The newer example demonstrating Vue Microfrontends can be found at https://github.com/vue-microfrontends and https://vue.microfrontends.app. That example better reflects the microfrontends architecture and is encouraged to use.
Demo: http://coexisting-vue-microfrontends.surge.sh
This is a starter-kit / example repository for people who want to have multiple vue microfrontends coexist within a single page. Each of the vue applications was created by Vue CLI.
It uses single-spa to pull this off, which means that you can even add React, Angular, or other frameworks as additional microfrontends.
This github repository has four projects all in one repo. But when you do this yourself, you'll want to have one git repo per vue application. The root-html-file project should also be in its own repo. This is what lets different teams and developers be in charge of different microfrontends.
With single-spa, it is preferred to run npm run serve
in only one single-spa application at a time, while using a deployed
version of the other applications. This makes for an awesome developer experience where you can boot up just one
microfrontend at a time, not even having to clone, npm install, or boot up all of the other ones.
To try this out, clone the repo and run the following commands:
cd app1
npm i
npm run serve
Now go to http://coexisting-vue-microfrontends.surge.sh in a browser. In a browser console, run localStorage.setItem('overrides-ui', true)
.
Refresh the page. Now click on the yellowish rectangle at the bottom right. Then click on app1
. Change the module url to http://localhost:8081/js/app.js. Then apply the override and reload the page. This will have change app1 to load from your localhost instead of from surge.sh.
As you modify the code locally, it will reload the page on coexisting-vue-microfrontends.surge.sh. See
https://github.com/joeldenning/import-map-overrides for more info on this.
It is preferred to only run one app at a time. But if you need to run them all locally, you can do so with the following instructions
# First terminal tab
cd root-html-file
npm install
npm run serve
# Second terminal tab
cd app1
npm install
npm run serve
# Third terminal tab
cd app2
npm install
npm run serve
# Fourth terminal tab
cd navbar
npm install
npm run serve
Now go to http://localhost:5000 in a browser. Note that you can change any of the ports for the projects by modifying the Import Map inside of root-html-file/index.html.
If you get serious about deploying your code, you'll want to make it no longer necessary to boot up all of the apps in order to do anything. When you get to that point, check out import-map-overrides, which lets you go to a deployed environment and override the Import Map for just one microfrontend at a time. The import-map-overrides library is already loaded in the index.html of root-html-file, so you can start using it immediately. You can make your deployed environment overridable, just like you can do overrides on http://coexisting-vue-microfrontends.surge.sh
Go to https://single-spa.js.org/docs/ecosystem-vue.html to learn how all of this works.