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Felipe Guizar Diaz
Felipe Guizar Diaz

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Universal Rendering in Laravel using Vue.js and Ara Framework

Laravel + Vue.js

This article was originally written in Ara blog.

Universal Rendering consists in rendering pages on the server and making them interactive on the browser using the same view components built with a library such as React, Vue.js, Angular, etc.

Nowadays, JavaScript frameworks such as Next.js, Nuxt.js and NgUniversal make this duty easier. However, how can we achieve it on non-JavaScript frameworks like Laravel?

Setup Laravel

Download Laravel installer using Composer.

composer global require laravel/installer

Create a folder named ara-laravel and run the following command inside the folder to create a Laravel project.

composer create-project --prefer-dist laravel/laravel laravel-site

Once the project is created run the Laravel application on http://localhost:8000/.

php artisan serve

Browser:

Laravel main page

Set up the Nova service

We'll create a Nova service using Vue.js.

Install Ara CLI:

npm i -g ara-cli

Create the Nova service:

ara new:nova -t vue nova

Go to the Nova service folder:

cd nova

Run Nova service:

yarn dev

The Nova service runs on http://localhost:3000.

Test the Nova Service.

Once the Nova service is running you can make a POST request to http://localhost:3000/batch using a payload like:

{
  "uuid": {
    "name": "Example",
    "data": {
      "title": "Ara Framework"
    }
  }
}

The results property in the response contains the html of the view rendered by the Nova service.

Example:

{
  "success": true,
  "error": null,
  "results": {
    "uuid": {
      "name": "Example",
      "html": "<div data-hypernova-key=\"Example\" data-hypernova-id=\"4d9e81bd-6413-4661-ab56-ed5bb4f59cae\"><h1 data-server-rendered=\"true\">Ara Framework</h1></div>\n<script type=\"application/json\" data-hypernova-key=\"Example\" data-hypernova-id=\"4d9e81bd-6413-4661-ab56-ed5bb4f59cae\"><!--{\"title\":\"Ara Framework\"}--></script>",
      "meta": {},
      "duration": 1.210146,
      "statusCode": 200,
      "success": true,
      "error": null
    }
  }
}

Setup Nova Directive in Laravel Blade

Install Nova Directive for Laravel Blade using Composer inside the laravel-site folder.

composer require marconi1992/hypernova-blade-directive

Add NovaServiceProvider in application config config/app.php


return [
    ...
    'providers': [
        ...
        Illuminate\View\ViewServiceProvider::class,
        /*
         * Package Service Providers...
         */
        Marconi\Nova\NovaServiceProvider::class,
        /*
         * Application Service Providers...
         */
        App\Providers\AppServiceProvider::class,
        ...
    ]
    ...
]

Use Nova Directive in a Laravel view

Add the Example view on the welcome page.

resources/views/welcome.blade.php

<html>
    ...
    <body>
        ...
        <div class="content">
            <div class="title m-b-md">
                Laravel
            </div>
            <!-- Nova Directive starts -->
            @hypernova('Example', [ 'title' => 'Ara Framework'])
            <!-- Nova Directive ends -->
            <div class="links">
                <a href="https://laravel.com/docs">Docs</a>
                <a href="https://laracasts.com">Laracasts</a>
                <a href="https://laravel-news.com">News</a>
                <a href="https://blog.laravel.com">Blog</a>
                <a href="https://nova.laravel.com">Nova</a>
                <a href="https://forge.laravel.com">Forge</a>
                <a href="https://github.com/laravel/laravel">GitHub</a>
            </div>
        </div>
        ...
    </body>
</html>

Server-side rendering

The Nova View is not rendered yet, we need to implement Nova Proxy in order to server-side render and include the Nova views.

The Nova Direvitve renders a placeholder that contains the necessary information to enable Nova Proxy to communicate with the Nova service and include the Nova view.

<div data-hypernova-key="Example" data-hypernova-id="d198fa6c-c9ec-11e9-a223-8c85903a4c93"></div>
<script type="application/json" data-hypernova-key="Example" data-hypernova-id="d198fa6c-c9ec-11e9-a223-8c85903a4c93"><!--{"title":"Ara Framework"}--></script>

Nova Proxy

Nova proxy is a service to implement Universal Rendering with any view library (React, Vue.js, etc) on any web platform (Laravel, Flask, etc). For example, in this demo, we'll render a view using Vue.js into a web application built with Laravel.

How it works:

  1. A user requests a page to the Nova Proxy.

  2. The Nova Proxy passes the request to the website server.

  3. The website uses a Nova Directive to render the placeholders where the Nova views should be included.

  4. The website sends back the HTML generated to the Nova Proxy.

  5. The Nova Proxy includes the Nova views on the placeholders and sends back the HTML to the browser.

Finally, on the browser, JavaScript is used to progressively enhance the application and make it interactive. Read more here about the Nova Architecture.

Setup Nova Proxy

Create a configuration file for Nova Proxy in the root folder:

touch nova-proxy.json

Add the following configuration in nova-proxy.json file to proxy the incoming requests to the Laravel web server.

{
  "locations": [
    {
      "path": "/",
      "host": "http://localhost:8000",
      "modifyResponse": true
    }
  ]
}

Run Nova Proxy

Before running the command we need to set the HYPERNOVA_BATCH variable using the Nova service endpoint.

export HYPERNOVA_BATCH=http://localhost:3000/batch

You need to run the following command where the noxa-proxy.json file was created or pass the --config parameter with the configuration file path.

ara run:proxy --config ./nova-proxy.json

The command runs Nova Proxy on http://localhost:8080.

Now, see how the Nova view is displayed, it's because Nova Proxy includes the Nova view in the page coming from the Laravel application.

Browser:

Nova view rendered by Nova Proxy

Client-side rendering

The Example view is rendering only a simple heading. We can make it interactive adding an input element that changes the heading text.

Replace the nova/src/components/Example.vue with the following code:

<template>
  <div>
    <h2>{{title}}</h2>
    <div>
      <input type="text" v-model="title">
    </div>
    <br/>
  </div>
</template>

<script>
export default {
  props: ['title']
}
</script>

Now, the Nova view displays an input element but the heading text doesn't change when we type something. It's because we need to add the client-side script.

Hydrate Nova views on the browser

Hydration is the process of mounting a view component on the browser using the state used when it was rendered on the server.

In order to hydrate the views we need to load the client.js script on the browser.

Update the welcome.blade.php file in the Laravel application:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
    ....
</head>
<body>
    ....
    <script src="http://localhost:3000/public/client.js"></script>
</body>
</html>

Nova view interactive

Conclusion

Nova Proxy enables us to use modern view libraries on any web framework. So if you previously developed a web application using non-Javascript frameworks (Laravel, Flask, Ruby on Rails, etc) then Nova Proxy can help you to gradually migrate its views to a JavaScript view library (React, Vue.js) in a short period of time.

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