Neutrino React Preset
@neutrinojs/react
is a Neutrino preset that supports building React web
applications.
Features
- Zero upfront configuration necessary to start developing and building a React web app
- Modern Babel compilation adding JSX, object rest spread syntax, and class properties.
- Support for React Hot Loader
- Write JSX in .js or .jsx files
- Extends from @neutrinojs/web
- Modern Babel compilation supporting ES modules, last 2 major browser versions, async functions, and dynamic imports
- webpack loaders for importing HTML, CSS, images, icons, and fonts
- webpack Dev Server during development
- Automatic creation of HTML pages, no templating necessary
- Automatic stylesheet extraction; importing stylesheets into modules creates bundled external stylesheets
- Pre-configured to support CSS Modules via
*.module.css
file extensions - Hot Module Replacement support including CSS
- Tree-shaking to create smaller bundles
- Production-optimized bundles with minification, easy chunking, and scope-hoisted modules for faster execution
- Easily extensible to customize your project as needed
Important! If you need polyfills in your code, consider including core-js
in
your package.json
. This is will configure @babel/preset-env
to automatically
include polyfills based on usage. *
Requirements
- Node.js 10+
- Yarn v1.2.1+, or npm v5.4+
- Neutrino 9
- webpack 4
- webpack-cli 3
- webpack-dev-server 3
Quickstart
The fastest way to get started is by using the create-project
scaffolding
tool. Don’t want to use the CLI helper? No worries, we have you covered with the
manual installation.
create-project
Run the following command to start the process. Substitute <directory-name>
with the directory name you wish to create for this project.
Yarn
❯ yarn create @neutrinojs/project <directory-name>
Note: The create
command is a shorthand that helps you do two things at once.
See the Yarn create docs for
more details.
npm/npx
npx
comes pre-installed with npm
. If you’re
running an older version of npm
, then npm install -g npm
to update to the
latest version.
❯ npx @neutrinojs/create-project <directory-name>
The CLI helper will prompt for the project to scaffold, and will offer to set up a test runner as well as linting to your project. Refer to the Create new project section for details on all available options.
Manual Installation
@neutrinojs/react
can be installed via the Yarn or npm clients. Inside your
project, make sure that the Neutrino and webpack related dependencies below are
installed as development dependencies. You will also need React and React DOM
for actual React development.
Yarn
❯ yarn add --dev neutrino @neutrinojs/react webpack webpack-cli webpack-dev-server
❯ yarn add react react-dom
npm
❯ npm install --save-dev neutrino @neutrinojs/react webpack webpack-cli webpack-dev-server
❯ npm install --save react react-dom
After that, add a new directory named src
in the root of the project, with a
single JS file named index.js
in it.
❯ mkdir src && touch src/index.js
This React preset exposes an element in the page with an ID of root
to which
you can mount your application. Edit your src/index.js
file with the
following:
import { render } from 'react-dom';
render(<h1>Hello world!</h1>, document.getElementById('root'));
Now edit your project's package.json
to add commands for starting and building
the application:
{
"scripts": {
"start": "webpack-dev-server --mode development --open",
"build": "webpack --mode production"
}
}
Then create a .neutrinorc.js
file alongside package.json
, which contains
your Neutrino configuration:
const react = require('@neutrinojs/react');
module.exports = {
use: [react()],
};
And create a webpack.config.js
file, that uses the Neutrino API to access the
generated webpack config:
const neutrino = require('neutrino');
module.exports = neutrino().webpack();
Start the app, then open a browser to the address in the console:
Yarn
❯ yarn start
npm
❯ npm start
Project Layout
@neutrinojs/react
follows the standard
project layout specified by Neutrino.
This means that by default all project source code should live in a directory
named src
in the root of the project. This includes JavaScript files, CSS
stylesheets, images, and any other assets that would be available to import your
compiled project.
Building
@neutrinojs/react
builds static assets to the build
directory by default
when running yarn build
. You can either serve or deploy the contents of this
build
directory as a static site.
Static assets
If you wish to copy files to the build directory that are not imported from application code, use the @neutrinojs/copy preset alongside this one.
Deployment Path
By default @neutrinojs/react
assumes that your application will be deployed at
the root of a domain (eg: https://www.my-app.com/
), and so sets webpack's
output.publicPath
to '/'
, which means assets will be loaded from the site root using absolute
paths.
If your app is instead deployed within a subdirectory, you will need to adjust
the publicPath
preset option. For example if your app is
hosted at https://my-username.github.io/my-app/
, you will need to set
publicPath
to '/my-app/'
.
Alternatively, if you would like your app to be able to be served from any
location, and are not using the HTML5 pushState history API or client-side
routing, then you can set publicPath
to the empty string, which will cause
relative asset paths to be used instead.
Preset options
You can provide custom options and have them merged with this preset's default
options to easily affect how this preset builds. You can modify React preset
settings from .neutrinorc.js
by overriding with an options object. The
following shows how you can pass an options object to the React preset and
override its options. See the
Web documentation for
specific options you can override with this object.
const react = require('@neutrinojs/react');
module.exports = {
use: [
react({
/* preset options */
// Example: disable Hot Module Replacement
hot: false,
// Controls webpack's `output.publicPath` setting.
// See the "Deployment Path" section above for more info.
publicPath: '/',
// Example: change the page title
html: {
title: 'Epic React App',
},
// Target specific browsers with @babel/preset-env
targets: {
browsers: ['last 1 Chrome versions', 'last 1 Firefox versions'],
},
// Add additional Babel plugins, presets, or env options
babel: {
// Override options for @babel/preset-env:
presets: [
[
'@babel/preset-env',
{
useBuiltIns: 'usage',
},
],
],
},
}),
],
};
Customizing
To override the build configuration, start with the documentation on
customization. @neutrinojs/react
does
not use any additional named rules, loaders, or plugins that aren't already in
use by the Web preset. See the
Web documentation customization
for preset-specific configuration to override.
For details on merging and overriding Babel configuration, such as supporting
decorator syntax, read more about using the
compile-loader
merge
once you are comfortable customizing your build.
If the need arises, you can also compile node_modules
by referring to the
relevant
compile-loader
documentation.
Advanced configuration
By following the customization guide
and knowing the rule, loader, and plugin IDs from @neutrinojs/web
, you can
override and augment the build by providing a function to your .neutrinorc.js
use array. You can also make these changes from the Neutrino API in custom
middleware.
By default Neutrino, and therefore this preset, creates a single main
index
entry point to your application, and this maps to the index.*
file in
the src
directory. The extension is resolved by webpack. This value is
provided by neutrino.options.mains
at neutrino.options.mains.index
.
If you wish to output multiple pages, you can configure them like so:
const react = require('@neutrinojs/react');
module.exports = {
options: {
mains: {
index: {
// outputs index.html from src/index.*
entry: 'index',
// Additional options are passed to html-webpack-plugin, and override
// any defaults set via the preset's `html` option.
title: 'Site Homepage',
},
admin: {
// outputs admin.html from src/admin.*
entry: 'admin',
title: 'Admin Dashboard',
},
account: {
// outputs account.html from src/user.* using a custom HTML template.
entry: 'user',
inject: true,
template: 'my-custom-template.html',
},
},
},
use: [react()],
};
Vendoring
External dependencies are automatically split into separate chunks from the application code, by the new webpack SplitChunksPlugin.
Example: The splitChunks settings can be adjusted like so:
const react = require('@neutrinojs/react');
module.exports = {
use: [
react(),
(neutrino) => {
neutrino.config.optimization.merge({
splitChunks: {
// Decrease the minimum size before extra chunks are created, to 10KB
minSize: 10000,
},
});
},
],
};
Polyfills
@babel/preset-react
has its own useBuiltIns
option for polyfilling other
Babel plugins. Don't confuse it with the useBuiltIns
option for
@babel/preset-env
.
Hot Module Replacement
While @neutrinojs/react
supports Hot Module Replacement for your app using
React Hot Loader, it does require some application-specific changes in order to
operate.
First, install react-hot-loader
as a dependency, this must be React Hot
Loader v4+:
Yarn
❯ yarn add react-hot-loader
npm
❯ npm install --save react-hot-loader
Neutrino will then automatically load React Hot Loader then next time a build is performed. Next, you need to mark your root component as hot-exported.
For example, if your src/index
main entry renders a root component from
App.jsx
, then the exported component needs to have a hot export:
// src/App.jsx
import React from 'react';
import { hot } from 'react-hot-loader';
const App = () => <div>Hello World!</div>;
export default hot(module)(App);
See the React Hot Loader docs for any API specifics on hot reloading other components.
Contributing
This preset is part of the neutrino repository, a monorepo containing all resources for developing Neutrino and its core presets and middleware. Follow the contributing guide for details.