This example demonstrates a fullstack application built with Convex, React, Next.js, and Auth0.
The app is a very simple Asana-style task management app that allows users to create, view, and manage tasks. The app features:
- Basic Authentication & Authorization, implemented with Auth0 and Convex
- Task creation, where each task may have:
- Owner
- Title
- Description
- Status (New | In Progress | Done | Cancelled)
- Comments
- File attachments (from a fixed collection to prevent abuse)
- Task management, allowing users/task owner to:
- Add a comment
- Change status (owner only)
- Reassign ownership (owner only)
- Filter tasks by ticket status or owner
- Search tasks by title, description, or comments
- Infinite-scroll pagination to support very large task collections
npm i
npm run dev
This command will log you into Convex, so you'll need to create a Convex account if this is your first project.
You'll need to go through the Auth0 setup to set the local environment variables (in .env.local) and in your Convex backend (https://dashboard.convex.dev/deployment/settings/environment-variables)
Once it's set up, it will run next dev
and convex dev
(a file watcher syncing your Convex code to your backend) at the same time.
Once everything is working, commit your code and deploy it to the cloud with Vercel.
Convex is a hosted backend platform with a
built-in database that lets you write your
database schema and
server functions in
TypeScript. Server-side database
queries automatically
cache and
subscribe to data, powering a
realtime useQuery
hook in our
React client. There are also
Python,
Rust,
ReactNative, and
Node clients, as well as a straightforward
HTTP API.
The database support NoSQL-style documents with relationships and custom indexes (including on fields in nested objects).
The
query
and
mutation
server functions have transactional,
low latency access to the database and leverage our
v8
runtime with
determinism guardrails
to provide the strongest ACID guarantees on the market:
immediate consistency,
serializable isolation, and
automatic conflict resolution via
optimistic multi-version concurrency control (OCC / MVCC).
The action
server functions have
access to external APIs and enable other side-effects and non-determinism in
either our
optimized v8
runtime or a more
flexible node
runtime.
Functions can run in the background via scheduling and cron jobs.
Development is cloud-first, with hot reloads for server function editing via the CLI. There is a dashbord UI to browse and edit data, edit environment variables, view logs, run server functions, and more.
There are built-in features for reactive pagination, file storage, reactive search, https endpoints (for webhooks), streaming import/export, and runtime data validation for function arguments and database data.
Everything scales automatically, and it’s free to start.