Book Image

Architecting Vue.js 3 Enterprise-Ready Web Applications

By : Solomon Eseme
Book Image

Architecting Vue.js 3 Enterprise-Ready Web Applications

By: Solomon Eseme

Overview of this book

Building enterprise-ready Vue.js apps entails following best practices for creating high-performance and scalable applications. Complete with step-by-step explanations and best practices outlined, this Vue.js book is a must-read for any developer who works with a large Vue.js codebase where performance and scalability are indispensable. Throughout this book, you’ll learn how to configure and set up Vue.js 3 and the composition API and use it to build real-world applications. You’ll develop the skills to create reusable components and scale performance in Vue.js 3 applications. As you progress, the book guides you in scaling performance with asynchronous lazy loading, image compression, code splitting, and tree shaking. Furthermore, you’ll see how to use the Restful API, Docker, GraphQL, and different types of testing to ensure that your Vue.js 3 application is scalable and maintainable. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-versed in best practices for implementing Restful API, Docker, GraphQL, and testing methods to build and deploy an enterprise-ready Vue.js 3 application of any scale.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Part 1: Getting Started with Vue.js
4
Part 2: Large-Scale Apps and Scaling Performance in Vue.js 3
9
Part 3: Vue.js 3 Enterprise Tools
11
Part 4: Testing Enterprise Vue.js 3 Apps
16
Part 5: Deploying Enterprise-ready Vue.js 3

Deploying to AWS

In this section, we are going to implement continuous deployment for the Vue.js 3 application with GitHub Actions and AWS App Runner.

This process can be triggered manually after thoroughly checking the staging application to make sure it satisfies all requirements before pushing it to production. However, it can also be automated to happen immediately after the staging is completed.

In this demo, we are going to create the deployment pipeline for deploying to the AWS production server using AWS App Runner and also automate the process at once.

Important note

It’s advisable to trigger the deployment process manually, which gives room to manually check all the requirements on the staging environment before deploying a new release to production.

To deploy to AWS, you will need an AWS account and an AWS IAM account with proper permissions. In this section, we explored how to create pipelines and deploy our project to AWS. In the next section, we...