In this guide, we'll look at how to use @angular/fire
to automatically deploy an Angular application to Firebase hosting or functions by using the Angular CLI.
@angular/fire
uses Firebase functions to deploy your Angular universal projects, with server-side rendering enabled.
Angular Universal deployments work with @nguniversal/*
version 9.0.0 and above.
First, you need to add the @angular/fire
package to your project. In your Angular CLI project run:
ng add @angular/fire
Note that the command above assumes you have global Angular CLI installed. To install Angular CLI globally run npm i -g @angular/cli
.
First, the command above will check if you have an Angular universal project. It'll do so by looking at your angular.json
project, looking for a server
target for the specified project. If it finds one, it'll ask you if you want to deploy the project in a firebase function.
After that it will trigger the @angular/fire
ng-add
schematics. The schematics will open a web browser and guide you through the Firebase authentication flow (if you're not signed in already). After you authenticate, you'll see a prompt to select a Firebase hosting project.
The schematics will do the following:
- Add
@angular/fire
to your list of dependencies - Create
firebase.json
,.firebaserc
files in the root of your workspace. You can use them to configure your firebase hosting deployment. Find more about them here - Update your workspace file (
angular.json
) by inserting thedeploy
builder
In the end, your angular.json
project will look like below:
{
"$schema": "./node_modules/@angular/cli/lib/config/schema.json",
"version": 1,
"newProjectRoot": "projects",
"projects": {
"sample-app": {
// ...
"deploy": {
"builder": "@angular/fire:deploy",
"options": {} // Here you may find an "ssr": true option if you've
// selected that you want to deploy your Angular universal project
// as a firebase function.
}
}
},
// ...
"defaultProject": "sample-app"
}
If you want to add deployment capabilities to a different project in your workspace, you can run:
ng add @angular/fire --project=[PROJECT_NAME]
As the second step, to deploy your project run:
ng deploy --project=[PROJECT_NAME]
The --project
option is optional. Learn more here.
The command above will trigger:
- Production build of your application
- Deployment of the produced assets to the firebase hosting project you selected during
ng add
If you've specified that you want a server-side rendering enabled deployment in a firebase function, the command will also:
- Create a firebase function in
dist
, which directly consumesmain.js
from your server output directory. - Create
package.json
for the firebase function with the required dependencies. - Deploy the static assets to firebase hosting and your universal server as a Firebase function.
If you want to preview your Angular Universal project before we deploy it as a Firebase Function you can run:
ng deploy --preview
We'll create the function and a package.json
in your project output directory. This way, you can later run firebase serve
in your project root so you can test everything before deploying.
To customize the deployment flow, you can use the configuration files you're already familiar with from firebase-tools
. You can find more in the firebase documentation.
Setting functionsNodeVersion
and functionsRuntimeOptions
in your angular.json
allow you to custimze the version of Node.js Cloud Functions is running and run-time settings like timeout, VPC connectors, and memory.
"deploy": {
"builder": "@angular/fire:deploy",
"options": {
"functionsNodeVersion": 12,
"functionsRuntimeOptions": {
"memory": "2GB",
"timeoutSeconds": 10,
"vpcConnector": "my-vpc-connector",
"vpcConnectorEgressSettings": "PRIVATE_RANGES_ONLY"
}
}
}
If you have multiple build targets and deploy targets, it is possible to specify them in your angular.json
or workspace.json
.
It is possible to use either your project name or project alias in firebaseProject
. The setting provided here is equivalent to passing a project name or alias to firebase deploy --project projectNameOrAlias
.
The buildTarget
simply points to an existing build configuration for your project. Most projects have a default configuration and a production configuration (commonly activated by using the --prod
flag) but it is possible to specify as many build configurations as needed.
You may specify a buildTarget
and firebaseProject
in your options
as follows:
"deploy": {
"builder": "@angular/fire:deploy",
"options": {
"buildTarget": "projectName:build",
"firebaseProject": "developmentProject"
},
"configurations": {
"production": {
"buildTarget": "projectName:build:production",
"firebaseProject": "productionProject"
}
}
}
The above configuration specifies the following:
ng deploy
will deploy the default project with default configuration.ng deploy projectName
will deploy the specified project with default configuration.ng deploy projectName --prod
orng deploy projectName --configuration='production'
will deployprojectName
with production build settings to your production environment.
All of the options are optional. If you do not specify a buildTarget
, it defaults to a production build (projectName:build:production
). If you do not specify a firebaseProject
, it defaults to the first matching deploy target found in your .firebaserc
(where your projectName is the same as your Firebase deploy target name). The configurations
section is also optional.