- Full stack ES8+ with Babel
- Node LTS support (verified working on 10.x, 12.x and 14.x LTS releases)
- Express server
- React client with Webpack
- Client-side routing with React Router
- Linting with ESLint
- Dev mode (watch modes for client and server, proxy to avoid CORS issues)
- Production build (single deployment artifact, React loaded via CDN)
- Heroku deployment
- Cloud Foundry deployment
- Docker build
- Postgres database with node-postgres
Pick one member of the team to own the repository and pipeline. That person should do the following:
- Click the "Use this template" button above (see GitHub's docs) to create your team repository, select "Include all branches" and name it something appropriate for your project.
- In your new repo, go to "Settings", then "Branches", then switch the default branch to
postgres
(optional: you can now delete the oldmaster
branch and renamepostgres
tomaster
,main
or whatever else you'd like) - see GitHub's docs again - In your repo, click the "Deploy to Heroku" button at the top of the README and create a Heroku account when prompted.
- Fill in the name of the application, select Europe and then click "Deploy App".
- Once it has deployed successfully, click the "Manage app" button to view the application details.
- Go to the "Deploy" tab, select "Connect to GitHub" and choose your repo.
- Click "Enable automatic deploys".
Whenever you commit to master (or e.g. merge a pull request) it will get automatically deployed!
You should now make sure all of the project team are collaborators on the repository.
Various scripts are provided in the package file, but many are helpers for other scripts; here are the ones you'll commonly use:
dev
: starts the frontend and backend in dev mode, with file watching (note that the backend runs on port 3100, and the frontend is proxied to it).lint
: runs ESLint against all the JavaScript in the project.serve
: builds and starts the app in production mode locally.
While running the dev mode using npm run dev
, you can attach the Node debugger to the server process via port 9229.
If you're using VS Code, a debugging configuration is provided for this.
There is also a VS Code debugging configuration for the Chrome debugger, which requires the recommended Chrome extension, for debugging the client application.
See the guidance in the wiki.