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React 16 Tooling

You're reading from   React 16 Tooling Master essential cutting-edge tools, such as create-react-app, Jest, and Flow

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788835015
Length 298 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Christopher Pitt Christopher Pitt
Author Profile Icon Christopher Pitt
Christopher Pitt
Adam Boduch Adam Boduch
Author Profile Icon Adam Boduch
Adam Boduch
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

1. Creating a Personalized React Development Ecosystem 2. Efficiently Bootstrapping React Applications with Create React App FREE CHAPTER 3. Development Mode and Mastering Hot Reloading 4. Optimizing Test-Driven React Development 5. Streamlining Development and Refactoring with Type-Safe React Components 6. Enforcing Code Quality to Improve Maintainability 7. Isolating Components with Storybook 8. Debugging Components in the Browser 9. Instrumenting Application State with Redux 10. Building and Deploying Static React Sites with Gatsby 11. Building and Deploying React Applications with Docker Containers 12. Another Book You May Enjoy

Getting started with Node containers


Let's start things off by running the Barely SMS React dev server within a Node.js Docker image. Note that this is not part of the production deployment. This is just a starting point for you to get familiar with deploying Docker containers. As we progress through the remaining sections in this chapter, you'll move steadily toward a production-level deployment.

The first step to getting your React application into a container is creating a Dockerfile. If you don't have Docker installed on your system already, find it here along with installation instructions: https://www.docker.com/community-edition. If you open up a terminal and change into the getting-started-with-containers directory, you'll see a file called Dockerfile. Here's what it looks like:

FROM node:alpine
WORKDIR /usr/src/app
COPY package*.json ./
RUN npm install
COPY . .
EXPOSE 3000
CMD [ "npm", "start" ]

This is the file that's used to build an image. An image is like a template for the container...

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