This guide will walk you through creating a Module Federated setup with Server Side Rendering (SSR) for Angular and React using Nx and its generators.
Create an empty workspace
Section titled “Create an empty workspace”Run the following command with the options listed to create an empty workspace.
// filename: ~
NX Let's create a new workspace [https://nx.dev/getting-started/intro]
✔ Which CI provider would you like to use? · skip✔ Would you like remote caching to make your build faster? · skip
Opting into Nx Cloud
You will also be prompted whether to add Nx Cloud to your workspace. We won't address this in this recipe, but you can see the introduction to Nx Cloud for more details.
Install your framework plugin
Section titled “Install your framework plugin”
Generating a host and multiple remotes with SSR
Section titled “Generating a host and multiple remotes with SSR”We will generate the apps required for a storefront application.
We will need the following applications:
- Store - host application
- Product - remote application
- Checkout - remote application
Nx allows you to do this with a single command:
This will generate three applications, set up with SSR and Module Federation.
Serving the store application
Section titled “Serving the store application”When using Module Federation, we want to serve the host application along with the remote applications so that everything works as expected.
To do this, run:
This will run all three application servers but only the store
will be watching for file changes. If you make a change to one of the remote applications (checkout
or product
) the changes will not be hot reloaded.
Serving the store application with file watching for checkout
Section titled “Serving the store application with file watching for checkout”If working on a remote application, we can still serve it via the host application and have it watch for changes.
To serve the store
application and watch for changes on the checkout
application run:
Additional Resources
Section titled “Additional Resources”To learn more about Module Federation, we have some resources you might find useful: