Building and deploying
This documentation is a work in progress. It describes prerelease software, and is subject to change.
This page will take you through the steps you need to do to build and deploy your application to production.
Table of Contents
prpl-server
(recommended)
prpl-server is a node server that uses differential serving to deliver the optimal response for each browser. Our provided configuration (polymer.json
) supports the following responses:
esm-bundled
- Bundled ES modules for browsers that support ES moduleses6-bundled
- Bundled ES6/2015 code using AMD for other browsers that support ES6/2015es5-bundled
- Bundled ES5 code using AMD for other browsers- Server-side rendered pages (with Rendertron) for supported bots/web crawlers
Building for prpl-server
To run the build:
npm run build
This will populate the server/build/
directory:
server/
├── build/
| └── es5-bundled/
| └── es6-bundled/
| └── esm-bundled/
| └── polymer.json
├── app.yaml
├── package-lock.json
└── package.json
Previewing prpl-server
To preview the build using prpl-server locally:
npm run serve
Deploying prpl-server
After building, the contents of server/
contains all the files and configuration necessary to run the app in production. The provided server/package.json
specifies server dependencies and the start command which can be used on almost any hosting service that supports Node.js.
App Engine
Standard Environment
The contents of server/app.yaml
is pre-configured to be deployed to Google App Engine Node.js Standard Environment. Use the gcloud
tool to deploy the contents of server/
(e.g. gcloud app deploy server/app.yaml
).
Flexible Environment
To deploy to Google App Engine Node.js Flexible Environment, replace the entire contents of server/app.yaml
with:
runtime: nodejs
env: flex
automatic_scaling:
min_num_instances: 1
Use the gcloud
tool to deploy the contents of server/
(e.g. gcloud app deploy server/app.yaml
).
Firebase Hosting + Firebase Functions
Firebase Hosting alone is not sufficient for hosting the prpl-server
build since it requires some server-side processing of the user agent string. Instead, you will have to use Firebase Functions
for server-side processing. This gist contains detailed instructions on how to accomplish this.
Static hosting
If you don’t need differential serving and want to serve the same build to all browsers, you can just deploy to a static server.
Building for static hosting
To build the production site, run:
npm run build:static
This will create three different build outputs:
build/
├── es5-bundled/
├── es6-bundled/
├── esm-bundled/
└── ...
esm-bundled
- Bundled ES modules for browsers that support ES moduleses6-bundled
- Bundled ES6/2015 code using AMD for other browsers that support ES6/2015es5-bundled
- Bundled ES5 code using AMD for other browsers
Previewing static hosting
To preview it locally, run:
npm run serve:static
Our provided configuration will serve the es5-bundled
build. If you don’t need to support legacy browsers, you can use a more modern build by modifying the serve:static
script in package.json to use es6-bundled
or esm-bundled
instead. Be sure that all page navigation requests are served the contents of index.html
.
Deploying static hosting
By default, static hosting servers aren’t set up to work with single page apps (SPAs) – in particular, the problem is that an SPA uses routes that do not correspond to full file path names. For example, in pwa-starter-kit
the second view’s URL is http://localhost:8081/view2
, but that doesn’t correspond to a file that the browser can use. Each static hosting server has a different approach to working around this:
App Engine
Download the Google App Engine SDK and follow the instructions for your platform to install it. Here we are using Python SDK.
Sign up for an App Engine account and go to project dashboard page to create a new project. Make note of the project ID associated with your project.
Create an App Engine config file (app.yaml
) with the following:
runtime: python27
api_version: 1
threadsafe: yes
handlers:
- url: /images
static_dir: build/es5-bundled/images
secure: always
- url: /node_modules
static_dir: build/es5-bundled/node_modules
secure: always
- url: /src
static_dir: build/es5-bundled/src
secure: always
- url: /manifest.json
static_files: build/es5-bundled/manifest.json
upload: build/es5-bundled/manifest.json
secure: always
- url: /service-worker.js
static_files: build/es5-bundled/service-worker.js
upload: build/es5-bundled/service-worker.js
secure: always
- url: /.*
static_files: build/es5-bundled/index.html
upload: build/es5-bundled/index.html
secure: always
skip_files:
- build/es6-bundled/
- build/esm-bundled/
- images/
- node_modules/
- server/
- src/
- test/
To deploy your project:
gcloud app deploy --project <project_ID>
Firebase Hosting
Firebase provides easy http2-enabled static hosting, a real-time database, server functions, and edge-caching all over the globe.
Install the Firebase CLI:
npm install -g firebase-tools
Sign up for a Firebase account if you don’t have one. Then go to Firebase Console to create a new project. Make note of the project ID associated with your project.
Login to the Firebase and set the previously created project as the active Firebase project for your working directory:
firebase login
firebase use <project_ID>
Create a Firebase config file (firebase.json
) with the following:
{
"hosting": {
"public": "build/es5-bundled/",
"rewrites": [
{
"source": "**/!(*.*)",
"destination": "/index.html"
}
],
"headers": [
{
"source":"/service-worker.js",
"headers": [
{
"key": "Cache-Control",
"value": "no-cache"
}
]
}
]
}
}
To deploy your project:
firebase deploy
Netlify
Netlify has built-in Continuous Deployment which automatically runs your build commands and deploys the result whenever you push to your Git repository.
Create a _redirects
file with the following rewrite rules:
/* /index.html 200
Go to netlify project page and setup the Git hosting for the new project. In Basic build settings
, put npm run build:static
as the build command and build/es5-bundled
as the publish directory.
Click Deploy site
.
Service Worker
A Service Worker is loaded and registered in the index.html
file. However, during development (to make debugging easier), the Service Worker does not actually exist, and only a stub file is used.
The production time Service Worker is automatically created during build time, i.e. by running npm run build
or npm run build:static
. This file is generated based on the polymer.json
and sw-precache-config.js
configuration files, and you can find it under each of the build directories:
build/
├── es5-bundled/
| └── service-worker.js
├── es6-bundled/
| └── service-worker.js
├── esm-bundled/
| └── service-worker.js
└── ...
By default, all of the source files (inside the /src
directory) will be pre-cached, as specified in the sw-precache-config.js
configuration file. If you want to change this behaviour, check out the sw-precache-config
docs.