, it uses the
NodeServices
package to implement its features. - Find documentation and usage examples here.
- This provides infrastructure that's generally useful when building Single Page Applications (SPAs) with technologies such as Angular 2 or React (for example, server-side prerendering and webpack middleware). Internally, it uses the
Microsoft.AspNetCore.AngularServices
- This builds on the
SpaServices
package and includes features specific to Angular 2. Currently, this includes validation helpers and a "cache priming" feature, which let you pre-evaluate ajax requests on the server so that client-side code doesn't need to make network calls once it's loaded. - The code is here, and you'll find a usage example for the validation helper here, and for the cache priming here. Full docs are to be written.
- This builds on the
There was previously a Microsoft.AspNetCore.ReactServices
but this is not currently needed - all applicable functionality is in Microsoft.AspNetCore.SpaServices
, because it's sufficiently general. We might add a new Microsoft.AspNetCore.ReactServices
package in the future if new React-specific requirements emerge.
If you want to build a helper library for some other SPA framework, you can do so by taking a dependency on Microsoft.AspNetCore.SpaServices
and wrapping its functionality in whatever way is most useful for your SPA framework.
Inside this repo, the templates
directory contains the application starting points that the aspnetcore-spa
generator emits. If you want, you can clone this repo and run those applications directly. But it's easier to use the Yeoman tool to run the generator.
Also in this repo, the samples
directory contains examples of using the JavaScript services family of packages with Angular 2 and React, plus examples of standalone NodeServices
usage for runtime code transpilation and image processing.
To run the samples:
- Clone this repo
- At the repo's root directory (the one containing
src
,samples
, etc.), rundotnet restore
- Change directory to the sample you want to run (e.g.,
cd samples/angular/MusicStore
) - Restore Node dependencies by running
npm install
- If you're trying to run the Angular 2 "Music Store" sample, then also run
gulp
(which you need to have installed globally). None of the other samples require this.
- If you're trying to run the Angular 2 "Music Store" sample, then also run
- Run the application (
dotnet run
) - Browse to http://localhost:5000
If you're interested in contributing to the various packages, samples, and project templates in this repo, that's great! You can run the code in this repo just by:
- Cloning the repo
- Running
dotnet restore
at the repo root dir - Going to whatever sample or template you want to run (e.g.,
cd templates/Angular2Spa
) - Restoring NPM dependencies (run
npm install
) - Launching it (
dotnet run
)
If you're planning to submit a pull request, and if it's more than a trivial fix (e.g., for a typo), it's usually a good idea first to file an issue describing what you're proposing to do and how it will work. Then you can find out if it's likely that such a pull request will be accepted, and how it fits into wider ongoing plans.