# Qwik City App ⚡️ - [Qwik Docs](https://qwik.builder.io/) - [Discord](https://qwik.builder.io/chat) - [Qwik GitHub](https://github.com/BuilderIO/qwik) - [@QwikDev](https://twitter.com/QwikDev) - [Vite](https://vitejs.dev/) --- ## Project Structure This project is using Qwik with [QwikCity](https://qwik.builder.io/qwikcity/overview/). QwikCity is just an extra set of tools on top of Qwik to make it easier to build a full site, including directory-based routing, layouts, and more. Inside your project, you'll see the following directory structure: ``` ├── public/ │ └── ... └── src/ ├── components/ │ └── ... └── routes/ └── ... ``` - `src/routes`: Provides the directory-based routing, which can include a hierarchy of `layout.tsx` layout files, and an `index.tsx` file as the page. Additionally, `index.ts` files are endpoints. Please see the [routing docs](https://qwik.builder.io/qwikcity/routing/overview/) for more info. - `src/components`: Recommended directory for components. - `public`: Any static assets, like images, can be placed in the public directory. Please see the [Vite public directory](https://vitejs.dev/guide/assets.html#the-public-directory) for more info. ## Add Integrations and deployment Use the `yarn qwik add` command to add additional integrations. Some examples of integrations includes: Cloudflare, Netlify or Express Server, and the [Static Site Generator (SSG)](https://qwik.builder.io/qwikcity/guides/static-site-generation/). ```shell yarn qwik add # or `yarn qwik add` ``` ## Development Development mode uses [Vite's development server](https://vitejs.dev/). The `dev` command will server-side render (SSR) the output during development. ```shell npm start # or `yarn start` ``` > Note: during dev mode, Vite may request a significant number of `.js` files. This does not represent a Qwik production build. ## Preview The preview command will create a production build of the client modules, a production build of `src/entry.preview.tsx`, and run a local server. The preview server is only for convenience to preview a production build locally and should not be used as a production server. ```shell yarn preview # or `yarn preview` ``` ## Production The production build will generate client and server modules by running both client and server build commands. The build command will use Typescript to run a type check on the source code. ```shell yarn build # or `yarn build` ``` ## Vercel Edge This starter site is configured to deploy to [Vercel Edge Functions](https://vercel.com/docs/concepts/functions/edge-functions), which means it will be rendered at an edge location near to your users. ## Installation The adaptor will add a new `vite.config.ts` within the `adapters/` directory, and a new entry file will be created, such as: ``` └── adapters/ └── vercel-edge/ └── vite.config.ts └── src/ └── entry.vercel-edge.tsx ``` Additionally, within the `package.json`, the `build.server` script will be updated with the Vercel Edge build. ## Production build To build the application for production, use the `build` command, this command will automatically run `npm run build.server` and `npm run build.client`: ```shell npm run build ``` [Read the full guide here](https://github.com/BuilderIO/qwik/blob/main/starters/adapters/vercel-edge/README.md) ## Dev deploy To deploy the application for development: ```shell npm run deploy ``` Notice that you might need a [Vercel account](https://docs.Vercel.com/get-started/) in order to complete this step! ## Production deploy The project is ready to be deployed to Vercel. However, you will need to create a git repository and push the code to it. You can [deploy your site to Vercel](https://vercel.com/docs/concepts/deployments/overview) either via a Git provider integration or through the Vercel CLI. ## Netlify This starter site is configured to deploy to [Netlify Edge Functions](https://docs.netlify.com/edge-functions/overview/), which means it will be rendered at an edge location near to your users. ### Local development The [Netlify CLI](https://docs.netlify.com/cli/get-started/) can be used to preview a production build locally. To do so: First build your site, then to start a local server, run: 1. Install Netlify CLI globally `npm i -g netlify-cli`. 2. Build your site with both ssr and static `npm run build`. 3. Start a local server with `npm run serve`. In this project, `npm run serve` uses the `netlify dev` command to spin up a server that can handle Netlify's Edge Functions locally. 4. Visit [http://localhost:8888/](http://localhost:8888/) to check out your site. ### Edge Functions Declarations [Netlify Edge Functions declarations](https://docs.netlify.com/edge-functions/declarations/) can be configured to run on specific URL patterns. Each edge function declaration associates one site path pattern with one function to execute on requests that match the path. A single request can execute a chain of edge functions from a series of declarations. A single edge function can be associated with multiple paths across various declarations. This is useful to determine if a page response should be Server-Side Rendered (SSR) or if the response should use a static-site generated (SSG) `index.html` file instead. By default, the Netlify Edge adaptor will generate a `.netlify/edge-middleware/manifest.json` file, which is used by the Netlify deployment to determine which paths should, and should not, use edge functions. To override the generated manifest, you can [add a declaration](https://docs.netlify.com/edge-functions/declarations/#add-a-declaration) to the `netlify.toml` using the `[[edge_functions]]` config. For example: ```toml [[edge_functions]] path = "/admin" function = "auth" ``` ### Addition Adapter Options Netlify-specific option fields that can be passed to the adapter options: - `excludedPath` this option accepts a `string` glob pattern that represents which path pattern should not go through the generated Edge Functions. ### Deployments You can [deploy your site to Netlify](https://docs.netlify.com/site-deploys/create-deploys/) either via a Git provider integration or through the Netlify CLI. This starter site includes a `netlify.toml` file to configure your build for deployment. #### Deploying via Git Once your site has been pushed to your Git provider, you can either link it [in the Netlify UI](https://app.netlify.com/start) or use the CLI. To link your site to a Git provider from the Netlify CLI, run the command: ```shell netlify link ``` This sets up [continuous deployment](https://docs.netlify.com/site-deploys/create-deploys/#deploy-with-git) for your site's repo. Whenever you push new commits to your repo, Netlify starts the build process.. #### Deploying manually via the CLI If you wish to deploy from the CLI rather than using Git, you can use the command: ```shell netlify deploy --build ``` You must use the `--build` flag whenever you deploy. This ensures that the Edge Functions that this starter site relies on are generated and available when you deploy your site. Add `--prod` flag to deploy to production.