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This Repo is being sunset in favor of a plugin that supports both SSR & CSR in one

All efforts are being directed to this PR: module-federation/core#108

This repo exists as a reference point to contributors. Do not use it, it will not be maintained further.

This plugin uses the sidecar design, which has been killed in favor of childCompiler design used in nextjs-mf

Module Federation For Next.js, with SSR support

This plugin enables Module Federation on Next.js, both client-side and server-side.

Module Federation on the server utilizes proprietary software, commonly known as "Software Streaming".

This is the only stable and continuously supported solution for Module Federation on Next.js.

It is also the only Federated SSR solution in existence that is supported by the creator of Module Federation.


Software Streams have been tested extensively in other federated server applications, the underlying tech is proven to be reliable. However, software streams in Next.js is experimental, while in the beta phase.

Companies have used streams with next.js in the past - but those streaming plugins were based on a leaked alpha we created before Webpack 5 was released.

This is the first time the Federation Group has made its proprietary technology available to others. Our technology is the most stable in existence.

This is because of our proximity to the Webpack Foundation & deep understanding

Supports

  • next ^12.x.x
  • SSR & CSR

Contents


What's shared by default?

Under the hood we share some next internals automatically You do not need to share these packages, sharing next internals yourself will cause errors.

const sharedDefaults = {
  "next/dynamic": {
    requiredVersion: false,
    singleton: true,
  },
  "styled-jsx": {
    requiredVersion: false,
    singleton: true,
  },
  "next/link": {
    requiredVersion: false,
    singleton: true,
  },
  "next/router": {
    requiredVersion: false,
    singleton: true,
  },
  "next/script": {
    requiredVersion: false,
    singleton: true,
  },
  "next/head": {
    requiredVersion: false,
    singleton: true,
  },
};

Important note about security!

This plugin creates a remote container for the server-side. By default, it is written to _next/static/ssr. It is highly recommended that network access to _next/static/ssr/* is restricted to servers/machines inside the VPN or internal infrastructure.

If access to that route is not restricted, you could risk exposing server code to the public internet!

Since the ssr directory is built for server-side, webpack will not tree-shake process.browser conditionals.

If you currently use if(process.browser) as a way to prevent private code or keys from showing up in bundled code, that will not work - this is becuse we are building both a client and server target and are exposing it via static directory which is accessible over networks.

Why would we put it in static?!?

The goal of this software is to make federation "just work" with one single plugin and as little setup as possible.

To provide a built-in protected route would require additional setup and complexity, like middleware, or a custom server.

How assets are protected should be up to the consumer, who might use the CDN, NGIX, middleware to implement a restricted route.


Using The Plugin

I now support the top-level API as well as the low-level API

Federated modules can be used in these various methods

Static, synchronous imports

import SomeComponent from "next2/SomeComponent";
// OR
const SomeComponent = require("next2/ScomeComponent");

This plugin can be used for any piece of code, not just React Components.

Hooks, Middleware, Context, utilities, anything.

Async imports are recommended, whenever possible

const SampleComponent = dynamic(() => import("next2/SampleComponent"));

// alternatively the low-level api can be used as well
// using the low-level api requires the remote to already be injected
const SampleComponent = dynamic(
  () => window.next2.get("./sampleComponent").then((factory) => factory()),
  {
    ssr: false,
  }
);

Make sure you are using mini-css-extract-plugin@2 - version 2 supports resolving assets through publicPath:'auto'


Configuration Options

const remotes = (isServer) => {
  const location = isServer ? "ssr" : "chunks";
  return {
    next1: `next1@https://someapp.com/_next/static/${location}/remoteEntry.js`,
  };
};
withFederatedSidecar(
  {
    name: "next2",
    filename: "static/chunks/remoteEntry.js",
    exposes: {
      "./sampleComponent": "./components/sampleComponent.js",
    },
    remotes,
    shared: {
      react: {
        // Notice shared are NOT eager here
        // we handle eager sharing inside the plugin
        requiredVersion: false,
        singleton: true,
      },
    },
  },
  {
    ssr: true, // if you want to disable the server runtimes, set to false. This will mean client side only.
    removePlugins: [
      // optional
      // these are the defaults
      "BuildManifestPlugin",
      "ReactLoadablePlugin",
      "DropClientPage",
      "WellKnownErrorsPlugin",
      "ModuleFederationPlugin",
      "NextJsRequireCacheHotReloader",
      "PagesManifestPlugin",
    ],
    publicPath: "auto", // defaults to 'auto', is optional
  }
);

Demo

You can see it in action here: https://github.com/module-federation/module-federation-examples/tree/master/nextjs-ssr

How to add a sidecar for exposes to your next.js app

  1. Use withFederatedSidecar in your next.config.js of the app that you wish to expose modules from. We'll call this "next2".
// next2
// next.config.js
const { withFederatedSidecar } = require("@module-federation/nextjs-ssr");
const withPlugins = require("next-compose-plugins");

const remotes = (isServer) => {
  const location = isServer ? "ssr" : "chunks";
  return {
    next1: `next1@https://someapp.com/_next/static/${location}/remoteEntry.js`,
  };
};

const nextConfig = {
  // your original next.config.js export
  // we attach next internals to share scope at runtime

  webpack(config, options) {
    const { webpack, isServer } = options;
    config.module.rules.push({
      test: [/_app.[jt]sx?/, /_document.[jt]sx?/],
      loader: "@module-federation/nextjs-ssr/lib/federation-loader.js",
    });

    return config;
  },
};

module.exports = withPlugins(
  [
    withFederatedSidecar({
      name: "next2",
      filename: "static/chunks/remoteEntry.js",
      remotes: remotes,
      exposes: {
        "./sampleComponent": "./components/sampleComponent.js",
      },
      shared: {},
    }),
  ],
  nextConfig
);

Consuming/host applications you must at least add the loader to next.config.js, and ensure you have a custom Next.js App pages/_app.js (or .tsx):

module.exports = {
  webpack(config, options) {
    // we attach next internals to share scope at runtime
    config.module.rules.push({
      test: [/_app.[jt]sx?/, /_document.[jt]sx?/],
      loader: "@module-federation/nextjs-ssr/lib/federation-loader.js",
    });

    return config;
  },
};

Experiments

Chunk Flushing

Chunk Flushing is the mechanism used to flush dynamic imported chunks out of a render and into the HTML of a document. If you want to SSR the <script> tags of federated imports, reducing Round Trip Time (RTT), you can enable the following experiment

  1. Enable the flushChunk experiment via the plugin
withFederatedSidecar(
  // normal MF config
  {
    name: "next1",
    filename: "static/chunks/remoteEntry.js",
    exposes: {},
    remotes: {},
    shared: {},
  },
  // sidecar specific options
  {
    experiments: {
      flushChunks: true,
    },
  }
);
  1. Inside _document.js (or .tsx) do the following:
import Document, { Html, Main, NextScript } from "next/document";
import {
  flushChunks,
  ExtendedHead,
} from "@module-federation/nextjs-ssr/flushChunks";

class MyDocument extends Document {
  static async getInitialProps(ctx) {
    const initialProps = await Document.getInitialProps(ctx);
    const remotes = await flushChunks(process.env.REMOTES);

    return {
      ...initialProps,
      remoteChunks: remotes,
    };
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <Html>
        <ExtendedHead>
          {" "}
          {/* this extends Head from next/document */}
          <meta name="robots" content="noindex" />
          {/* Object.values() MUST be called here, not in getInitialProps */}
          {Object.values(this.props.remoteChunks)}
        </ExtendedHead>
        <body className="bg-background-grey">
          <Main />
          <NextScript />
        </body>
      </Html>
    );
  }
}

export default MyDocument;

Hot Reloadable Production Servers

When a remote is deployed, prod servers will hot reload. This solves the "stuck" modules problem once a federated module has been required.

By default, revalidation will purge require cache. If you want to perform any additional actions, you can do so in the then parameter.

You do not need to call any extra functions to hot reload

Options:

// these are the defaults
revalidate({
  // revalidate remotes by polling
  poll: false, // defualt false
  // how ofter should it poll
  pollFrequeny: 3000, // defaults to 3000ms
});
  1. Inside _document.js (or .tsx) do the following:
import Document, { Html, Main, NextScript } from "next/document";
import React from "react";
import {
  revalidate,
  flushChunks,
  ExtendedHead,
  DevHotScript,
} from "@module-federation/nextjs-ssr/flushChunks";

class MyDocument extends Document {
  static async getInitialProps(ctx) {
    // could also be on "close"
    ctx?.res?.on("finish", () => {
      revalidate().then((willReload) => {
        // choose any additional steps you want to take.
        // the promise will only resolve if remotes have changed and a hot reload needs to happen
        if (process.env.NODE_ENV === "development" && willReload) {
          setTimeout(() => {
            // useful for dev or if you want to cold start lambdas.
            process.exit(1);
          }, 50);
        }
      });
    });
    const initialProps = await Document.getInitialProps(ctx);
    const remotes = await flushChunks(process.env.REMOTES);

    return {
      ...initialProps,
      remoteChunks: remotes,
    };
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <Html>
        <ExtendedHead>
          <meta name="robots" content="noindex" />
          {Object.values(this.props.remoteChunks)}
        </ExtendedHead>
        <DevHotScript /> {/* useful in development mode if you terminate processes on hot reload */}
        <body className="bg-background-grey">
          <Main />
          <NextScript />
        </body>
      </Html>
    );
  }
}

export default MyDocument;

Configuring Pages for SSR

To enable SSR for pages, you will need to create an async bootstrap layer for each page and the _app file.

Since Next.js reads all the pages from the pages directory, your pages and _app file will be the bootstrap file for the real pages defined in another directory.

  1. Bootstrap the _app and pages:
// pages/_app.js
import dynamic from "next/dynamic";
const page = import("../async-pages/_app");

const Page = dynamic(() => import("../async-pages/_app"));
Page.getInitialProps = async (ctx) => {
  const getInitialProps = (await page).default?.getInitialProps;
  if (getInitialProps) {
    return getInitialProps(ctx);
  }
  return {};
};
export default Page;
// pages/index.js
import dynamic from "next/dynamic";
const page = import("../async-pages/index");

const Page = dynamic(() => import("../async-pages/index"));
Page.getInitialProps = async (ctx) => {
  const getInitialProps = (await page).default?.getInitialProps;
  if (getInitialProps) {
    return getInitialProps(ctx);
  }
  return {};
};
export default Page;
  1. Now, create a directory for the real _app and pages. Let's call this directory async-pages:
// async-pages/_app.js
function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }) {
  return <Component {...pageProps} />;
}

export default MyApp;
// async-pages/index.js
import Head from "next/head";

const Home = () => (
  <>
    <Head>
      <title>Home</title>
    </Head>
    <main>
      <h1>Home</h1>
    </main>
  </>
);

Home.getInitialProps = async (ctx) => {
  return {};
};

export default Home;

Dynamic Routing between applications

To enable dynamic routes from another Next.js application, you will need to create a [...slug].js file in the pages directory as the async bootstrap file and one in the async-pages directory to handle the createFederatedCatchAll method.

// async-pages/[...slug].js
import { createFederatedCatchAll } from "@module-federation/next-catchall";

const ErrorComponent = () => {
  return <h1>There was an error trying to load route</h1>;
};
const NotFoundComponent = () => {
  return <h1>4OH4 not found</h1>;
};
export default createFederatedCatchAll(
  process.env.REMOTES,
  ErrorComponent,
  NotFoundComponent
);

Exposing and Consuming Pages

Just like exposing components and other modules, pages can also be exposed from one Next.js application and consumed in another.

To expose a page, you will need to define a pages-map in the remote app.

  1. Create a pages-map.js (or .ts) file in your project root.
// next2
// pages-map.js
const pagesMap = {
  "/": "./home", // "route": module "key" you're exposing
};

export default pagesMap;
  1. In your next.config.js file, expose the page from the remote app.
// next2
// next.config.js
withFederatedSidecar(
  // normal MF config
  {
    name: "next2",
    filename: "static/chunks/remoteEntry.js",
    exposes: {
      "./home": "./async-pages/index.js",
      "./pages-map": "./pages-map.js",
    },
    remotes: {},
    shared: {
      react: {
        requiredVersion: false,
        singleton: true,
      },
    },
  },
  // sidecar specific options
  {
    experiments: {
      flushChunks: true,
    },
  }
);

To import a federated page from a remote, you will need to add a page to your app that represents the federated page.

Add the page to your pages directory:

// pages/index.js
import dynamic from "next/dynamic";
const page = import("home/home");

const Page = dynamic(() => import("home/home"));
Page.getInitialProps = async (ctx) => {
  const getInitialProps = (await page).default?.getInitialProps;
  if (getInitialProps) {
    return getInitialProps(ctx);
  }
  return {};
};
export default Page;

Then add the remote to the next.config.js file.


Support and Maintenance

This software is maintained by the Module Federation Group. The primary maintainer is ScriptedAlchemy - the creator of Module Federation & an official member of the Webpack Foundation

Worldwide, there are only about 10 engineers capable of creating reliable and safe extensions of Module Federation.

The Federation Group provides 5 of the 10 engineers capable of creating solid implementations.

Any Federation Package that is not from The Webpack Foundation or Module Federation Group should be used with caution!

This software is actively used in production at our place of employment. It must be maintained at all times otherwise our production applications will fail.

Worries about reliability or contingency plans should not be a concern for end-users.

If this package fails, it will cost our employer millions of dollars a day. It will not be abandoned, it cannot be.

What if ScriptedAlchemy is hit by a bus?

While that would be unfortunate, the Federation Group is more than capable of maintaining this package.

All group members have full access to the organization and all its source code, registry authentication.

ScriptedAlchemy is the primary maintainer, not the only maintainer - this software is not dependent on "one person"


Reliability Testing

This software undergoes significant QA, SRE, Security Audits, Performance testing with our employer.

RUM data and other telemetry is heavily implemented and monitored closely.

Our software is backed with the resources of a multi-billion dollar corporation.


Contact

If you have any questions or need to report a bug Reach me on Twitter @ScriptedAlchemy

Or join this discussion thread: https://github.com/module-federation/module-federation-examples/discussions/1482

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