Live demo / Explore and run the code in CodeSandbox
React Storefront is an open-source frontend e-commerce platform from the Saleor team.
- Next.js
- TypeScript
- GraphQL with Apollo Client
- Tailwind CSS
modern & fast: Project is focusing on best practices for e-commerce, like: SSR & ISR, image optimization.
easily customizable: TailwindCSS can be easily extended and tweaked, or completely changed to your favorite css solution.
works out-of-the-box: Pre configured tools for DX.
Please note: this project use the pnpm package manager. To install it, run:
npm install -g pnpm
Install dependencies:
pnpm i
Start the dev server:
npm run dev
Storefront can be now accessed at http://localhost:3001/.
The .env
file contains environment variables used by the application. You can override them by creating .env.local
file.
Graphql queries are located under the ./graphql
. We strongly encourage use of fragments, which minimizes code duplication and plays nicely with the TypeScript, during transformation of incoming data.
Our client of choice is Apollo, which provides excellent cache and features out of the box. To get fully typed requests and responses, GraphQL Code Generator transforms all .graphql
files into ready to use hooks. Generated code is located at ./saleor/api.tsx
file.
API endpoint can be configured via .env
file.
- Modify or create GraphQL file. For example, new query at
./graphql/queries/FeaturedProducts.graphql
- Run
npm run generate
command - New query will be added to the
./saleor/api.tsx
file - Import generated hook (
import { useFeaturedProductsQuery } from "@/saleor/api";
) in your component code
Script will start the GraphQL Code Generator in the watch mode, so changes in the queries will be automatically updated.
When creating new components, please follow the React TypeScript Cheatsheet.
Code for the payment gateways can be found at ./components/checkout/payments
. At the moment we support Saleor test gateway and basic flow for Stripe.
Project use file based routing. Available routes can be found at ./pages
. Dynamic routes (for example ./pages/product/[slug].tsx
) are generated at build time based on getStaticPaths
.
To ensure, that Link components use only the existing URLs with required arguments, we use pathpida. It is used to automatically generate the ./lib/$path.ts
file with all available routes. File should not be updated manually, instead run:
npm run paths
Since routes require additional arguments with current locale and channel, you should use usePaths
hook which will automatically add those. Let's create example component with link to the product page:
import Link from "next/link";
import { usePaths } from "@/lib/paths";
export const ProductLinkComponent = () => {
const paths = usePaths();
return (
<Link href={paths.products._slug(line?.variant?.product?.slug).$url()}>
<a>Product link</a>
</Link>
);
};
Before commiting the code, make sure to run code linters and formatters:
npm run lint
The repository contains ready to use VS Code debugger configuration (.vscode/launch.json
).
Start server in debug mode
npm run debug
Add breakpoints, and start debugging session in your editor.
GraphQL extension for VSCode adds syntax highlighting, validation, and language features like go to definition, hover information and autocompletion for graphql projects. This extension also works with queries annotated with gql tag.
VS Marketplace link
If you want to check how your changes impact page size, use command:
npm run analyze-build
After the build, report will open in your browser.
This application is optimized for deployments on Vercel and Netlify. You can use the following deploy buttons
or, configure it directly in the respective cloud provider.
For Heroku, you need to specify a LTS version of Node.js in your package.json
explicitly. Add the following snippet in package.json
:
"engines": {
"node": ">=14 <17",
"npm": ">=6.11.0 <8"
}
We don't add this in this codebase as we prefer to target the latest Node.js version.