astro/packages/integrations/node
Houston (Bot) 6afb1efea8
[ci] release (#6541)
* [ci] release

* nit: typo in #6594 changeset

---------

Co-authored-by: github-actions[bot] <github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ben Holmes <hey@bholmes.dev>
2023-03-21 08:03:46 -04:00
..
src feat(all): Migrate to TypeScript 5.0 (#6579) 2023-03-20 17:02:07 +01:00
test Node adapter: handle prerendering and serving with query params (#6110) 2023-02-02 19:10:16 -05:00
CHANGELOG.md [ci] release (#6432) 2023-03-07 14:49:19 -05:00
package.json [ci] release (#6541) 2023-03-21 08:03:46 -04:00
README.md update node integration README with Fastify code example (#6120) 2023-02-07 13:58:37 -05:00
tsconfig.json Update compilation target for Node 16 (#6213) 2023-03-06 13:57:16 -05:00

@astrojs/node

This adapter allows Astro to deploy your SSR site to Node targets.

Why @astrojs/node

If you're using Astro as a static site builder—its behavior out of the box—you don't need an adapter.

If you wish to use server-side rendering (SSR), Astro requires an adapter that matches your deployment runtime.

Node.js is a JavaScript runtime for server-side code. @astrojs/node can be used either in standalone mode or as middleware for other http servers, such as Express.

Installation

Add the Node adapter to enable SSR in your Astro project with the following astro add command. This will install the adapter and make the appropriate changes to your astro.config.mjs file in one step.

# Using NPM
npx astro add node
# Using Yarn
yarn astro add node
# Using PNPM
pnpm astro add node

If you prefer to install the adapter manually instead, complete the following two steps:

  1. Install the Node adapter to your projects dependencies using your preferred package manager. If youre using npm or arent sure, run this in the terminal:

      npm install @astrojs/node
    
  2. Add two new lines to your astro.config.mjs project configuration file.

    // astro.config.mjs
    import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
    import node from '@astrojs/node';
    
    export default defineConfig({
      output: 'server',
      adapter: node({
        mode: 'standalone'
      }),
    });
    

Configuration

@astrojs/node can be configured by passing options into the adapter function. The following options are available:

Mode

Controls whether the adapter builds to middleware or standalone mode.

  • middleware mode allows the built output to be used as middleware for another Node.js server, like Express.js or Fastify.
    import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
    import node from '@astrojs/node';
    
    export default defineConfig({
      output: 'server',
      adapter: node({
        mode: 'middleware'
      }),
    });
    
  • standalone mode builds to server that automatically starts with the entry module is run. This allows you to more easily deploy your build to a host without any additional code.

Usage

First, performing a build. Depending on which mode selected (see above) follow the appropriate steps below:

Middleware

The server entrypoint is built to ./dist/server/entry.mjs by default. This module exports a handler function that can be used with any framework that supports the Node request and response objects.

For example, with Express:

import express from 'express';
import { handler as ssrHandler } from './dist/server/entry.mjs';

const app = express();
app.use(express.static('dist/client/'))
app.use(ssrHandler);

app.listen(8080);

Or, with Fastify (>4):

import Fastify from 'fastify';
import fastifyMiddie from '@fastify/middie';
import fastifyStatic from '@fastify/static';
import { fileURLToPath } from 'url';
import { handler as ssrHandler } from './dist/server/entry.mjs';

const app = Fastify({ logger: true });

await app
  .register(fastifyStatic, {
    root: fileURLToPath(new URL('./dist/client', import.meta.url)),
  })
  .register(fastifyMiddie);
app.use(ssrHandler);

app.listen({ port: 8080 });

Note that middleware mode does not do file serving. You'll need to configure your HTTP framework to do that for you. By default the client assets are written to ./dist/client/.

Standalone

In standalone mode a server starts when the server entrypoint is run. By default it is built to ./dist/server/entry.mjs. You can run it with:

node ./dist/server/entry.mjs

For standalone mode the server handles file servering in addition to the page and API routes.

Custom host and port

You can override the host and port the standalone server runs on by passing them as environment variables at runtime:

HOST=0.0.0.0 PORT=3000 node ./dist/server/entry.mjs

HTTPS

By default the standalone server uses HTTP. This works well if you have a proxy server in front of it that does HTTPS. If you need the standalone server to run HTTPS itself you need to provide your SSL key and certificate.

You can pass the path to your key and certification via the environment variables SERVER_CERT_PATH and SERVER_KEY_PATH. This is how you might pass them in bash:

SERVER_KEY_PATH=./private/key.pem SERVER_CERT_PATH=./private/cert.pem node ./dist/server/entry.mjs

Troubleshooting

SyntaxError: Named export 'compile' not found

You may see this when running the entry script if it was built with npm or Yarn. This is a known issue that will be fixed in a future release. As a workaround, add "path-to-regexp" to the noExternal array:

// astro.config.mjs
import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';

import node from "@astrojs/node";

export default defineConfig({
  output: "server",
  adapter: node(),
  vite: {
    ssr: {
      noExternal: ["path-to-regexp"]
    }
  }
});

For more help, check out the #support channel on Discord. Our friendly Support Squad members are here to help!

You can also check our Astro Integration Documentation for more on integrations.

Contributing

This package is maintained by Astro's Core team. You're welcome to submit an issue or PR!

Changelog

See CHANGELOG.md for a history of changes to this integration.