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homepage | lerna | |
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16 | 162 | |
11 | 35,365 | |
- | 0.4% | |
7.2 | 8.9 | |
about 1 month ago | 18 days ago | |
SCSS | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
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Is Nestjs easy to understand for frontend developer who is good at Typescript, reactjs and familiar with express?
I highly recommend, with these types of credentials, go serverless and use https://sst.dev/ with https://nextjs.org/ . Stupid simple deployment, and SST’s (reasonably priced) paid arm, https://seed.run/, for ci/cd and deployment including great stage management, and nearly free logging and error observability.
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Is anyone successfully using the CI/CD offering from serverless.com?
I've used seed.run with the Serverless Framework for 4-5 years. As I don't deploy to much I've stayed with the free tier and it all works perfectly. Try it out it won't disappoint.
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How much vendor lock-in is there in the NextJS/Vercel ecosystem?
They have, at least SST, visit seed
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What tech-stack to use for a solo dev that can prioritize product iteration and scale?
The backend is built with serverless.com (lambda, dynamodb, sqs, appsync). The good thing is that all the backend is stored in a file and you can deploy multiple stacks on the same account using seed.run . You don't really need EC2/Fargate when you have lambdas and you know that most of the time will be idle time. The same with cache I wouldn't think of it right now until you see the workload you are facing. Dynamodb once you understand it and have a proper design it's the fastest thing you can have. On my appsync calls I'm using Dynamodb as a cache because it's cheaper...
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Do some developers actually, REALLY, have no local environment and run everything in AWS? Is the individual cloud dev environment a real alternative to having things running locally?
I run my personal project on AWS. I has been running for 4+ years now and I never had a local environment. I took the serverless route. That is appsync, lambda, dynamodb, sqs to build the stack. I'm using serverless.com to have all the resources defined in a yaml files which will deploy multiple stacks. I'm using seed.run to manage that part because it's much more simple than to do it manually.
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Best managed graphql service for database + search?
How do you deploy your services on AWS? I'm a solo developer and have no issues with my backend. I use the Serverless framework so all services, lambdas, configurations is on a repository on git. I do all the deploys to a dev environment where I test my code and later on I deploy with a PR to my prod environment thanks to seed.run.
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Structuring a Real-World Serverless App
Your repo setup can look different, but the general concept still holds true. You have to figure out if a file change affects an individual service, or if a file change affects all the services. The advantage of this strategy is that you know upfront which services can be skipped. This allows you to skip a portion of the entire build process, thus speeding up your builds. A shameless plug here, Seed supports this and the setup outlined in this post out of the box!
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Working with Lambda Code
I use serverless.com framework with tests and deploy with seed.run. So I don't ever touch a Lambda in production. I also have 2 environments, one for testing and the other for production.
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I have a serverless application with multiple services or stacks which behave as a microservice , I have a build.sh file which allows me to deploy specific service. Now , I want to automate my deployments using gitlab/github but only deploy specific stacks
I'd use seed.run . You can deploy multiple stacks on parallel or with dependencies. You can deploy from github ( 100% sure ) from gitlab I'm not sure. Worth checking it. I'm using the service for free and haven't had any issue.
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What do you like/dislike about AWS services? What are the most common problems?
Building on top of it requires some knowledge but for me it has been worth it. I use serverless.com to manage all the infrastructure as a CF template. This has the benefit that I can deploy multiple test environments at will. I'm also using seed.run to do all the CI/CD ( also for free ) and doing all the monitoring with lumigo.io . And I build single pages applications that use Netlify.com to handle at that part. I do it to avoid less things to manage on AWS directly when the service is free (again) and really easy to use.
lerna
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Add Step-up Authentication Using Angular and NestJS
Open the project up in your favorite IDE. Let's take a quick look at the project organization. The project has an Angular frontend and NestJS API backend housed in a Lerna monorepo. If you are curious about how to recreate the project, check out the repo's README file. I'll include all the npx commands, CLI commands, and the manual steps used to create the project.
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Things I learned while building projects with NX
Lerna currently maintained by Nx team
- tsParticles 3.0.0 is out. Breaking changes ahead.
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Nx 16.8 Release!!!
On Netlify's enterprise tier, approximately 46% of builds are monorepos, with the majority leveraging Nx and Lerna. Recognizing this trend, Netlify has focused on enhancing the setup and deployment experiences for monorepo projects. In particular they worked on an "automatic monorepo detection" feature. When you connect your project to GitHub, Netlify automatically detects if it's part of a monorepo, reads the relevant settings, and pre-configures your project. This eliminates the need for manual setup. This feature also extends to local development via the Netlify CLI.
- Mocha/Chai with TypeScript (2023 update)
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Help with library implementation in a big webapp
This is the exact problem monorepos were born to solve. Not only will a monorepo let you share UI components, you'll be able to gradually add shared application logic as well (for instance, do all of your apps have their own logic for connecting to a database? you could roll that into a shared library with a monorepo). There are a lot of tools for accomplishing this in JS, but probably the most popular is lerna, which is built on top of NX (though lots of teams roll their own monorepo in nx without lerna, which IMO is a totally valid option).
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How to Build and Publish Your First React NPM Package
To begin, you need to prepare your environment. A few ways to build a React package include tools like Bit, Storybook, Lerna, and TSDX. However, for this tutorial, you will use a zero-configuration bundler for tiny modules called Microbundle.
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Utility for making sure that I'm using the right `@types/react`
If so, are you using a monorepo tool like Nx or Lerna? If not, start there and see if it solves your problem.
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[AskJS] Is there a silver bullet for consuming Typescript libraries in a Monorepo?
I mean I don't know what your monorepo looks like, but for example infernojs (actually written with typescript) uses lerna, and lerna seems simpler than typescript references
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Understanding npm Versioning
Tools for publishing, such as Lerna (when using the --conventional-commit flag), follow this convention when incrementing package versions and generating changelog files.
What are some alternatives?
LocalStack - 💻 A fully functional local AWS cloud stack. Develop and test your cloud & Serverless apps offline
turborepo - Incremental bundler and build system optimized for JavaScript and TypeScript, written in Rust – including Turborepo and Turbopack. [Moved to: https://github.com/vercel/turbo]
sst - Build modern full-stack applications on AWS
nx - Smart Monorepos · Fast CI
serverless-plugin-warmup - Keep your lambdas warm during winter. ♨ [Moved to: https://github.com/juanjoDiaz/serverless-plugin-warmup]
changesets - 🦋 A way to manage your versioning and changelogs with a focus on monorepos
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web
pnpm - Fast, disk space efficient package manager
Previous Serverless Version 0.5.x - ⚡ Serverless Framework – Use AWS Lambda and other managed cloud services to build apps that auto-scale, cost nothing when idle, and boast radically low maintenance.
webpack - A bundler for javascript and friends. Packs many modules into a few bundled assets. Code Splitting allows for loading parts of the application on demand. Through "loaders", modules can be CommonJs, AMD, ES6 modules, CSS, Images, JSON, Coffeescript, LESS, ... and your custom stuff.
serverless-bundle - Optimized packages for ES6 and TypeScript Node.js Lambda functions without any configuration.
single-spa - The router for easy microfrontends