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Blazing Lit Micro-Frontend Demo

A proof-of-concept demonstrating experimental support for Blazor WebAssembly (WASM) micro-frontends loaded in a simple web app built using single-spa. The app comprises four components:

  • An app shell managing overall page layout and micro-frontend lifecycles
  • A Profile micro-frontend written using Lit
  • A Catalog micro-frontend written using Blazor
  • An Orders micro-frontend written using Blazor and using components from MudBlazor

Background

Lit and other popular JavaScript frameworks are largely well-supported for developing micro-frontends using single-spa; Blazor historically has not been. In this demo, using a Blazor WASM micro-frontend is made possible using two experimental packages I created:

  • Blazor.WebAssembly.SingleSpa – NuGet package that provides a modified Blazor WASM start script (blazor.webassembly.js). This modifies the Blazor object created by the Blazor WASM runtime to expose additional APIs and startup options enabling better management over the lifecycle, navigation, and resource loading of a Blazor WASM application.
  • blazor-wasm-single-spa – NPM package providing an experimental single-spa framework helper for Blazor WebAssembly. This helper creates the three lifecycle hooks single-spa expects each micro-frontend to export for bootstrapping, mounting, and unmounting itself.

This is not necessarily meant to demonstrate a robust and production-ready implementation of a Blazor WASM micro-frontend but rather is a demo of what could be conceptually possible. Ideally, Blazor (at least its WebAssembly variant) would eventually evolve to more readily support the micro-frontend use case as detailed in dotnet/aspnetcore#38128.

Demo Parts

This demo comprises four separately deployed applications:

  • A vanilla HTML, CSS, and JS application shell that loads the site and manages the lifecycle of each micro-frontend.
  • A Lit-based micro-frontend that renders a user profile page.
  • A Blazor WASM micro-frontend that renders a catalog page. It also features client-side routing internal to the micro-frontend that goes from a catalog view to a detail view of a specific item.
  • Another Blazor WASM micro-frontend that renders a table using MudBlazor, a popular component library for Blazor WebAssembly applications. This uses an experimental app extension for blazor-wasm-single-spa. This extension ensure global state written by MudBlazor is cleared and properly restored when the micro-frontend is unmounted from and later re-mounted to the DOM.

Live Demo

A live instance of this demo is hosted on the free tier of Azure Static Web Apps (SWA). The app shell and each micro-frontend are hosted on their own Azure SWA instance, so technically they are served from different origins. The application shell can be accessed here.

Blazor WASM Micro-frontend Setup

The Blazor WASM micro-frontend is based on the blazorwasm-empty template. This is done via the dotnet CLI:

dotnet new blazorwasm-empty -o CatalogApp

NOTE: For whatever reason, the blazorwasm-empty template only allows you to specify a target framework up to .NET 7 whereas the blazorwasm template allows you to specify up to .NET 8. After creating the new project and installing the necessary dependencies, the package references in the project file must have their versions adjusted so that it references those Microsoft assemblies that were released alongside .NET 8.

After creating the new project, the Blazor.WebAssembly.SingleSpa NuGet package is added to the project. This will provide a variant of the Blazor WebAssembly start script (blazor.webassembly.js) that ships by default with the .NET SDK. The provided version exposes additional APIs and startup options that facilitate repeatedly mounting and unmounting Blazor WASM applications from the DOM via single-spa.

dotnet add package Blazor.WebAssembly.SingleSpa

A single-spa micro frontend must expose a JavaScript module that exports a number of lifecycle hooks called by single-spa. The Blazor WASM micro-frontend defines a lifecycles.js file in its wwwroot file and uses the blazor-wasm-single-spa framework helper to assist in defining these lifecycle hooks.

For the framework helper to successfully mount the Blazor WASM application to the DOM, the application needs to register its App root component as a custom element. To support this, we need add the Microsoft.AspNetCore.Components.CustomElements package to the project:

dotnet add package Microsoft.AspNetCore.Components.CustomElements

We then need to add the following line to the Program.cs file to actually add support for the custom element:

builder.RootComponents.RegisterCustomElement<App>("mfe-catalog-app");

To ensure the Blazor WASM framework helper can properly unmount the Blazor micro-frontend when the user navigates away from it to a different micro-frontend, we remove the lines that register the App and HeadOutlet with DOM selectors:

builder.RootComponents.Add<App>("#app");
builder.RootComponents.Add<HeadOutlet>("head::after");

To define the required lifecycle hooks, lifecycles module imports the framework helper and calls its singleSpaBlazor function, exporting the hooks it returns. Note that the appTagName specified must match the custom element tag name registered in the call to RegisterCustomElement.

import singleSpaBlazor from 'blazor-wasm-single-spa';

const iLastSlash = import.meta.url.lastIndexOf('/');
const assetBaseUrl = import.meta.url.substring(0, iLastSlash + 1);

export const { bootstrap, mount, unmount } = singleSpaBlazor({
  appTagName: 'mfe-catalog-app',
  stylePaths: ['CatalogApp.styles.css'],
  assetBaseUrl,
});

To avoid bundling the framework helper with the micro-frontend, the lifecycles module leaves its import statements untouched with bare module specifiers, and the app shell defines an import map that knows how to resolve these bare specifiers to actual URLs at runtime. This is but one method of sharing common dependencies across multiple micro-frontends.

The above demonstrates also how to incorporate stylesheets defined by the Blazor WASM application. The path given is relative to the asset base URL. This is a new startup option exposed by Blazor.WebAssembly.SingleSpa as the assetBaseUrl property. It defines the base URL to use when fetching Blazor assets such as the .NET browser runtime loader (dotnet.js), various WebAssembly modules, etc. It is typically set to the base URL at which your micro-frontend is hosted.

The other important startup option is the navigation base URL. It is exposed as the navigationBaseUrl property. The navigation base URL is the base URL to use for client-side routing purposes within your micro-frontend. In the context of a Blazor WASM micro-frontend, this is used to properly configure Blazor's navigation manager.

While this could be set statically in the call to singleSpaBlazor, it's typical to define the navigation base URL based on information passed down from the app shell to the micro-frontend via the props passed to each lifecycle hook. For this reason, the mount hook returned by singleSpaBlazor will also use any navigationBaseUrl prop it receives. This prop takes precedence over the navigation base URL (if any) passed to singleSpaBlazor.

Due to how the .NET browser runtime forms some of its fetch requests for .NET and Blazor assets, namely how it configure the request to include credentials, it is important that the origin serving your Blazor WASM micro-frontend serves up the correct CORS headers if the origin does not match the origin of the app-shell (as is the case in the live demo linked above). In particular, since some requests are configured to include credentials for cross-origin requests, it's important that the Blazor WASM micro-frontend's origin responds with at least the following CORS response headers:

Access-Control-Allow-Origin: <origin of your app shell>
Access-Control-Allow-Credentials: true

Note that the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header cannot specify a wildcard because the spec expressly forbids this when the request includes credentials.

The Blazor WASM micro-frontend in this demo uses Azure Static Web Apps and thus defines these CORS headers inside its staticwebapp.config.json.

Preparing a Blazor Micro Frontend for Deployment

For the most part, building the Blazor-based micro frontend and preparing it for deployment should be no different than other standalone Blazor WebAssembly applications. Most of the work is done via the dotnet publish command:

dotnet publish -c Release -o dist

The static content that needs to be uploaded is located in dist/wwwroot. The lifecycles.js file that needs to be loadable by single-spa is located in this wwwroot folder.

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Simple web app demonstrating Blazor and Lit micro frontends integrated together via single-spa

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