Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.awfixer.me/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
Warning — This will soon have breaking changes. It was designed when JSTime was mostly a dev server and not a JavaScript runtime.
Frameworks preconfigure JSTime to enable developers to use JSTime with their existing tooling.
Frameworks are configured via the framework object in the package.json of the framework (not in the application’s package.json):
Here is an example:
{
"name": "jstime-framework-next",
"version": "0.0.0-18",
"description": "",
"framework": {
"displayName": "Next.js",
"static": "public",
"assetPrefix": "_next/",
"router": {
"dir": ["pages", "src/pages"],
"extensions": [".js", ".ts", ".tsx", ".jsx"]
},
"css": "onimportcss",
"development": {
"client": "client.development.tsx",
"fallback": "fallback.development.tsx",
"server": "server.development.tsx",
"css": "onimportcss",
"define": {
"client": {
".env": "NEXT_PUBLIC_",
"defaults": {
"process.env.__NEXT_TRAILING_SLASH": "false",
"process.env.NODE_ENV": "\"development\"",
"process.env.__NEXT_ROUTER_BASEPATH": "''",
"process.env.__NEXT_SCROLL_RESTORATION": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_I18N_SUPPORT": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_HAS_REWRITES": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_ANALYTICS_ID": "null",
"process.env.__NEXT_OPTIMIZE_CSS": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_CROSS_ORIGIN": "''",
"process.env.__NEXT_STRICT_MODE": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_IMAGE_OPTS": "null"
}
},
"server": {
".env": "NEXT_",
"defaults": {
"process.env.__NEXT_TRAILING_SLASH": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_OPTIMIZE_FONTS": "false",
"process.env.NODE_ENV": "\"development\"",
"process.env.__NEXT_OPTIMIZE_IMAGES": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_OPTIMIZE_CSS": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_ROUTER_BASEPATH": "''",
"process.env.__NEXT_SCROLL_RESTORATION": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_I18N_SUPPORT": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_HAS_REWRITES": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_ANALYTICS_ID": "null",
"process.env.__NEXT_CROSS_ORIGIN": "''",
"process.env.__NEXT_STRICT_MODE": "false",
"process.env.__NEXT_IMAGE_OPTS": "null",
"global": "globalThis",
"window": "undefined"
}
}
}
}
}
}
Here are type definitions:
type Framework = Environment & {
// This changes what’s printed in the console on load
displayName?: string;
// This allows a prefix to be added (and ignored) to requests.
// Useful for integrating an existing framework that expects internal routes to have a prefix
// e.g. "_next"
assetPrefix?: string;
development?: Environment;
production?: Environment;
// The directory used for serving unmodified assets like fonts and images
// Defaults to "public" if exists, else "static", else disabled.
static?: string;
// "onimportcss" disables the automatic "onimportcss" feature
// If the framework does routing, you may want to handle CSS manually
// "facade" removes CSS imports from JavaScript files,
// and replaces an imported object with a proxy that mimics CSS module support without doing any class renaming.
css?: "onimportcss" | "facade";
// JSTime's filesystem router
router?: Router;
};
type Define = {
// By passing ".env", JSTime will automatically load .env.local, .env.development, and .env if exists in the project root
// (in addition to the processes’ environment variables)
// When "*", all environment variables will be automatically injected into the JavaScript loader
// When a string like "NEXT_PUBLIC_", only environment variables starting with that prefix will be injected
".env": string | "*";
// These environment variables will be injected into the JavaScript loader
// These are the equivalent of Webpack’s resolve.alias and esbuild’s --define.
// Values are parsed as JSON, so they must be valid JSON. The only exception is '' is a valid string, to simplify writing stringified JSON in JSON.
// If not set, `process.env.NODE_ENV` will be transformed into "development".
"defaults": Record<string, string>;
};
type Environment = {
// This is a wrapper for the client-side entry point for a route.
// This allows frameworks to run initialization code on pages.
client: string;
// This is a wrapper for the server-side entry point for a route.
// This allows frameworks to run initialization code on pages.
server: string;
// This runs when "server" code fails to load due to an exception.
fallback: string;
// This is how environment variables and .env is configured.
define?: Define;
};
// JSTime's filesystem router
// Currently, JSTime supports pages by either an absolute match or a parameter match.
// pages/index.tsx will be executed on navigation to "/" and "/index"
// pages/posts/[id].tsx will be executed on navigation to "/posts/123"
// Routes & parameters are automatically passed to `fallback` and `server`.
type Router = {
// This determines the folder to look for pages
dir: string[];
// These are the allowed file extensions for pages.
extensions?: string[];
};
To use a framework, you pass jstime jstime --use package-name.
Your framework’s package.json name should start with jstime-framework-. This is so that people can type something like jstime jstime --use next and it will check jstime-framework-next first. This is similar to how Babel plugins tend to start with babel-plugin-.
For developing frameworks, you can also do jstime jstime --use ./relative-path-to-framework.
If you’re interested in adding a framework integration, please reach out. There’s a lot here, and it’s not entirely documented yet.