Sample monorepo setup with npm workspaces and typescript project references.
Clone repository and execute the following commands in the root:
npm i
npm run build
npm start
- to see the client running in dev-mode (non-minified; with source-maps)npm run start:server
- to see server running (with SSR; client is minified with source-maps)
-
Monorepo is installed using npm.
- Packages are automatically linked together, meaning you can do cross-package work within the repo.
devDependencies
are common, and only appear in the rootpackage.json
. Easier to manage and upgrade.- Each package has its own
scripts
anddependencies
. They are being installed in the rootnode_modules
, using the same deduping mechanismnpm
uses for single packages. - Adding new packages is as simple as dropping an existing package in the
packages
folder, and re-runningnpm i
.
-
Sources and tests are written in strict TypeScript.
- Common base
tsconfig.base.json
.
- Common base
-
- React components library.
-
- React application.
- Uses the
@sample/components
package (also inside monorepo).
-
- Express application.
- Uses the
@sample/app
package (also inside monorepo). - Listens on http://localhost:3000 (client only rendering) http://localhost:3000/server (SSR rendering).
.github // CI flow configuration (GitHub Actions)
packages/
some-package/
src/
test/ // package-specific test folder
test.spec.ts
index.ts
tsconfig.json // package-specific config, built to "some-package/dist"
LICENSE // license file. included in npm artifact
package.json // package-specific deps and scripts
README.md // shown in npmjs.com. included in npm artifact
.eslintignore // eslint (linter) ignored directories/files
.eslintrc // eslint (linter) configuration
.gitignore // github's default node gitignore with customizations
.prettierignore // prettier (formatter) ignored directories/files
.prettierrc // prettier (formatter) configuration
lerna.json // lerna configuration (needed for deployment below)
LICENSE // root license file. picked up by github
package-lock.json // the only lock file in the repo. all packages combined
package.json // common dev deps and workspace-wide scripts
README.md // workspace-wide information. shown in github
tsconfig.base.json // common typescript configuration
tsconfig.json // solution-style root typescript configuration
webpack.config.js // root webpack configuration. inherited by app's webpack config
This repository aims to avoid showcasing styling solutions in-depth.
Webpack's experimental CSS handling is turned on for the sanitize.css
library being used, but the infrastructure doesn't contain any asset copying (into dist
folder) and so doesn't support local css assets.
Each styling solution has its own set of infrastructure requirements.
CSS-in-JS based solutions, for example, probably won't need to worry about it at all, and work without additional setup.
Within Wix, we use Stylable, which has its own CLI (stc) to build and/or copy .st.css
files into dist
.
Full support for source code importing .css/.scss/.less/.whatever
would require additional building. It would have to be addressed for Node as well, if one wants to execute tests importing these source files.
Traditionally, working with projects in separate repositories makes it difficult to keep versions of devDependencies
aligned, as each project can specify its own devDependency
versions.
Monorepos simplify this, because devDependencies
are shared between all packages within the monorepo.
Taking this into account, we use the following dependency structure:
devDependencies
are placed in the rootpackage.json
dependencies
andpeerDependencies
are placed in thepackage.json
of the relevant package requiring them, as each package is published separately
New devDependencies
can be added to the root package.json
using npm:
npm i <package name> -D
Some packages depend on sibling packages within the monorepo. For example, in this repo, @sample/app
depends on @sample/components
. This relationship is just a normal dependency, and can be described in the package.json
of app
like so:
"dependencies": {
"@sample/components": "<package version>"
}
npx lerna publish
will publish new versions of the packages to npm.
Lerna asks for new version numbers for packages that changed since last release and their dependencies. Every package has a prepack
script which automatically runs build
prior to packing.
npx lerna publish --force-publish
will force a release of all packages, regardless of which ones actually changed.
Deployment of app/server assets to any actual production servers is not shown.