Learn more about Remix Stacks.
npx create-remix --template freekrai/remix-blogThis blog starter template was inspired by Kent C. Dodds implementation of kentcdodds.com. You can read more about the architecture and the idea behind it at How I built a modern website in 2021.
Inspiration was also drawn from Sergio Xalambrí and Ben McHone, as well as Lee Rob
content: where mdx is storedcontent/posts: blog posts, stored as:SLUG/index.mdxcontent/pages: pages, stored asSLUG/index.mdx
The structure is based on Gatsby and gives us more flexibility, each page and post is a folder and contains an index.mdx file, this folder name becomes the slug.
This also gives you a lot of flexibility, for example, you can have multiple files inside one folder
content/posts/hello-world/index.mdxreturns as/hello-worldcontent/posts/hello-world/abc.mdxreturns as/hello-world/abccontent/posts/hello-world/more-hello/index.mdxreturns ashello-world/more-hellocontent/posts/hello/still-hello/index.mdxreturns ashello/still-hellocontent/posts/2022/test/index.mdxreturns as/2022/test
This lets you structure content however you want.
On build, we generate a cached json file in content (blog-cache.json) for all blog posts, which we then reference later for the blog index, rss, sitemap, etc.
We also generate a separate cache json file in content (page-cache.json) for all pages, this can then be used for sitemap, etc as well.
Mdx files contain frontmatter which we use on the site, this frontmatter looks like:
---
meta:
title: Another Post
description: A description
date: '2021-10-02T00:00:00'
excerpt: Hello Gaseous cloud...
headers:
Cache-Control: no-cache
---By default, remix-blog will try to use the file system to read files, this works great but if you are on a hosting service like cloudflare where you can't access the file system then we need to use Github, you can configure how it accesses files in your .env file:
SESSION_SECRET: Session Secret used for sessions such as dark modeUSE_FILESYSTEM_OR_GITHUB: this is eitherfsorghGITHUB_TOKEN: your Personal access tokenGITHUB_OWNER: your Github nameGITHUB_REPO: your Github repo
The Github variables are only needed if USE_FILESYSTEM_OR_GITHUB is set to gh, it's fs by default.
build- compile and build the Remix app, Tailwind and cache blog posts into a json file inproductionmodedev- starts Remix watcher, blog cache watcher and Tawilwind CLI in watch mode
To run your Remix app locally, first, copy .env.example to .env and configure as needed following the Config step above.
Next, make sure your project's local dependencies are installed:
npm installAfterwards, start the Remix development server like so:
npm run devOpen up http://localhost:3000 and you should be ready to go!
Initially, this stack is set up for deploying to Vercel, but it can be deployed to other hosts quickly and we'll update the wiki with instructions for each.
Open server.js and save it as:
import { createRequestHandler } from "@remix-run/vercel";
import * as build from "@remix-run/dev/server-build";
export default createRequestHandler({ build, mode: process.env.NODE_ENV });Then update your remix.config.js file as follows:
/** @type {import('@remix-run/dev').AppConfig} */
module.exports = {
serverBuildTarget: "vercel",
server: process.env.NODE_ENV === "development" ? undefined : "./server.js",
ignoredRouteFiles: ["**/.*"],
};This will instruct your Remix app to use the Vercel runtime, after doing this, you only need to import your Git repository into Vercel, and it will be deployed.
If you'd like to avoid using a Git repository, you can also deploy the directory by running Vercel CLI:
npm i -g vercel
vercelIt is generally recommended to use a Git repository, because future commits will then automatically be deployed by Vercel, through its Git Integration.
Coming Soon
Coming Soon