Female behind a laptop with a heartValeriaVG

How Build a Web App in 11 Minutes and Fall in Love With Sveltekit

#svelte, #node, #webdev, #tutorial

It's been a long time since I got excited about a framework. I often advocate for reinventing the wheel, how come I'm writing an ode to a framework? Short answer: because SvelteKit is very good, even though it's still in beta. The long answer is ahead.

Svelte itself is like coming back to the future: you write your user interfaces with almost old-school HTML in a declarative manner with zero-to-none boilerplate. And then .svelte files are compiled to the plain old .js,.css and .html. Apps come out fast, lightweight and easy to maintain and extend.

But SvelteKit takes it even further. Heard of Create React App? Not even close! SvelteKit is a full-stack framework capable of producing not only single-page applications and static websites, but a versatile full-blown HTTP server with any pages, API and handlers NodeJS can have.

Alright, enough words let's build something already! And by something I mean an app where users can signup, log in and see account information.

In other words, we'll build a base for a generic web service.

Prerequisites & Architecture

For this tutorial you'll need NodeJS (v14.17.6 or higher).

It's also nice to have a code editor with Svelte extension (e.g. VSCode with svelte-vscode extension).

The app will store data in a simple in-memory database (literally an object) and write to a JSON file for persistence. Though you can replace it with a database of your choice.

For speed and simplicity, we'll use a minimalistic CSS framework called Milligram.

Creating the App

Open the terminal, paste or type npm init svelte@next my-app and choose the highlighted options:

npm init svelte@next my-app

# ✔ Which Svelte app template? › [Skeleton project]
# ✔ Use TypeScript? … No / [Yes]
# ✔ Add ESLint for code linting? … No / [Yes]
# ✔ Add Prettier for code formatting? … No / [Yes]

Install dependencies from the app folder:

cd my-app && npm i

You can now start the app in the development mode with:

npm run dev

Open http://localhost:3000/ in your browser to see the ascetic home page.

Let's start with the layout: a file that will include global css styles and some constant parts of the page. Create file src/routes/__layout.svelte:

<svelte:head>
  <link
    rel="stylesheet"
    href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Roboto:300,300italic,700,700italic"
  />
  <!-- CSS Reset -->
  <link
    rel="stylesheet"
    href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/normalize/8.0.1/normalize.css"
  />
  <!-- Milligram CSS -->
  <link
    rel="stylesheet"
    href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/milligram/1.4.1/milligram.css"
  />
</svelte:head>

<main class="container">
  <slot />
</main>
<footer class="container">{new Date().getFullYear()} &copy; MY APP</footer>

<style>
  :global(body, html, #svelte) {
    width: 100vw;
    min-height: 100vh;
  }
  :global(#svelte) {
    display: flex;
    flex-direction: column;
  }
  main {
    flex: 1;
    margin-top: 3rem;
  }
  footer {
    margin-top: auto;
    font-size: 0.8em;
    opacity: 0.5;
  }
</style>

The page should be looking much better now because we replaced the default <slot></slot> layout with a bit more sophisticated one. SvelteKit will look for __layout.svelte file in the nearest or parent directory, so it's possible to use a different one for each nested folder.

As you can see Svelte is very close to HTML, though you probably have noticed the differences:

Creating Forms & Pages

To create a new page create a new file src/routes/signup.svelte:

<svelte:head>
  <title>Create an account</title>
</svelte:head>

<h1>Create an account</h1>

<form method="POST" action="/signup">
  <fieldset>
    <label for="email">Email</label>
    <input type="email" placeholder="user@email.net" name="email" required />
    <label for="password">Password</label>
    <input
      type="password"
      placeholder="Your password"
      name="password"
      required
    />
    <label for="password">Password, again</label>
    <input
      type="password"
      placeholder="Repeat the password, please"
      name="repeat-password"
      required
    />
    <input class="button-primary" type="submit" value="Signup" />
  </fieldset>
</form>
<p>Already have an account? <a href="/login">Login</a></p>

<style>
  form {
    max-width: 420px;
  }
</style>

And src/routes/login.svelte:

<svelte:head>
  <title>Login</title>
</svelte:head>

<h1>Login</h1>
<form method="POST" action="/login">
  <fieldset>
    <label for="email">Email</label>
    <input type="email" placeholder="user@email.net" name="email" />
    <label for="password">Password</label>
    <input type="password" placeholder="Your password" name="password" />
    <input class="button-primary" type="submit" value="Login" />
  </fieldset>
</form>
<p>Don't have an account? <a href="/signup">Signup</a></p>

<style>
  form {
    max-width: 420px;
  }
</style>

Navigate to http://localhost:3000/login or http://localhost:3000/signup to enjoy utterly useless forms that send data to themselves.

Creating API Route handlers

Update: adjusted Svelte Kit API to that of v1.0.0-next.259

To create a handler for POST /signup all we need to do is create a signup.ts (or .js, if you prefer) file in routes, exporting a post function. Simple, right?

But first, we need a couple of handy dependencies: uuid to generate unique user ID's and tokens and bcrypt to hash passwords:

npm i uuid bcrypt --save && npm i @types/uuid @types/bcrypt --save-dev

You might need to restart the dev server after installing new dependencies.

Now let's create src/routes/signup.ts with:

import type { RequestHandler } from "@sveltejs/kit";
import { v4 as uuidv4 } from "uuid";
import bcrypt from "bcrypt";

export const post: RequestHandler = async (event) => {
  const contentType = event.request.headers.get("content-type");
  const req =
    contentType === "application/json"
      ? await event.request.json()
      : contentType?.includes("form")
      ? await event.request.formData()
      : null;
  if (!req) return { status: 400, body: { error: "Incorrect input" } };
  // Handle FormData & JSON
  const input = {
    email: ("get" in req ? req.get("email") : req.email)?.toLowerCase().trim(),
    password: "get" in req ? req.get("password") : req.password,
    "repeat-password":
      "get" in req ? req.get("repeat-password") : req["repeat-password"],
  };
  if (!input.password || !input.email)
    return { status: 400, body: { error: "Email & password are required" } };

  if (input.password !== input["repeat-password"])
    return { status: 400, body: { error: "Passwords do not match" } };

  const user = {
    id: uuidv4(),
    email: input.email,
    pwhash: await bcrypt.hash(input.password, 10),
  };

  return {
    status: 201,
    body: {
      user,
    },
  };
};

If you submit the signup form now you'll see a page with JSON response like this:

{
  "user": {
    "id": "60d784c7-d369-4df7-b506-a274c962880e",
    "email": "clark.kent@daily.planet",
    "pwhash": "$2b$10$QiLRAFF5qqGxWuQjT3dIou/gZo2A0URImJ1YMSjOx2GYs0BxHt/TC"
  }
}

Writing handlers in SvelteKit is as simple as writing a function that returns an object with status, body and optional headers properties.

But we are not storing user information anywhere yet. To do so we need to add a global store and give our handler access to it.

First things first, let's create a poor-mans in-memory database in src/lib/db.ts:

import fs from "fs/promises";

export type User = {
  id: string;
  email: string;
  pwhash: string;
};

export type UserToken = {
  id: string;
  email: string;
};

export interface DB {
  users: Map<string, User>;
  tokens: Map<string, UserToken>;
  __stop: () => void;
}

const DB_FILE = "db.json";

export const initDB = async () => {
  let data: Record<string, Array<[string, any]>> = {};
  try {
    const str = await fs.readFile(DB_FILE);
    data = JSON.parse(str.toString());
  } catch (err) {
    console.error(`Failed to read ${DB_FILE}`, err);
  }
  const db: DB = {
    users: new Map<string, User>(data.users),
    tokens: new Map<string, UserToken>(data.tokens),
    __stop: () => {},
  };

  const interval = setInterval(async () => {
    try {
      await fs.writeFile(
        DB_FILE,
        JSON.stringify({
          users: [...db.users.entries()],
          tokens: [...db.tokens.entries()],
        })
      );
    } catch (err) {
      console.error(`Failed to write ${DB_FILE}`, err);
    }
  }, 1_000);

  db.__stop = () => {
    clearInterval(interval);
  };

  return db;
};

To give every route access to this "database" we can use hooks, which allow us to hook middleware(s) before or after any route handler. Expectedly a file src/hooks.ts will do the trick:

import { initDB } from "$lib/db";
import type { Handle } from "@sveltejs/kit";

// Create a promise, therefore start execution
const setup = initDB().catch((err) => {
  console.error(err);
  // Exit the app if setup has failed
  process.exit(-1);
});

export const handle: Handle = async ({ event, resolve }) => {
  // Ensure that the promise is resolved before the first request
  // It'll stay resolved for the time being
  const db = await setup;
  event.locals["db"] = db;
  const response = await resolve(event);
  return response;
};

I intentionally made initDB function asynchronous to show how to do asynchronous startup via Promises. If it seems a bit like a hack, well, that's because it is, though I believe there will be a more straightforward way of doing it in the future.

Alright, now let's quickly add saving user to the database in the src/routes/signup.ts:

import type { RequestHandler } from "@sveltejs/kit";
import { v4 as uuidv4 } from "uuid";
import bcrypt from "bcrypt";
import type { DB } from "$lib/db";

export const post: RequestHandler<
  { db: DB },
  Partial<{ email: string; password: string; ["repeat-password"]: string }>
> = async (req) => {
  if (typeof req.body == "string" || Array.isArray(req.body))
    return { status: 400, body: { error: "Incorrect input" } };

  // Handle FormData & JSON
  const input = {
    email: ("get" in req.body ? req.body.get("email") : req.body.email)
      ?.toLowerCase()
      .trim(),
    password: "get" in req.body ? req.body.get("password") : req.body.password,
    "repeat-password":
      "get" in req.body
        ? req.body.get("repeat-password")
        : req.body["repeat-password"],
  };

  if (input.password !== input["repeat-password"])
    return { status: 400, body: { error: "Passwords do not match" } };

  const db = req.locals.db;
  const user = {
    id: uuidv4(),
    email: input.email,
    pwhash: await bcrypt.hash(input.password, 10),
  };
  // Store in DB
  db.users.set(user.email, user);
  return {
    status: 201,
    body: {
      user,
    },
  };
};

If you submit the form again and check db.json in a second - you'll see your data there.

Now let's write a login function in src/routes/login.ts

import type { RequestHandler } from "@sveltejs/kit";
import { v4 as uuidv4 } from "uuid";
import bcrypt from "bcrypt";
import type { DB } from "$lib/db";
export const post: RequestHandler = async (event) => {
  const contentType = event.request.headers.get("content-type");
  const req =
    contentType === "application/json"
      ? await event.request.json()
      : contentType?.includes("form")
      ? await event.request.formData()
      : null;
  if (!req) return { status: 400, body: { error: "Incorrect input" } };

  // Handle FormData & JSON
  const input = {
    email: ("get" in req ? req.get("email") : req.email)?.toLowerCase().trim(),
    password: "get" in req ? req.get("password") : req.password,
  };

  const db = event.locals["db"] as DB;
  const user = db.users.get(input.email);

  if (!user)
    return { status: 400, body: { error: "Incorrect email or password" } };

  const isPasswordValid = await bcrypt.compare(input.password, user.pwhash);

  if (!isPasswordValid)
    return { status: 400, body: { error: "Incorrect email or password" } };

  const token = { id: uuidv4(), email: user.email };
  db.tokens.set(token.id, token);

  return {
    status: 200,
    body: {
      user,
    },
    headers: {
      "set-cookie": `token=${token.id}`,
    },
  };
};

In this function, we check if a user with this email exists, verify provided password against the saved hash and either return an error or create a new token and set it as a session cookie.

In a production app you should set an expiration date to both cookies and stored tokens.

Go ahead and try logging in with correct and then wrong credentials. It works and it works without any client JavaScript, which is great for compatibility, but is a bit meh.

Reusable Svelte components

Both of our login and signup pages are pretty much the same and the functionality is quite similar. Therefore, let's write a component to use in both of them. Create src/routes/_form.svelte:

<script lang="ts">
  import type { User } from "$lib/db";
  import { afterUpdate } from "svelte";
  export let action = "/";
  export let method = "POST";

  type Result = { error?: string; user?: User };

  export let onUpdate: (state: {
    result: Result;
    isSubmitting: boolean;
  }) => void = () => {};
  let result: Result;
  let isSubmitting = false;

  const onSubmit = async (e) => {
    e.preventDefault();
    if (isSubmitting) return;
    isSubmitting = true;
    const form: HTMLFormElement = e.target.form;
    const formData = new FormData(form);
    const data: Record<string, string> = {};
    formData.forEach((value, key) => {
      data[key] = value.toString();
    });

    result = await fetch(form.action, {
      method: form.method,
      headers: {
        "content-type": "application/json",
      },
      body: JSON.stringify(data),
    })
      .then((r) => r.json())
      .catch((err) => {
        return { error: err.toString() };
      });
    isSubmitting = false;
  };
  $: error = result?.error;

  afterUpdate(() => onUpdate({ result, isSubmitting }));
</script>

<form {method} {action} on:click="{onSubmit}">
  <slot />
  {#if error}
  <p class="error">{error}</p>
  {/if}
</form>

<style>
  form {
    max-width: 420px;
  }
  .error {
    color: red;
  }
</style>

Simply exporting values from a Svelte component makes them properties, similar to a JSX / React Component. And a <slot/> tag determines the spot for the inner HTML or other Svelte components.

And now let's import and use this component in src/routes/login.svelte:

<script lang="ts">
  import { goto } from "$app/navigation";
  import { session } from "$app/stores";
  import Form from "./_form.svelte";
  let isSubmitting: boolean;
  session.subscribe(() => {});
  const onUpdate = (form) => {
    isSubmitting = form.isSubmitting;
    if (form.result?.user) {
      session.set({ user: { email: form.result.user.email } });
      alert("You are logged in!");
      goto("/");
    }
  };
</script>

<svelte:head>
  <title>Login</title>
</svelte:head>

<h1>Login</h1>
<form action="/login" {onUpdate}>
  <fieldset>
    <label for="email">Email</label>
    <input type="email" placeholder="user@email.net" name="email" />
    <label for="password">Password</label>
    <input type="password" placeholder="Your password" name="password" />
    <input
      class="button-primary"
      type="submit"
      value="Login"
      disabled="{isSubmitting}"
    />
  </fieldset>
</form>

<p>Don't have an account? <a href="/signup">Signup</a></p>

Here we are also setting session state so that other pages will have access to user information.

Let's add the <Form/> to src/routes/signup.svelte as well:

<script lang="ts">
  import { goto } from "$app/navigation";
  import Form from "./_form.svelte";
  let isSubmitting: boolean;
  const onUpdate = (form) => {
    isSubmitting = form.isSubmitting;
    if (form.result?.user) {
      alert("You are signed up!");
      goto("/login");
    }
  };
</script>

<svelte:head>
  <title>Create an account</title>
</svelte:head>

<h1>Create an account</h1>
<form action="/signup" {onUpdate}>
  <fieldset>
    <label for="email">Email</label>
    <input type="email" placeholder="user@email.net" name="email" required />
    <label for="password">Password</label>
    <input
      type="password"
      placeholder="Your password"
      name="password"
      required
    />
    <label for="password">Password, again</label>
    <input
      type="password"
      placeholder="Repeat the password, please"
      name="repeat-password"
      required
    />
    <input
      class="button-primary"
      type="submit"
      value="Signup"
      disabled="{isSubmitting}"
    />
  </fieldset>
</form>
<p>Already have an account? <a href="/login">Login</a></p>

Now you should be able to create an account and log in without annoying raw JSON (but with annoying alerts instead :-) )

User-only content

The whole point of user authentication is to show something that only a certain user should see. That's why we are going to make some changes to the src/routes/index.svelte page:

<script lang="ts">
  import { session } from "$app/stores";
  import type { User } from "$lib/db";
  let user: User | undefined;
  session.subscribe((current) => {
    user = current.user;
  });
  $: username = user ? user.email : "Guest";
</script>

<svelte:head>
  <title>Welcome, {username}!</title>
</svelte:head>

<h1>Welcome, {username}!</h1>
{#if user}
<p>You are logged in!</p>
{:else}
<p>Would you like to <a href="/login">Login</a>?</p>
{/if}

Now, when you log in, you should see your email on the home page, but if you reload the page you will only see the Guest state, as we don't have access to the server session yet. To pass server session state to the client we need to modify src/hooks.ts:

import { initDB } from "$lib/db";
import type { GetSession, Handle } from "@sveltejs/kit";
import { parse } from "querystring";

// Create a promise, therefore start execution
const setup = initDB().catch((err) => {
  console.error(err);
  // Exit the app if setup has failed
  process.exit(-1);
});

export const handle: Handle = async ({ event, resolve }) => {
  // Ensure that the promise is resolved before the first request
  // It'll stay resolved for the time being
  const db = await setup;
  event.locals["db"] = db;
  const cookies = event.request.headers
    .get("cookie")
    ?.split(";")
    .map((v) => parse(v.trim()))
    .reduceRight((a, c) => {
      return Object.assign(a, c);
    });
  if (cookies?.token && typeof cookies.token === "string") {
    const existingToken = db.tokens.get(cookies.token);
    if (existingToken) {
      event.locals["user"] = db.users.get(existingToken.email);
    }
  }
  const response = await resolve(event);
  return response;
};

export const getSession: GetSession = (event) => {
  return event.locals["user"]
    ? {
        user: {
          // only include properties needed client-side —
          // exclude anything else attached to the user
          // like access tokens etc
          email: event.locals["user"].email,
        },
      }
    : {};
};

We added yet another hook called getSession that makes server values accessible on the client-side and during pre-render.

Another improvement has been made to the handle hook, which now determines which user is currently logged in based on the token cookie.

Load the page one more time to see something like:

# Welcome, clark.kent@daily.planet!

You are logged in!

What's next?

While SvelteKit is still in beta it might not be suitable for mission-critical applications yet, but it seems to be getting there fast.

Nonetheless, if you would like to deploy your app for the world to see, you'll need an adapter. For this app and overall a generic Node app you can use @sveltejs/adapter-node@next, but there's a lot of other options, including static site generation or oriented to a particular type of deployment. And you can always write your own, it's really simple.

I love how close to the actual Web ( as in HTML, CSS, JS) Svelte is and SvelteKit feels the same way with its predictable HTTP abstractions.

What do you think, reader? Excited to give it a try yet?

Discuss on Dev
Related articles
5 Ways to Use Redis in Your Next Project
#redis, #node, #database

If the best code is no code at all, then the next best thing is code, that you can explain in one simple sentence. For example, like this: Redis holds a variety of structures in memory and lets you manage them through a text based command protocol. Despite, or maybe, because of its simplicity, Redis has plenty of utility in modern web architecture.

[read more]