Book Image

Hands-On Full Stack Web Development with Aurelia

By : Diego Argüelles Rojas, Erikson Murrugarra
Book Image

Hands-On Full Stack Web Development with Aurelia

By: Diego Argüelles Rojas, Erikson Murrugarra

Overview of this book

Hands-On Full Stack Web Development with Aurelia begins with a review of basic JavaScript concepts and the structure of an Aurelia application generated with the Aurelia-CLI tool. You will learn how to create interesting and intuitive application using the Aurelia-Materialize plugin, which implements the material design approach. Once you fully configure a FIFA World Cup 2018 app, you'll start creating the initial components through TDD practices and then develop backend services to process and store all the user data. This book lets you explore the NoSQL model and implement it using one of the most popular NoSQL databases, MongoDB, with some exciting libraries to make the experience effortless. You'll also be able to add some advanced behavior to your components, from managing the lifecycle properly to using dynamic binding, field validations, and the custom service layer. You will integrate your application with Google OAuth Service and learn best practices to secure your applications. Furthermore, you'll write UI Testing scripts to create high-quality Aurelia Apps and explore the most used tools to run end-to-end tests. In the concluding chapters, you'll be able to deploy your application to the Cloud and Docker containers. By the end of this book, you will have learned how to create rich applications using best practices and modern approaches.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Foreword
Contributors
Preface
Index

Deploying on your own server


Upto now, we have the production files ready to be deployed. The typical deployment scenario is when you want to deploy your web application on your local server, local computer, or internal corporate server. This is a common practice for big companies that want to manage and have full control on their servers. So, let's learn how to do that using Docker and NGINX as our best allies.

Creating our NGINX configuration file

The only role that NGINX will play in our deployment is to serve as a web server, so we will write a simple configuration file for our server. Go ahead and create the default.conf file in the project root folder:

server {
listen 80;
    server_name localhost;

 location / {
        root /usr/share/nginx/html;
        index index.html index.htm;
    }

    error_page 500 502 503 504 /50x.html;
}

Let's understand what this configuration file does. First, we tell NGINX to listen on port 80. It means that when we want to access our application, we should...