When I made this repository years ago, other tools were in their infancy and I applied the practices I deemed to make the most sense back then to this boilerplate.
Since then, many new tools have come out and have changed the way I think about creating new projects.
If I were to create a project consisting of an API based back-end and a front-end today, I would do so this way:
-
One repository for front-end using NextJS
-
No Redux if at all possible, rely on react-query or SWR to handle state coming from the server, and use context if something is needed on a global level.
-
Another Laravel repository for the back-end
-
Use Sanctum for authorization with your SPA front-end, possibly use Laravel Fortify for your logic set-up or roll your own.
This is the boilerplate that I personally use for getting projects off the ground quickly using my favourite stack of technologies. It uses Laravel as a backend API service, and has a React single page application in the front end.
- Laravel Passport API authentication
- Route level code splitting using React Lazy/Suspense
- Login/signup functionality implemented and tested
- Webpack configuration for development and production
- React/Redux single page application using React Router
- Some basic components already built in resources/assets/js/components
- Simple form building using Formik
- Component library and interactive component building via Storybook
- Hot module reloading for your React components using Webpack Dev Server and React Hot Module Reloader
- Tailwind CSS for utility class styling (see https://tailwindcss.com)
- Support for scoped styling using React CSS modules using Gajus React CSS Modules
- Continous build integration via Travis CI
- Automatic code style fixing with Prettier
I personally use Vagrant and Homestead, so these installation instructions assume that you use Homestead as well, but the project's dependencies are very similar to the base Laravel installation, so if you use something else to develop locally, the instructions shouldn't change too much.
- Clone the repository using
git clone https://github.com/huwcarwyn/react-laravel-boilerplate
- Fill out a .env file in the project root using the .env.example file as a template
- Install composer dependencies using
composer install
- Run
php artisan key:generate
php artisan migrate
php artisan passport:install
andphp artisan storage:link
- Install NPM dependencies using
npm install
- Make sure to create two databases, one main and one for running the tests, then run
php artisan migrate
- If you want to use the webpack dev server, make sure that the proxy entry in the weback.dev.js points to the server that's running your Laravel installation.
Since this application takes advantage of webpack hashes to bust caches in production, the asset() and mix() helpers are used when loading front end assets. This means that it is important to set a correct value for ASSET_URL
in your .env
file. Otherwise Laravel will load assets from the wrong place.
If you are developing using npm run hot
- make sure to set ASSET_URL
to http://localhost:9000
, otherwise for development set it to the root URL of your app.
In production you will need to set this value to the public root, that will usually be the same as your domain name.