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Enterprise-grade Reference Architecture for JavaScript

This repository contains the reference architecture and components for building enterprise-grade modern composable frontends (or micro-frontends) and cloud-native applications. It is a collection of best practices, architecture patterns, and functional components that can be used to build and deploy modern JavaScript applications to Azure.

Open in GitHub Codespaces

Table of Contents

You can navigate through the documentation using the table of contents below:

Architecture Diagram

Application architecture diagram

Simplified Flow Diagram

flowchart TD
    %% 

    subgraph Internet
    Portal[https://portal.contoso.com]
    Blog[https://blog.contoso.com]
    CMS[https://cms.contoso.com]
    Stripe[https://stripe.contoso.com]
    API[https://api.contoso.com]
    end
    
    subgraph Azure API Management
    APIM(API Gateway)
    end
    
    subgraph Azure Static Web Apps
    SWA_Angular([Angular])
    end 

    subgraph Azure Functions
    Functions([Node.js])
    end 

    subgraph Azure Container Apps
    ACA_Next([Next.js])
    ACA_Strapi([Strapi])
    ACA_Stripe([Stripe])
    end 

    subgraph Database/Storage
    DB_PostresSQL[(PostgreSQL - Strapi)]
    DB_Mongo[(MongoDB - Portal)]
    Storage([Azure Blob Storage - CMS])
    end 

    Portal --> SWA_Angular -- "portal.contoso.com/api/**" --> APIM -- "portal.contoso.com/api/**" --> Functions
    
    Blog -- "blog.contoso.com" --> ACA_Next -. "Strapi API" .-> ACA_Strapi
    
    CMS -- "cms.contoso.com" --> ACA_Strapi
    ACA_Strapi -- "read/write" ----> DB_PostresSQL -- "read only" --> Functions
    ACA_Strapi -- "upload" --> Storage
    
    API --> APIM -- "api.contoso.com" --> Functions <-- "read/write" --> DB_Mongo

    Stripe ---> APIM -- "stripe.contoso.com" --> ACA_Stripe <-. "validate payment (through APIM)" .-> Functions
    
    %% Portal
    linkStyle 0 stroke:pink
    linkStyle 1 stroke:pink
    linkStyle 2 stroke:pink

    %% Blog
    linkStyle 3 stroke:blue
    linkStyle 4 stroke:blue
    linkStyle 5 stroke:blue
    
    %% CMS
    linkStyle 5 stroke:red
    linkStyle 6 stroke:red
    linkStyle 8 stroke:red
    
    linkStyle 7 stroke:lime
    linkStyle 9 stroke:lime
    linkStyle 10 stroke:lime
    linkStyle 11 stroke:lime
Loading

Components

Frontend

  • Angular - The Portal application used to view and book listings.
  • Next.js - The Blog application used to view and create blog posts.
  • Playwright - The end-to-end testing of the Portal application.
  • Azure Static Web Apps - The hosting of the Portal application.

Backend

DevOps

Developer tools

Development environment

This project is optimized for use with GitHub Codespaces, a development environment hosted in the GitHub cloud. Here is how to get started:

  1. Fork this repository.
  2. Create a new GitHub Codespaces from your fork. This will automatically provision a new Codespaces with all the required dependencies preinstalled and configured.
  3. Open the terminal and run npm install && npm start to start the development servers. Note: Codespaces will show a series of windows on the right side of the screen while starting all servers. This is normal and expected.
  4. Once all dev servers have started, the following URLs will be available:
Application URL Port
Portal https://YOUR-REPO-4280.preview.app.github.dev:4280 4280
Blog https://YOUR-REPO-3000.preview.app.github.dev:3000 3000
Strapi CMS https://YOUR-REPO-1337.preview.app.github.dev:1337/admin 1337
Serverless API https://YOUR-REPO-7071.preview.app.github.dev:7071/api/ 7071
Stripe API https://YOUR-REPO-4242.preview.app.github.dev:4242 4242

Note: The URLs above are just examples. The URLs will be different for your fork. The ports however will be the same.

Developer Guide (Website)

The project has a Developer Guide defined under packages/docs and implemented as an interactive website using the Docusaurus platform.

1 | Preview Website

  • Read the website/README more details on setting up and building this package.
  • Use the following instructions for a quickstart.
$ cd packages/docs/website     # Set working directory
$ npm install                  # Install dependencies
$ npm run start                # Run dev server, launch preview
..
[INFO] Starting the development server...
[SUCCESS] Docusaurus website is running at: http://localhost:3000/

This should launch the browser to the landing page of the guide as shown below:

Contoso Real Estate Developer Guide: Preview

2 | Deploy Website

This repo is not configured for automated deployment of the website to a static site hosting service. However Docusaurus provides Deployment guidance that works for most options - we've validated this for Azure Static Web Apps and GitHub Pages.

If you want a hosted version of the guide, we recommend you maintain a personal fork and set it up for automated build-deploy with GitHub Actions. Then keep up-to-date with origin, for content.

3 | Test Website

The website comes with its own Playwright testing harness with a separate configuration and a base test specification. Use it for test-driven documentation to validate the existence of routes and sections, and check content for accessibility compliance. Note - this test suite is separate from e2e testing setup for Contoso Real Estate application (located in packages/testing).

$ cd packages/docs/website     # Set working directory
$ npm install                  # Install dependencies
$ npm run test                 # Run dev server => launches browser to preview
$ npm run report               # View last HTML report => open browser to specified URL

Want to understand what the test report provides? You can explore this cached version of the report interactively (screenshot below) to dive into detailed traces. Note that the cached version will not reflect the latest codebase updates and is meant only as an example.

Contoso Real Estate Developer Guide: Test Report

Usage costs

Github Codespaces usage is billed either to an organization or to the user creating it. There are limits to the number of concurrent codespaces you can create or run, so here are a few things to keep in mind:

Project structure

The project is using npm workspaces. The project structure is as follows:

  • packages/ - contains all the packages
    • api - contains the serverless Azure Functions API.
    • portal - contains the Angular web portal.
    • blog - contains the Next.js blog.
    • blog-cms - contains the Strapi CMS.
    • docs - contains the Developer Guide website
    • stripe - contains the Stripe webhook.
    • testing - contains the Playwright tests.

Deploy to Azure

Prerequisites

This project uses GitHub Codespaces as the main development environment. The following steps assume you are using GitHub Codespaces. If you are not using GitHub Codespaces, you can open the project in a Dev Container locally following the instructions here.

Deploy to Azure

This project uses Azure Developer CLI (azd) to provision infrastructure, package, and deploy the application to Azure. Running the following commands will get you started with deployment.

# Login to azd. Only required once per install.
azd auth login

# Provision infrastructure and the azd development environment
azd provision

# Package the app using the environment variables in .azure/env + deploy the code on Azure
azd deploy

If you encounter issues with the Azure Developer CLI, please open an issue here.

Important: It is mandatory to run these azd commands in this order. Provisioning first will create the azd development environment and outputs the .env file with the required environment variables. Packaging will package the application using some of the environment variables from the .env file.

Deployment region: Your deployment may fail if the region you selected is unavailable for provisioning specific resources. We recommend using westeurope as your target region since that has been currently validated for all services.

Configure CI-CD

Use the following command to configure the CI-CD pipelines:

azd pipeline config --auth-type client-credentials

Clean up resources

When you are done, you can delete all the Azure resources created with this template by running the following command:

azd down

Want to help?

Want to file a bug, contribute some code, or improve the documentation? Excellent! Read up on our guidelines for contributing and then check out one of our issues in the list: community-help.

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