Background
With the release of Next 13 and introduction of the beta app/
directory, we now have support for React Server Components, and can start building applications using these new React paradigms.
Awhile back I wrote about packaging your JavaScript library code into a dual-module bundle (ESM + CommonJS) using Rollup module bundler. Make sure to check it out (it's been updated for Rollup v3!).
A starter template for React using the setup covered in that post is available here:
Now, that template is great. I've used it in several libraries that have been published to production for several years now without problems.
However, when trying to import a component from a library built using that starter template in a Next 13 app
directory, you get the following error:
The Problem
Next 13 pages inside app
directory are React Server Components by default. In fact, anything deemed a React component, when consumed within the app
directory, is considered to be a Server Component by default.
To make a React component into a Client Component (ie. our regular old React components with effects and state that we all use and love), you need to denote it with a 'use client'
directive at the top of the component file:
// ClientComponent.js
'use client';
export default function ClientComponent() {
return (
// ...
);
}
Client Components are any components that rely on client-side only features, such as:
So, when I tried to import a Button
component (which has event handlers and is "interactive") inside a Server Component, React had no idea that it was supposed to be a Client Component. It didn't see a 'use client'
anywhere in the library code, so it assumed that it's a Server Component.
This is something that component libraries will need to start addressing soon, as Server Components start to gain ground (and some already have). I wanted to make sure that my starter template supported Server Components properly.
Possible Solution
One way to address this would be to mark all components in our library as Client Components. This would mean having a top-level 'use client'
directive in each file (or at the top of the bundled file if not using directories).
To do this, include a banner
option in your output
options inside the rollup.config.js
, and add 'use client'
at the very end of it:
// rollup.config.js
const outputOptions = {
exports: 'named',
preserveModules: true,
banner: `/*
* Rollup Library Starter
* {@link https://github.com/mryechkin/rollup-library-starter}
* @copyright Mykhaylo Ryechkin (@mryechkin)
* @license MIT
*/
'use client';`,
};
Now, if you leave it as is, the terser
plugin will remove it, so we need to tell it to preserve directives by setting the compress.directives
option to false
:
// rollup.config.js
const config = {
// ...
plugins: [
// ...
terser({
compress: { directives: false },
}),
],
};
And now if you run the build
script, you'll see that our bundled files have that included at the top.
Great!
...or is it? π€
Better Solution
While the above solution works, it's not very elegant.
We don't necessarily want every component to be a Client Component. There can be components in your library that don't rely on state or use any effects, and can very well benefit from being Server Components.
Well, we've already configured Rollup to output separate files for each of our modules. What if we simply add 'use client'
to the component files themselves?
A-ha! π‘
// src/components/Button/Button.js
'use client';
const Button = (props) => ({/* */});
However... If we try to run the build
, we'll see a warning like this:
Rollup will simply ignore this directory and not include it in our final bundle. And this is a good thing, in general. However, in this case we want this directive to be included. This is where Rollup community comes to the rescue π
While searching for a solution, I came across this issue. Ironically, one of the suggested solutions in there was the initial solution described earlier above. However, there was also another suggestion.
Fredrik HΓΆglund shared his plugin that solves our exact problem:
This plugin, as its name implies, preserves any directives written at the top of our files:
This plugin preserves directives when
preserveModules: true
is set in the Rollup config.Rollup by default always removes directives like
'use client'
from the top of files. This makes sense when bundling files because directives should be applied per file, which is not possible when bundling.When
preserveModules: true
is set, because each module is a separate output file, it's possible to keep directives, which is exactly what this plugin does.
Because we're already using the preserveModules
option in our Rollup config, this will work great.
With this plugin, we can safely leave the 'use client'
directives in our component files (where they belong), and Rollup won't remove them from our bundled files.
To use the plugin, first install it:
npm i -D rollup-plugin-preserve-directives
Then, add it to the plugins
array in your rollup.config.js
(before terser
):
// rollup.config.js
import preserveDirectives from 'rollup-plugin-preserve-directives';
// ...
const config = {
plugins: [
// ...
preserveDirectives(),
terser(),
// ...
]
};
Running the build
again, we can see that the 'use client'
directive is preserved in the output files:
And now we can import it in a Server Component and use without any issues:
// src/app/index.js
import { Button, Text } from 'rollup-library-starter';
export default function Home() {
return (
<Button>
<Text>Hello</Text>
</Button>
);
}
Disabling the warning
Currently the rollup-preserve-directives
plugin doesn't suppress that Rollup warning we saw earlier. Its README suggests to add a custom onwarn
handler to the Rollup config if desired.
Let's do that. Add the following to rollup.config.js
:
// rollup.config.js
const config = {
// ...
onwarn(warning, warn) {
if (warning.code !== 'MODULE_LEVEL_DIRECTIVE') {
warn(warning);
}
},
};
This will suppress any MODULE_LEVEL_DIRECTIVE
warnings, and throw all others. See Rollup docs for more details.
Starter Template
The rollup-library-starter
template has been updated to use this plugin, and is available in GitHub for your reference:
Happy hacking!
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