A fork of the Remix Blues Stack for making web3 Progressive Web Apps.
- Wallet and Social Authentication with Privy
- Progressive Web App with Remix PWA
- Multi-region Fly app deployment with Docker
- Multi-region Fly PostgreSQL Cluster
- Healthcheck endpoint for Fly backups region fallbacks
- GitHub Actions for deploy on merge to production and staging environments
- Database ORM with Prisma
- Styling with Tailwind and Shadcn
- End-to-end testing with Cypress
- Local third party request mocking with MSW
- Unit testing with Vitest and Testing Library
- Code formatting with Prettier
- Linting with ESLint
- Static Types with TypeScript
Not a fan of bits of the stack? Fork it, change it, and use npx create-remix --template your/repo
! Make it your own.
Click this button to create a Gitpod workspace with the project set up, Postgres started, and Fly pre-installed
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Start the Postgres Database in Docker:
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NOTE: you must install Docker and Docker Compose locally if you haven't yet.
npm run docker
Note: The npm script will complete while Docker sets up the container in the background. Ensure that Docker has finished and your container is running before proceeding.
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Initial setup:
npm run setup
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Run the first build:
npm run build
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Start dev server:
npm run dev
This starts your app in development mode, rebuilding assets on file changes.
This Remix Stack comes with two GitHub Actions that handle automatically deploying your app to production and staging environments.
Prior to your first deployment, you'll need to do a few things:
-
Sign up and log in to Fly
fly auth signup
Note: If you have more than one Fly account, ensure that you are signed into the same account in the Fly CLI as you are in the browser. In your terminal, run
fly auth whoami
and ensure the email matches the Fly account signed into the browser. -
Create two apps on Fly, one for staging and one for production:
fly apps create app-23f9 fly apps create app-23f9-staging
Note: Once you've successfully created an app, double-check the
fly.toml
file to ensure that theapp
key is the name of the production app you created. This Stack automatically appends a unique suffix at init which may not match the apps you created on Fly. You will likely see 404 errors in your Github Actions CI logs if you have this mismatch. -
Initialize Git.
git init
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Create a new GitHub Repository, and then add it as the remote for your project. Do not push your app yet!
git remote add origin <ORIGIN_URL>
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Add a
FLY_API_TOKEN
to your GitHub repo. To do this, go to your user settings on Fly and create a new token, then add it to your repo secrets with the nameFLY_API_TOKEN
. -
Add a
SESSION_SECRET
to your fly app secrets, to do this you can run the following commands:fly secrets set SESSION_SECRET=$(openssl rand -hex 32) --app app-23f9 fly secrets set SESSION_SECRET=$(openssl rand -hex 32) --app app-23f9-staging
Note: When creating the staging secret, you may get a warning from the Fly CLI that looks like this:
WARN app flag 'app-23f9-staging' does not match app name in config file 'app-23f9'
This simply means that the current directory contains a config that references the production app we created in the first step. Ignore this warning and proceed to create the secret.
If you don't have openssl installed, you can also use 1password to generate a random secret, just replace
$(openssl rand -hex 32)
with the generated secret. -
Create a database for both your staging and production environments. Run the following:
fly postgres create --name app-23f9-db fly postgres attach --app app-23f9 app-23f9-db fly postgres create --name app-23f9-staging-db fly postgres attach --app app-23f9-staging app-23f9-staging-db
Note: You'll get the same warning for the same reason when attaching the staging database that you did in the
fly set secret
step above. No worries. Proceed!
Fly will take care of setting the DATABASE_URL
secret for you.
Now that everything is set up you can commit and push your changes to your repo. Every commit to your main
branch will trigger a deployment to your production environment, and every commit to your dev
branch will trigger a deployment to your staging environment.
If you run into any issues deploying to Fly, make sure you've followed all of the steps above and if you have, then post as many details about your deployment (including your app name) to the Fly support community. They're normally pretty responsive over there and hopefully can help resolve any of your deployment issues and questions.
Once you have your site and database running in a single region, you can add more regions by following Fly's Scaling and Multi-region PostgreSQL docs.
Make certain to set a PRIMARY_REGION
environment variable for your app. You can use [env]
config in the fly.toml
to set that to the region you want to use as the primary region for both your app and database.
Install the ModHeader browser extension (or something similar) and use it to load your app with the header fly-prefer-region
set to the region name you would like to test.
You can check the x-fly-region
header on the response to know which region your request was handled by.
We use GitHub Actions for continuous integration and deployment. Anything that gets into the main
branch will be deployed to production after running tests/build/etc. Anything in the dev
branch will be deployed to staging.
We use Cypress for our End-to-End tests in this project. You'll find those in the cypress
directory. As you make changes, add to an existing file or create a new file in the cypress/e2e
directory to test your changes.
We use @testing-library/cypress
for selecting elements on the page semantically.
To run these tests in development, run npm run test:e2e:dev
which will start the dev server for the app as well as the Cypress client. Make sure the database is running in docker as described above.
We have a utility for testing authenticated features without having to go through the login flow:
cy.login();
// you are now logged in as a new user
We also have a utility to auto-delete the user at the end of your test. Just make sure to add this in each test file:
afterEach(() => {
cy.cleanupUser();
});
That way, we can keep your local db clean and keep your tests isolated from one another.
For lower level tests of utilities and individual components, we use vitest
. We have DOM-specific assertion helpers via @testing-library/jest-dom
.
This project uses TypeScript. It's recommended to get TypeScript set up for your editor to get a really great in-editor experience with type checking and auto-complete. To run type checking across the whole project, run npm run typecheck
.
This project uses ESLint for linting. That is configured in .eslintrc.js
.
We use Prettier for auto-formatting in this project. It's recommended to install an editor plugin (like the VSCode Prettier plugin) to get auto-formatting on save. There's also a npm run format
script you can run to format all files in the project.