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Quick Start

Just getting started with Remix? The latest version of Remix is now React Router v7. If you want to use the latest features, you should use the React Router docs to get started.

This guide will get you familiar with the basic plumbing required to run a Remix app as quickly as possible. While there are many starter templates with different runtimes, deploy targets, and databases, we're going to create a bare-bones project from scratch.

When you're ready to get serious about your Remix project, you might consider starting with a community template. They include TypeScript setups, databases, testing harnesses, authentication, and more. You can find a list of community templates on the Remix Resources page.

Installation

If you prefer to initialize a batteries-included Remix project, you can use the create-remix CLI:

npx create-remix@latest

However, this guide will explain everything the CLI does to set up your project, and instead of using the CLI you can follow these steps. If you're just getting started with Remix, we recommend following this guide to understand all of the different pieces that make up a Remix app.

mkdir my-remix-app
cd my-remix-app
npm init -y

# install runtime dependencies
npm i @remix-run/node @remix-run/react @remix-run/serve isbot@4 react react-dom

# install dev dependencies
npm i -D @remix-run/dev vite

Vite Config

touch vite.config.js

Since Remix uses Vite, you'll need to provide a Vite config with the Remix Vite plugin. Here's the basic configuration you'll need:

import { vitePlugin as remix } from "@remix-run/dev";
import { defineConfig } from "vite";

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [remix()],
});

The Root Route

mkdir app
touch app/root.jsx

app/root.jsx is what we call the "Root Route". It's the root layout of your entire app. Here's the basic set of elements you'll need for any project:

import {
  Links,
  Meta,
  Outlet,
  Scripts,
} from "@remix-run/react";

export default function App() {
  return (
    <html>
      <head>
        <link
          rel="icon"
          href="data:image/x-icon;base64,AA"
        />
        <Meta />
        <Links />
      </head>
      <body>
        <h1>Hello world!</h1>
        <Outlet />

        <Scripts />
      </body>
    </html>
  );
}

Build and Run

First build the app for production:

npx remix vite:build

You should now see a build folder containing a server folder (the server version of your app) and a client folder (the browser version) with some build artifacts in them. (This is all configurable.)

πŸ‘‰ Run the app with remix-serve

First you will need to specify the type in package.json as module so that remix-serve can run your app.

{
  "type": "module"
  // ...
}

Now you can run your app with remix-serve:

# note the dash!
npx remix-serve build/server/index.js

You should be able to open up http://localhost:3000 and see the "hello world" page.

Aside from the unholy amount of code in node_modules, our Remix app is just one file:

β”œβ”€β”€ app/
β”‚   └── root.jsx
└── package.json
└── vite.config.js

Bring Your Own Server

The build/server directory created by remix vite:build is just a module that you run inside a server like Express, Cloudflare Workers, Netlify, Vercel, Fastly, AWS, Deno, Azure, Fastify, Firebase, ... anywhere.

If you don't care to set up your own server, you can use remix-serve. It's a simple express-based server maintained by the Remix team. However, Remix is specifically designed to run in any JavaScript environment so that you own your stack. It is expected many β€”if not mostβ€” production apps will have their own server. You can read more about this in Runtimes, Adapters, and Stacks.

Just for kicks, let's stop using remix-serve and use express instead.

πŸ‘‰ Install Express, the Remix Express adapter, and cross-env for running in production mode

npm i express @remix-run/express cross-env

# not going to use this anymore
npm uninstall @remix-run/serve

πŸ‘‰ Create an Express server

touch server.js
import { createRequestHandler } from "@remix-run/express";
import express from "express";

// notice that the result of `remix vite:build` is "just a module"
import * as build from "./build/server/index.js";

const app = express();
app.use(express.static("build/client"));

// and your app is "just a request handler"
app.all("*", createRequestHandler({ build }));

app.listen(3000, () => {
  console.log("App listening on http://localhost:3000");
});

πŸ‘‰ Run your app with express

node server.js

Now that you own your server, you can debug your app with whatever tooling your server has. For example, you can inspect your app with chrome devtools with the Node.js inspect flag:

node --inspect server.js

Development Workflow

Instead of stopping, rebuilding, and starting your server all the time, you can run Remix in development using Vite in middleware mode. This enables instant feedback to changes in your app with React Refresh (Hot Module Replacement) and Remix Hot Data Revalidation.

First, as a convenience, add dev and start commands in package.json that will run your server in development and production modes respectively:

πŸ‘‰ Add a "scripts" entry to package.json

{
  "scripts": {
    "dev": "node ./server.js",
    "start": "cross-env NODE_ENV=production node ./server.js"
  }
  // ...
}

πŸ‘‰ Add Vite development middleware to your server

Vite middleware is not applied if process.env.NODE_ENV is set to "production", in which case you'll still be running the regular build output as you did earlier.

import { createRequestHandler } from "@remix-run/express";
import express from "express";

const viteDevServer =
  process.env.NODE_ENV === "production"
    ? null
    : await import("vite").then((vite) =>
        vite.createServer({
          server: { middlewareMode: true },
        })
      );

const app = express();
app.use(
  viteDevServer
    ? viteDevServer.middlewares
    : express.static("build/client")
);

const build = viteDevServer
  ? () =>
      viteDevServer.ssrLoadModule(
        "virtual:remix/server-build"
      )
  : await import("./build/server/index.js");

app.all("*", createRequestHandler({ build }));

app.listen(3000, () => {
  console.log("App listening on http://localhost:3000");
});

πŸ‘‰ Start the dev server

npm run dev

Now you can work on your app with immediate feedback. Give it a shot, change the text in root.jsx and watch!

Controlling Server and Browser Entries

There are default magic files Remix is using that most apps don't need to mess with, but if you want to customize Remix's entry points to the server and browser you can run remix reveal and they'll get dumped into your project.

npx remix reveal
Entry file entry.client created at app/entry.client.tsx.
Entry file entry.server created at app/entry.server.tsx.

Summary

Congrats, you can add Remix to your resume! Summing things up, we've learned:

  • Remix compiles your app into two things:
    • A request handler that you add to your own JavaScript server
    • A pile of static assets in your public directory for the browser
  • You can bring your own server with adapters to deploy anywhere
  • You can set up a development workflow with HMR built-in

In general, Remix is a bit "guts out". A few minutes of boilerplate but now you own your stack.

What's next?

Docs and examples licensed under MIT