Using WebAssembly Modules
WebAssembly (Wasm) has been around for many years now. Despite its huge benefits in terms of performance and low bundle size, it hasn’t gained much popularity, primarily because it wasn’t easy for developers to build a WASM module. However, now that people are starting to work with tools such as Rust, it gets fairly easy to build WebAssembly modules with Rust. We anticipate that WebAssembly will become mainstream when building applications that require a high level of computation on the browser.
WASM modules can work really well in a microfrontend architecture, where the critical compute-intensive modules are built in WASM wrapped as a micro app and imported into a microfrontend architecture in which the rest of the micro apps in the microfrontend are built using the standard React.
Here is a rough approach of how you could set this up in your module federated Next.js app. Use our module federation code from Chapter 6. First build a Rust...