vue/packages/vue-server-renderer
2016-06-28 01:10:19 -04:00
..
index.js [build] 2.0.0-alpha.7 2016-06-27 22:25:12 -04:00
package.json [build] 2.0.0-alpha.7 2016-06-27 22:25:12 -04:00
README.md docs for ssr 2016-06-28 01:10:19 -04:00

vue-server-renderer

This package is auto-generated. For pull requests please see src/entries/web-server-renderer.js.

This package offers Node.js server-side rendering for Vue 2.0.

Installation

npm install vue-server-renderer
const ssr = require('vue-server-renderer')

API

ssr.createRenderer([rendererOptions])

Create a renderer instance.

const renderer = ssr.createRenderer()

renderer.renderToString(vm, cb)

Render a Vue instance to string. The callback is a standard Node.js callback that receives the error as the first argument:

const Vue = require('vue')
const ssr = require('vue-server-renderer')

const renderer = ssr.createRenderer()
const vm = new Vue({
  render (h) {
    return h('div', 'hello')
  }
})

renderer.renderToString(vm, (err, html) => {
  console.log(html) // -> <div server-rendered="true">hello</div>
})

renderer.renderToStream(vm)

Render a Vue instance in streaming mode. Returns a Node.js readable stream.

// example usage with express
app.get('/', (req, res) => {
  const vm = new App({ url: req.url })
  const stream = renderer.renderToStream(vm)

  res.write(`<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><title>...</title></head><body>`)

  stream.on('data', chunk => {
    res.write(chunk)
  })

  stream.on('end', () => {
    res.end('</body></html>')
  })
})

ssr.createBundleRenderer(code, [rendererOptions])

Creates a bundleRenderer instance using pre-bundled application code (see Creating the Server Bundle). For each render call, the code will be re-run in a new context using Node.js' vm module. This ensures your application state is discrete between requests, and you don't need to worry about structuring your application in a limiting pattern just for the sake of SSR.

const bundleRenderer = ssr.createBundleRenderer(code)

bundleRenderer.renderToString([context], cb)

Render the bundled app to a string. Same callback interface with renderer.renderToString. The optional context object will be passed to the bundle's exported function.

bundleRenderer.renderToString({ url: '/' }, (err, html) => {
  // ...
})

bundleRenderer.renderToStream([context])

Render the bundled app to a stream. Same stream interface with renderer.renderToStream. The optional context object will be passed to the bundle's exported function.

bundleRenderer
  .renderToStream({ url: '/' })
  .pipe(writableStream)

Creating the Server Bundle

The application bundle can be generated by any build tool, so you can easily use Webpack + vue-loader with the bundleRenderer. You do need to use a slightly different webpack config and entry point for your server-side bundle, but the difference is rather minimal:

  1. add target: 'node', and use output: { libraryTarget: 'commonjs2' } for your webpack config.

  2. In your server-side entry point, export a function. The function will receive the render context object (passed to bundleRenderer.renderToString or bundleRenderer.renderToStream), and should return a Promise, which should eventually resolve to the app's root Vue instance:

// server-entry.js
import Vue from 'vue'
import App from './App.vue'

const app = new Vue(App)

// the default export should be a function
// which will receive the context of the render call
export default context => {
  // data pre-fetching
  return app.fetchServerData(context.url).then(() => {
    return app
  })
}

Renderer Options

directives

Allows you to provide server-side implementations for your custom directives:

const renderer = createRenderer({
  directives: {
    example (vnode, directiveMeta) {
      // transform vnode based on directive binding metadata
    }
  }
})

As an example, check out v-show's server-side implementation.


cache

Specify cache options. Passed directly to lru-cache. The default is { max: 5000 }.

const renderer = createRenderer({
  cache: {
    max: 10000
  }
})

Component-Level Caching

You can easily cache components during SSR by implementing the server.getCacheKey function:

export default {
  props: ['item'],
  server: {
    getCacheKey: props => props.item.id
  },
  render (h) {
    return h('div', this.item.id)
  }
}

The cache key is per-component, and it should contain sufficient information to represent the shape of the render result. The above is a good implementation because the render result is solely determined by props.item.id. However, if the render result also relies on another prop, then you need to modify your getCacheKey implementation to take that other prop into account.

Returning a constant will cause the component to always be cached, which is good for purely static components.

If the renderer hits a cache for a component during render, it will directly reuse the cached result for the entire sub tree. So do not cache a component containing child components that rely on global state.

In most cases, you shouldn't and don't need to cache single-instance components. The most common type of components that need caching are ones in big lists. Since these components are usually driven by objects in database collections, they can make use of a simple caching strategy: generate their cache keys using their unique id plus the last updated timestamp:

server: {
  getCacheKey: props => props.item.id + '::' + props.item.last_updated
}

Client Side Hydration

In server-rendered output, the root element will have the server-rendered="true" attribute. On the client, when you mount a Vue instance to an element with this attribute, it will attempt to "hydrate" the existing DOM instead of creating new DOM nodes.

In development mode, Vue will assert the client-side generated virtual DOM tree matches the DOM structure rendered from the server. If there is a mismatch, it will bail hydration, discard existing DOM and render from scratch. In production mode, this assertion is disabled for maximum performance.

Hydration Caveats

One thing to be aware of when using SSR + client hydration is some special HTML structures that may be altered by the browser. For example, when you write this in a Vue template:

<table>
  <tr><td>hi</td></tr>
</table>

The browser will automatically inject <tbody> inside <table>, however, the virtual DOM generated by Vue does not contain <tbody>, so it will cause a mismatch. To ensure correct matching, make sure to write valid HTML in your templates.