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Deployment
To deploy your application, you have to compile it, and then host the JavaScript, CSS, and HTML on a web server. Built Angular applications are very portable and can live in any environment or served by any technology, such as Node, Java, .NET, PHP, and many others.
Whether you came here directly from Your First App, or completed the entire online store application through the Routing, Managing Data, and Forms sections, you have an application that you can deploy by following the instructions in this section.
Share your application
StackBlitz projects are public by default, allowing you to share your Angular app via the project URL. Keep in mind that this is a great way to share ideas and prototypes, but it is not intended for production hosting.
- In your StackBlitz project, make sure you have forked or saved your project.
- In the preview pane, you should see a URL that looks like
https://<Project ID>.stackblitz.io
. - Share this URL with a friend or colleague.
- Users that visit your URL will see a development server start up, and then your application will load.
Building locally
To build your application locally or for production, you will need to download the source code from your StackBlitz project. Click the Download Project
icon in the left menu across from Project
to download your files.
Once you have the source code downloaded and unzipped, use the Angular Console to serve the application, or you install Node.js
and have the Angular CLI installed.
From the terminal, install the Angular CLI globally with:
npm install -g @angular/cli
This will install the command ng
into your system, which is the command you use to create new workspaces, new projects, serve your application during development, or produce builds that can be shared or distributed.
Create a new Angular CLI workspace using the ng new
command:
ng new my-project-name
From there you replace the /src
folder with the one from your StackBlitz
download, and then perform a build.
ng build --prod
This will produce the files that you need to deploy.
Hosting the built project
The files in the dist/my-project-name
folder are static and can be hosted on any web server capable of serving files (Node.js
, Java, .NET) or any backend (Firebase, Google Cloud, App Engine, others).
Hosting an Angular app on Firebase
One of the easiest ways to get your site live is to host it using Firebase.
- Sign up for a firebase account on Firebase.
- Create a new project, giving it any name you like.
- Install the
firebase-tools
CLI that will handle your deployment usingnpm install -g firebase-tools
. - Connect your CLI to your Firebase account and initialize the connection to your project using
firebase login
andfirebase init
. - Follow the prompts to select the
Firebase
project you creating for hosting. - Deploy your application with
firebase deploy
because StackBlitz has created afirebase.json
that tells Firebase how to serve your app. - Once deployed, visit https://your-firebase-project-name.firebaseapp.com to see it live!
Hosting an Angular app anywhere else
To host an Angular app on another web host, you'll need to upload or send the files to the host.
Because you are building a Single Page Application, you'll also need to make sure you redirect any invalid URLs to your index.html
file.
Learn more about development and distribution of your application in the Building & Serving and Deployment guides.
Join our community
You are now an Angular developer! Share this moment, tell us what you thought of this Getting Started, or submit suggestions for future editions.
Angular offers many more capabilities, and you now have a foundation that empowers you to build an application and explore those other capabilities:
- Angular provides advanced capabilities for mobile apps, animation, internationalization, server-side rendering, and more.
- Angular Material offers an extensive library of Material Design components.
- Angular Protractor offers an end-to-end testing framework for Angular apps.
- Angular also has an extensive network of 3rd-party tools and libraries.
Keep current by following the Angular blog.