Good things come in pairs
Looking to mix up a backend with express/sequelize and a frontend with react/redux? That's boilermaker
!
Follow along with the workshop to make your own! This canonical version can serve as a reference, or a starting point all on its own.
To use this boilerplate, you'll need to take the following steps:
-
Fork and clone this repo.
-
cd
into your clone andrm -rf .git
to remove the boilerplate git tracking -
Update project name and description in
package.json
file -
git init
to start your own git tracking -
npm install
, oryarn install
- whatever you're into -
Create two postgres databases:
boilermaker
andboilermaker-test
(you can substitute these with the name of your own application - just be sure to go through and change thepackage.json
andserver/db/db.js
to refer to the new names)- By default, running
npm test
will useboilermaker-test
, while regular development usesboilermaker
- By default, running
-
Create a file called
secrets.js
in the project root- This file is
.gitignore
'd, and will only be required in your development environment - Its purpose is to attach the secret env variables that you'll use while developing
- However, it's very important that you not push it to Github! Otherwise, prying eyes will find your secret API keys!
- It might look like this:
process.env.GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID = 'hush hush'; process.env.GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET = 'pretty secret'; process.env.GOOGLE_CALLBACK = '/auth/google/callback';
- This file is
-
To use OAuth with Google, complete the step above with a real client ID and client secret from Google
- You can get them here: https://console.developers.google.com/apis/credentials
-
Finally, complete the section below to set up your linter
Linters are a fundamental tool to any project - it ensures that code your working with has a consistent style, which is critical to writing readable code.
Everyone has their own style, so Boilermaker does not come prepackaged with a linter. However, we strongly
recommend that you (and your team, if working in a group) decide on a style, and stick with it. Here's what you need to do:
npm install -g eslint
- In the root of your project,
eslint --init
- You will then be prompted to choose how you want to configure ESLint. We recommend selecting the
Use a popular style guide option
. The existing Boilermaker code was written in accordance with theStandard
style, but you may choose a different one if you don't like it. - This will add an
.eslintrc.js
,.eslintrc.yaml
, or.eslintrc.json
(depending on which you choose) -.js
or.json
will usually work fine. You may also need to install an appropriate eslint plugin specific for your code editor.
npm run start-dev
will make great things happen!
If you want to run the server and/or webpack separately, you can also npm run start-server
and npm run build-client
.
From there, just follow your bliss.
Ready to go world wide? Here's a guide to deployment!
- Set up the Heroku command line tools and install Yarn if you haven't already (
npm install -g yarn
) heroku login
- Add a git remote for heroku:
-
If you're creating a new app...
heroku create
orheroku create your-app-name
if you have a name in mind.heroku addons:create heroku-postgresql:hobby-dev
to add ("provision") a postgres database to your heroku dyno
-
If you already have a Heroku app...
heroku git:remote your-app-name
You'll need to be a collaborator on the app.
- Make sure that all your work is fully committed and pushed to your master branch on Github.
- Checkout a new branch called "deploy":
git checkout -b deploy
. If you currently have an existing branch called "deploy", delete it now (git branch -d deploy
). Note that the name "deploy" here isn't magical, but it needs to match the name of the branch we specify in step 3d. npm run deploy
- this will cause the following commands to happen in order: a.webpack -p
: webpack will run in "production mode" b.git add -f public/bundle.js public/bundle.js/map
: "force" add the otherwise gitignored build files c.git commit --allow-empy -m 'Deploying'
: create a commit, even if nothing changed d.git push heroku deploy:master
: push your local "deploy" branch to the "master" branch on heroku
Now, you should be deployed! To clean up, remove your deploy branch:
git checkout master
: return to your master branchgit branch -d deploy
: remove the deploy branch
Why do all of these steps? The big reason is because we don't want our production server to be cluttered up with dev dependencies like webpack, but at the same time we don't want our development git-tracking to be cluttered with production build files like bundle.js! By doing these steps, we make sure our development and production environments both stay nice and clean!
(By the way, if performing these steps seems tedious and error-prone, try writing a shell script that will do them all for you!)