How To Deploy a React Application to DigitalOcean App Platform

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Introduction

DigitalOcean’s App Platform is a Platform as a Service (PaaS) product that lets you configure and deploy applications from a source repository. After configuring your app, DigitalOcean will build and deploy the application on every change, giving you the benefit of a full web server and deployment pipeline with minimal configuration. This can be a quick and efficient way to deploy your React applications, and if you are using React to build a site with no backend, you can use App Platform’s free tier.

In this tutorial, you’ll deploy a React application to the DigitalOcean App Platform using the free Starter tier. You’ll build an application with Create React App, push the code to a GitHub repository, then configure the application as a DigitalOcean app. You’ll connect the app to your source code and deploy the project as a set of static files.

By the end of this tutorial, you’ll be able to configure a React application to deploy automatically on every push to the main branch of a GitHub repository.

Prerequisites

Step 1 — Creating a React Project

In this step, you’ll create a React application using Create React App and build a deployable version of it.

To start, create a new application using Create React App on your local machine. In a terminal, run the command to build an application called digital-ocean-app:

  • npx create-react-app digital-ocean-app

The npx command will run a Node package without downloading it to your machine. The create-react-app script will install all of the dependencies and will build a base project in the digital-ocean-app directory. For more on Create React App, check out the tutorial How To Set Up a React Project with Create React App.

The code will download the dependencies and will create a base project. It may take a few minutes to finish. When it is complete, you will receive a success message. Your version may be slightly different if you use yarn instead of npm:

Output
Success! Created digital-ocean-app at your_file_path/digital-ocean-app Inside that directory, you can run several commands: npm start Starts the development server. npm build Bundles the app into static files for production. npm test Starts the test runner. npm eject Removes this tool and copies build dependencies, configuration files and scripts into the app directory. If you do this, you can’t go back! We suggest that you begin by typing: cd digital-ocean-app npm start Happy hacking!

Now that you have a base project, run it locally so you can test how the project will appear on the server. First, change into the directory:

  • cd digital-ocean-app

Run the project using the npm start script:

  • npm start

When the command runs, you’ll receive output with the URL for the local development server:

Output
Compiled successfully! You can now view digital-ocean-app in the browser. Local: http://localhost:3000 On Your Network: http://192.168.1.110:3000 Note that the development build is not optimized. To create a production build, use npm build.

Open a browser to http://localhost:3000 and you’ll find your project:

React project template running locally

Stop the project by typing either CTRL+C or ⌘+C in the terminal.

Now that you have a working React application, you can push the code to a GitHub repository.

Step 2 — Pushing the Code to GitHub

To deploy your app, App Platform retrieves your source code from a hosted code repository. In this step, you will push your React app code to a GitHub repository so that App Platform can access it later.

Log in to your GitHub account. After you log in, create a new repository called digital-ocean-app. You can make the repository either private or public:

New GitHub repository page

Create React App automatically initializes your project with git, so you can set up to push the code directly to GitHub. First, add the repository that you’d like to use with the following command:

Next, declare that you want to push to the main branch with the following:

  • git branch -M main

Finally, push the code to your repository:

  • git push -u origin main

Enter your GitHub credentials when prompted to push your code.

When you push the code you will receive a success message. Your message will be slightly different:

Output
Counting objects: 22, done. Delta compression using up to 4 threads. Compressing objects: 100% (22/22), done. Writing objects: 100% (22/22), 187.50 KiB | 6.94 MiB/s, done. Total 22 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0) To github.com:your_name/digital-ocean-app.git 4011c66..647d2e1 main -> main

You’ve now copied your code to the GitHub repository.

In this step, you pushed your project to GitHub so that you can access it using DigitalOcean Apps. Next, you’ll create a new DigitalOcean App using your project and set up automatic deployment.

Step 3 — Deploying to DigitalOcean App Platform

In this step, you’ll deploy a React application to the DigitalOcean App Platform. You’ll connect your GitHub repository to DigitalOcean, configure the project to build, and build your initial project. After the project is live, each change will trigger a new build and update.

By the end of this step, you’ll be able to deploy an application with continous delivery on DigitalOcean.

To begin, log in to your DigitalOcean account and press the Create button, then select Apps:

Create a new app page in the DigitalOcean interface

You’ll next be prompted to link your GitHub repository. If you have not yet connected it, you will need to log in with your username and password and give DigitalOcean authorization to access your repositories:

Link GitHub to DigitalOcean page

Once you link your account, select the repository you’d like to connect on the GitHub authorization screen. In this case, you are using the digital-ocean-app repository, but you can connect more repositories if you would like:

Select a repo on GitHub authorization page

After selecting the repository, you will reconnect to the DigitalOcean interface. Select digital-ocean-app from the list of repositories, then press Next. This will connect your App directly to the GitHub repo:

Select repo in the DigitalOcean UI

Now that you have selected your repository, you need to configure the DigitalOcean App. In this example, the server will be based in North America by choosing New York in the Region field, and the deployment branch will be main. For your app, choose the region that is closest to your physical location:

Select branch and location in the DigitalOcean interface

For this tutorial, you are checking Autodeploy code changes. This will automatically rebuild your app every time you update the code.

Press Next to move on to the Configure your app screen.

Next, select the type of application you will run. Since React will build static assets, select Static Site from the dropdown menu in the Type field.

Note: Create React App is not a static site generator like Gatsby, but you are using static assets, since the server does not need to run any server-side code such as Ruby or PHP. The app will use Node to run the install and build steps, but will not execute application code at the free tier.

You also have the option to use a custom build script. But in this case, you can stick with the default npm run build command. You may want to create a custom build script if you have a different build script for a quality assurance (QA) or a production environment:

Select Static Site on the app configuration page

Press Next to move on to the Finalize and launch page.

Here you can select the price plan. The free Starter tier is made for static sites, so choose that one:

Select price option for DigitalOcean App Platform

Press the Launch Starter App button and DigitalOcean will start building your application.

DigitalOcean is building the application page

The app will run the npm ci and npm build scripts in your repo. This will download all of the dependencies and create the build directory with a compiled and minified version of all of your JavaScript, HTML files, and other assets. You could also create a custom script in your package.json and update the Commands in the Components tab of your application on App Platform.

It will take a few minutes for the build to run, but when it is finished, you will receive a success message and a link to your new site. Your link will have a unique name and will be slightly different:

Deploy complete page

Press Live App to access your project in the browser. It will be the same as the project you tested locally, but this will be live on the web with a secure URL:

Live application

Now that your project is configured, any time you make a change to the linked repository, you’ll run a new build. In this case, if you push a change to the main branch, DigitalOcean will automatically run a new deployment. There is no need to log in; it will run as soon as you push the change:

New deploy

In this step, you created a new DigitalOcean app on App Platform. You connected your GitHub account and configured the app to build the main branch. After configuring the application, you learned that the app will deploy a new build after every change.

Conclusion

DigitalOcean’s App Platform gives you a quick tool for deploying applications. With a small initial set up, your app will deploy automatically after every change. This can be used in conjunction with React to quickly get your web application up and running.

A possible next step for a project like this would be to change the domain name of the app. To do this, take a look at the official documentation for App Platform.

Originally posted on DigitalOcean Community Tutorials
Author: Joe Morgan

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