siygle / nextjs-starter

A starter project for Next.js with and email and oAuth authentication

Geek Repo:Geek Repo

Github PK Tool:Github PK Tool

XO code style

Next.js 2.0 Starter Project

This is a starter Next.js 2.0 project that shows how to put together a website with server and client side rendering powered by Next.js, which uses React.

Like all Next.js projects it features automatic pre-fetching of templates with a ServiceWorker, renders pages both client and server side and live reloading in development. It also shows how to use features new in Next.js version 2.0 like integration with Express for custom route handling.

There are practical examples with header, footer and layout files, how to add page-specific CSS and JavaScript and header elements, how to write code that does asynchronous data fetching, how to write different logic for fetching data on the client and server if you need to.

It includes session support (with CSRF and XSS protection), email based sign-in sytem and integrates with Passport to support signing in with Facebook, Google, Twitter and other sites that support oAuth.

All functionality works both client and server site - including without JavaScript support in the browser.

Demo

You can try it out at https://nextjs-starter.now.sh

The demo is hosted on Next.js creators Zeit's cloud platform.

Running locally in development mode

To get started in development mode, just clone the repository and run:

npm install
npm run dev

Building and deploying in production

If you wanted to run this site in production run:

npm install
npm run build
npm start

You should run the the build step again any time you make changes to pages or components.

Deploying to the cloud with now.sh

To deploy on Zeit's cloud platform now just install it, clone this repository and run now in the working directory:

npm install -g now
now

If you configure a .env file (see .env.default for an example of the options supported) now will include it when deploying if you use the -E option to deploy:

now -E

Running tests

Style formatting is enforced with the JavaScript style linter xo which is invoked when running npm test.

Reflecting how most examples of Next.js are written, in package.json we have configured 'xo' to tell it this project uses spaces (not tabs) in both JavaScript and JSX and to not use semicolons.

xo needs to be installed globally:

install -g xo

You can check linting by running xo or by running npm test.

Note: There are currently no application specific tests, beyond style checking.

About

A starter project for Next.js with and email and oAuth authentication


Languages

Language:JavaScript 96.2%Language:CSS 3.8%