91 lines
2.8 KiB
Markdown
91 lines
2.8 KiB
Markdown
# App shell
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Application shell is a way to render a portion of your application using a route at build time.
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It can improve the user experience by quickly launching a static rendered page (a skeleton common to all pages) while the browser downloads the full client version and switches to it automatically after the code loads.
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This gives users a meaningful first paint of your application that appears quickly because the browser can render the HTML and CSS without the need to initialize any JavaScript.
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Learn more in [The App Shell Model](https://developers.google.com/web/fundamentals/architecture/app-shell).
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## Step 1: Prepare the application
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You can do this with the following CLI command:
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<code-example language="bash">
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ng new my-app --routing
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</code-example>
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For an existing application, you have to manually add the `RouterModule` and defining a `<router-outlet>` within your application.
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## Step 2: Create the app shell
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Use the CLI to automatically create the application shell.
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<code-example language="bash">
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ng generate app-shell
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</code-example>
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* `client-project` takes the name of your client application.
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After running this command you will notice that the `angular.json` configuration file has been updated to add two new targets, with a few other changes.
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<code-example language="json">
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"server": {
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"builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:server",
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"defaultConfiguration": "production",
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"options": {
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"outputPath": "dist/my-app/server",
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"main": "src/main.server.ts",
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"tsConfig": "tsconfig.server.json"
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},
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"configurations": {
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"development": {
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"outputHashing": "none",
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},
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"production": {
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"outputHashing": "media",
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"fileReplacements": [
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{
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"replace": "src/environments/environment.ts",
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"with": "src/environments/environment.prod.ts"
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}
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],
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"sourceMap": false,
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"optimization": true
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}
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}
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},
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"app-shell": {
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"builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:app-shell",
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"defaultConfiguration": "production",
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"options": {
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"route": "shell"
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},
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"configurations": {
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"development": {
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"browserTarget": "my-app:build:development",
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"serverTarget": "my-app:server:development",
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},
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"production": {
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"browserTarget": "my-app:build:production",
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"serverTarget": "my-app:server:production"
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}
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}
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}
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</code-example>
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## Step 3: Verify the app is built with the shell content
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Use the CLI to build the `app-shell` target.
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<code-example language="bash">
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ng run my-app:app-shell:development
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</code-example>
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Or to use the production configuration.
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<code-example language="bash">
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ng run my-app:app-shell:production
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</code-example>
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To verify the build output, open `dist/my-app/browser/index.html`. Look for default text `app-shell works!` to show that the application shell route was rendered as part of the output.
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