# Source Code Structure
# Avoid Stateful Singletons
When writing client-only code, we can assume that our code will be evaluated in a fresh context every time. However, a Node.js server is a long-running process. When our code is first imported by the process, it will be evaluated once and then stay in memory. This means that if you create a singleton object, it will be shared between every incoming request, with the risk of cross-request state pollution.
Therefore, we need to create a new root Vue instance for each request. In order to do that, we need to write a factory function that can be repeatedly executed to create fresh app instances for each request:
// app.js
const { createSSRApp } = require('vue')
function createApp() {
return createSSRApp({
data() {
return {
user: 'John Doe'
}
},
template: `<div>Current user is: {{ user }}</div>`
})
}
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And our server code now becomes:
// server.js
const { renderToString } = require('@vue/server-renderer')
const server = require('express')()
const { createApp } = require('src/app.js')
server.get('*', async (req, res) => {
const app = createApp()
const appContent = await renderToString(app)
const html = `
<html>
<body>
<h1>My First Heading</h1>
<div id="app">${appContent}</div>
</body>
</html>
`
res.end(html)
})
server.listen(8080)
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The same rule applies to other instances as well (such as the router or store). Instead of exporting the router or store directly from a module and importing it across your app, you should create a fresh instance in createApp
and inject it from the root Vue instance.
# Introducing a Build Step
So far, we haven't discussed how to deliver the same Vue app to the client yet. To do that, we need to use webpack to bundle our Vue app.
We need to process the server code with webpack. For example,
.vue
files need to be processed withvue-loader
, and many webpack-specific features such as importing files viafile-loader
or importing CSS viacss-loader
do not work directly in Node.js.Similarly, we need a separate client-side build because although the latest version of Node.js fully supports ES2015 features, older browsers will require the code to be transpiled.
So the basic idea is that we will use webpack to bundle our app for both client and server. The server bundle will be required on the server and used to render static HTML, while the client bundle will be sent to the browser to hydrate the static markup.
We will discuss the details of the setup in later sections - for now, let's just assume we've got the build setup figured out and we can write our Vue app code with webpack enabled.
# Code Structure with webpack
Now that we are using webpack to process the app for both server and client, the majority of our source code can be written in a universal fashion, with access to all the webpack-powered features. At the same time, there are a number of things you should keep in mind when writing universal code.
A simple project would look like this:
src
├── components
│ ├── MyUser.vue
│ └── MyTable.vue
├── App.vue
├── app.js # universal entry
├── entry-client.js # runs in browser only
└── entry-server.js # runs on server only
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# app.js
app.js
is the universal entry to our app. In a client-only app, we would create the Vue application instance right in this file and mount directly to DOM. However, for SSR that responsibility is moved into the client-only entry file. app.js
instead creates an application instance and exports it:
import { createSSRApp } from 'vue'
import App from './App.vue'
// export a factory function for creating a root component
export default function(args) {
const app = createSSRApp(App)
return {
app
}
}
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# entry-client.js
The client entry creates the application using the root component factory and mounts it to the DOM:
import createApp from './app'
// client-specific bootstrapping logic...
const { app } = createApp({
// here we can pass additional arguments to app factory
})
// this assumes App.vue template root element has `id="app"`
app.mount('#app')
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# entry-server.js
The server entry uses a default export which is a function that can be called repeatedly for each render. At this moment, it doesn't do much other than returning the app instance - but later we will perform server-side route matching and data pre-fetching logic here.
import createApp from './app'
export default function() {
const { app } = createApp({
/*...*/
})
return {
app
}
}
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