Creating a Remote
In the concept of Module Federation a remote
is the term given to an application that exposes modules that can be shared to and consumed by host applications.
This is the key difference between a remote
and host
.
- A
remote
exposes modules that can be consumed - A
host
consumes exposed modules
Nx includes first-class support for helping you to scaffold a Module Federation Architecture for your React and Angular application(s).
Generating a Remote
To generate a remote application in your workspace, run the following command:
❯
nx g @nx/react:remote apps/react/myremote
1NX Generating @nx/react:remote
2
3CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/app/app.spec.tsx
4CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/assets/.gitkeep
5CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/environments/environment.prod.ts
6CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/environments/environment.ts
7CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/favicon.ico
8CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/index.html
9CREATE apps/react/myremote/tsconfig.app.json
10CREATE apps/react/myremote/webpack.config.ts
11CREATE apps/react/myremote/.babelrc
12CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/app/nx-welcome.tsx
13CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/app/app.module.css
14CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/app/app.tsx
15CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/styles.css
16CREATE apps/react/myremote/tsconfig.json
17CREATE apps/react/myremote/project.json
18CREATE apps/react/myremote/.eslintrc.json
19CREATE apps/react/myremote/jest.config.ts
20CREATE apps/react/myremote/tsconfig.spec.json
21CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/bootstrap.tsx
22CREATE apps/react/myremote/module-federation.config.ts
23CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/main.ts
24CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/remote-entry.ts
25CREATE apps/react/myremote/webpack.config.prod.ts
26UPDATE tsconfig.base.json
27
After the remote
application is generated, you can then update your host application's Module Federation Config File to specify that it can consume federated modules from this remote.
1import { ModuleFederationConfig } from '@nx/webpack';
2
3const config: ModuleFederationConfig = {
4 name: 'shell',
5 remotes: ['myremote'], // <-- add the name of your remote to the remotes array
6};
7export default config;
8
If you do not already have a host application in your workspace, look at the Create a Host Recipe for more information on how to achieve this.
Let Nx add your Remote to your Host
The remote
generators also allow you to specify a --host
option, which will allow the generator to add your remote to your host automatically. This can save you time by skipping the manual step above.
The command would look like the following:
❯
nx g @nx/react:remote apps/react/myremote --host=shell
1NX Generating @nx/react:remote
2
3CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/app/app.spec.tsx
4CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/assets/.gitkeep
5CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/environments/environment.prod.ts
6CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/environments/environment.ts
7CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/favicon.ico
8CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/index.html
9CREATE apps/react/myremote/tsconfig.app.json
10CREATE apps/react/myremote/webpack.config.ts
11CREATE apps/react/myremote/.babelrc
12CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/app/nx-welcome.tsx
13CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/app/app.module.css
14CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/app/app.tsx
15CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/styles.css
16CREATE apps/react/myremote/tsconfig.json
17CREATE apps/react/myremote/project.json
18CREATE apps/react/myremote/.eslintrc.json
19CREATE apps/react/myremote/jest.config.ts
20CREATE apps/react/myremote/tsconfig.spec.json
21CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/bootstrap.tsx
22CREATE apps/react/myremote/module-federation.config.ts
23CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/main.ts
24CREATE apps/react/myremote/src/remote-entry.ts
25CREATE apps/react/myremote/webpack.config.prod.ts
26UPDATE apps/react/shell/module-federation.config.ts
27UPDATE tsconfig.base.json
28
Building your Remote
Your remote
application acts like any other application in the context of Nx, and therefore building it as simple as running:
❯
nx build myremote
Serving your Remote
The remote
application is generated with two serve-like targets. These are:
- serve
- serve-static
They can be run as usual with Nx:
❯
nx serve myremote
❯
nx serve-static myremote
Serve Target
The serve
target will use webpack-dev-server
to serve your application, allowing for HMR and Live Reload. This is useful when you're working locally on that specific remote application.
Serve-Static Target
The serve-static
target will first build your application, storing the build artifact in the defined output directory (usually dist/path/to/remote
). It will then use http-server
to serve the built application locally.
This is less memory and CPU intensive than webpack-dev-server
but it does not support HMR or Live Reload.
The purpose of the serve-static
target is to allow you to serve your host
application, along with all of the remote
applications it depends on without being too resource intensive.
This has been further expanded upon. When you serve the host
application, Nx will build (or pull from cache) your remote
applications and serve them all via a single file server, to further reduce resource consumption.
Serving your Remote via your Host
Generally, your host
is the main application that you deploy and that users visit. It consumes modules from remote
applications, but those remote
applications are usually never visited directly by a user.
Therefore, to support developing your application in a manner that replicates how users use the application, when serving a host
application, Nx will serve all the dependent remotes automatically.
By default, the dependent remote
applications will be served via the serve-static
command. However, if you are working on a specific remote application, you can tell Nx to serve the host
application and any number of remote
applications via the webpack-dev-server
allowing those remote applications to take advantage of HMR and Live Reloading as you work on them.
To do this, run the command:
❯
nx serve host --devRemotes=myremote
This informs Nx to run the serve
command of myremote
, rather than the serve-static
command.