Progressive Web Apps in Vue
#
Making your Vue app a PWAThe two main requirements of a PWA are a Service Worker and a Web Manifest. While it's possible to add both of these to an app manually, the Vue CLI has some utilities for adding this for you.
For existing projects, you can run the vue add
command to install the PWA plugin for Vue.
If you have changes already in place, be sure to commit them in Git.
Once this is completed, Vue's CLI will have created a new registerServiceWorker.ts
file and imported it into our main.ts
.
The registerServiceWorker.ts
file will point to a service worker that the CLI will create at build time. Inside of here we can customize the experience users will have when the service worker detects an update, change in network connectivity, or receives an error.
The service worker that is generated is based on Workbox's webpack plugin, and by default is setup to use GenerateSW()
. Meaning that at build time, Workbox will automatically generate a service worker cache for all the files it processes.
If you want to configure this and change the default behavior, checkout the PWA plugin docs on GitHub.
#
ManifestIn addition to the service worker, the Vue PWA plugin also is responsible for creating a manifest file for your app as well. By default, the CLI will generate a manifest that contains the following entries.
Be sure to update the icons in public/img/icons
to match your own brand. If you wanted to customize the theme color or name, be sure to read the PWA plugin docs on GitHub.
#
DeployingYou can use various hosts like Firebase, Vercel, Netlify, or even Azure Static Web Apps. All will have similar setup processes that need to be completed. For this guide, Firebase will be used as the hosting example. In addition to this guide, the Vue CLI docs also have a guide on how to deploy to various providers.
#
FirebaseFirebase hosting provides many benefits for Progressive Web Apps, including fast response times thanks to CDNs, HTTPS enabled by default, and support for HTTP2 push.
First, if not already available, create the project in Firebase.
Next, in a Terminal, install the Firebase CLI:
With the Firebase CLI installed, run firebase init
within your Ionic project. The CLI prompts:
"Which Firebase CLI features do you want to set up for this folder?" Choose "Hosting: Configure and deploy Firebase Hosting sites."
"Select a default Firebase project for this directory:" Choose the project you created on the Firebase website.
"What do you want to use as your public directory?" Enter "dist".
Note: Answering these next two questions will ensure that routing, hard reload, and deep linking work in the app:
Configure as a single-page app (rewrite all urls to /index.html)?" Enter "Yes".
"File dist/index.html already exists. Overwrite?" Enter "No".
A firebase.json
config file is generated, configuring the app for deployment.
The last thing needed is to make sure caching headers are being set correctly. To do this, add a headers
snippet to the firebase.json
file. The complete firebase.json
looks like:
For more information about the firebase.json
properties, see the Firebase documentation.
Next, build an optimized version of the app by running:
Last, deploy the app by running:
After this completes, the app will be live.