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Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase
Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase

Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase: A comprehensive guide to database design, security, real-time data, storage, multi-tenancy, and more

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Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase

Unveiling the Inner Workings of Supabase and Introducing the Book’s Project

In 2000, I started playing around with HTML, which had been around for 10 years at the time. Google, which was then only two years old, was already becoming popular. Back then, the internet was slow and expensive, and my connection was a snail-paced 56 Kbps, miles behind today’s lightning-fast 1 Gbps, which is 18,000 times faster.

However, it was a great time to start with web development as the field wasn’t overly complex. Making dynamic websites typically meant using PHP and MySQL, and things such as “JavaScript Frameworks” did not even exist yet. At that time, authentication was simpler but not very secure, and HTTPS (which is represented by the padlock icon in your browser) was rare. To log in, you had to enter a username and password on a website, and the server created a session cookie to connect you to your account on the backend.

Fast forward to today, when starting...

Technical requirements (and some preamble)

This chapter contains code samples. However, you don’t need to remember them, as they simply serve the purpose of helping you understand the context of what’s explained better. Just expose yourself to their meaning and let go of trying to map it to a real implementation.

In the upcoming chapters, the code will be real code samples, which can be found, sorted by branches, at https://github.com/PacktPublishing/Building-Production-Grade-Web-Applications-with-Supabase.

Now for the preamble. In this chapter, we’ll dive into why Supabase is the ideal stack for building exceptional applications and explore its internal architecture.

Don’t be intimidated by the length of this chapter—Supabase works seamlessly without you needing to remember all the details of this chapter. Approach this chapter like you would a novel: as something to read, enjoy, and have aha-moments with, rather than something that you...

Understanding why Supabase is the stack you want

Talking about an awesome product is one thing. Understanding its history of success is equally important, as this paves the way for the future that you will invest your time and effort into. Also, that same history is part of the reason why it resonates with the principles of many developers, as well as why it isn’t just yet another Software as a Service (SaaS) with a short life span but one of the most promising tools that the web has seen in recent years.

In 2019, Paul Copplestone, the CEO of Supabase, worked on a Realtime extension for Postgres. This was part of a migration, in his former company, to move away from Google’s Firebase to Postgres. As this gained popularity, he asked his friend Ant Wilson if he’d be open to building an open-source company with the Postgres database at its core.

Ant agreed, and they came up with the name Supabase, choosing this due to the planned “super database”...

Demystifying the inner workings of Supabase with Postgres

Postgres is, and always has been, one of the go-to databases. It has proven to be a reliable and fast partner for projects of any size. Hence, it’s no surprise that Supabase is not only using one but in fact is a Postgres database with a specific setup and specific extensions, enhanced with additional services.

Everything related to Supabase (excluding files) is stored within that exact Postgres database. That’s why we will now jump into a mix of theoretical and practical thoughts about what differentiates Supabase, at its core, from just being a regular database.

One very interesting fact is that the database within Supabase can be controlled by you and is extensible. Often, when you work with any kind of platform that provides you with a database, your access will be limited in regard to safeguarding you from making fatal changes. Supabase, however, gives you full access to its underlying Postgres database...

Supabase Studio – the convenient web dashboard

At the heart of the Supabase stack, you’ll find Supabase Studio, an intuitive dashboard designed to streamline the management of your Supabase instance. However, it’s not a necessity—if you’re a command line person and love to hack SQL commands and HTTP requests much more than using a convenient dashboard, you’d be free to ignore the dashboard. Hence, of all the Supabase services, Studio is the only one you could completely delete without negative impacts on your Supabase infrastructure as it isn’t required by the other services.

Studio excels at simplifying complex tasks, from creating and managing table data to handling users and credentials, and even executing raw SQL commands for those who prefer that level of control. In Figure 1.5, you can catch a glimpse of the Studio start page for one of my projects, showcasing a quick statistical overview of its usage:

Figure 1.5: Supabase Studio
...

Supabase Auth (GoTrue) – the authentication handler

Supabase Auth, formerly known as GoTrue, is an auth API server written in Go. It’s what I refer to as the authentication service. It was originally created by Netlify. However, Supabase forked it and now builds upon it (https://github.com/supabase/auth).

In the next chapter, you’ll be setting up your first Supabase JavaScript client, which has a lot of convenient methods for the features of your Supabase instance. When you call the convenient supabaseClient.signUp(..) method, it requests the Auth server at its /auth/signup endpoint. Even though you can (and should) always use convenient functions such as signUp(..), it is interesting to know that everything in Supabase is based on REST APIs and hence you are not dependent on any specific framework.

Auth itself does not care about permissions, it cares only about authentication, such as sign-ups, login, recovery, profile changes, and so on. The job of giving...

PostgREST – a REST and GraphQL API for your database

The driver of any web application is selecting, updating, and inserting data from or into the Database. With Supabase, these actions are internal requests to the PostgREST service, which is reachable at the /rest/ endpoint. That service is the PostgREST project, which essentially makes any Postgres database accessible via the REST API (https://postgrest.org/en/stable/).

However, how does it work? Relational databases consist of tables, just like an Excel spreadsheet. In one Excel file, there can be multiple tabs, each containing a table of columns and rows. Hence, the Excel file itself is like a container for different tables.

In relational databases, this container is called a schema. By default, any table within a Postgres database is created in the default schema, which is named public. A simple visualization of a TodoItem table with an Upload table resembling a Todo database is given in Figure 1.6:

...

Realtime – elevating the user experience

Nearly any sophisticated application will come to a point where it makes sense to deliver live updates to a user without delay, whether it be gaming, a collaborative whiteboard, or simply new comments in your favorite social platform such as Signal. The Supabase Realtime Server solves exactly that.

It is an ultra-fast, open-source WebSocket communication implementation connecting to Postgres databases, written in Elixir Lang (https://elixir-lang.org/) by the CEO of Supabase, Paul Copplestone. It’s worth mentioning that nowadays, it’s driven by community contributors. It can be used for arbitrary real-time communication purposes and is able to handle millions of connections (https://supabase.com/docs/guides/realtime/architecture).

Even more interesting is the fact that it listens for changes within the database, so you can actually push live changes happening in the database to the user without any noticeable delay...

Storage – simple and scalable object storage

Supabase Storage is the service that allows you to store and manage files while respecting authentication. However, the service in itself isn’t actually storing the files, it’s only managing them.

As we learned, the PostgREST service isn’t a database but only connects to it and provides an API on top of it to access the data from the Postgres database. The Storage service in the Supabase stack provides an API to manage the files which can be in arbitrary places or other servers. Let’s get a deeper understanding of it.

A very common way of storing files is the Simple Storage Service (S3). S3 is an Amazon-specific development that allows for failsafe, distributed, replicated object storage—in simple terms, it’s a well-architected database for files.

Although Supabase uses Amazon’s S3, nowadays, when talking about S3, one doesn’t necessarily mean Amazon S3. There are alternative...

Image Proxy – helping to transform images on the fly

The Image Proxy service is a standalone, but complementary, service to the Storage service. It is used internally by the aforementioned storage service to pre-render images; for example, if you only need a thumbnail of a saved image and not the full resolution, you can use the Image Proxy service.

In the following figure, you’ll see a flow diagram illustrating what happens when you request a resized image from Supabase:

Figure 1.7: The service flow when requesting a resized image

Figure 1.7: The service flow when requesting a resized image

In the figure, you requested a file called cat.jpg, which we assume is high-resolution, and you want it to be downscaled to a size of 120 pixels. In that case, the Storage service will download the file from the S3 and pass it on to the ImageProxy service, which returns it to the Storage service after the transformation. The Storage service will then pass the result on to the one who requested it.

With the...

Edge Functions – completing the optimization stack

Edge Functions are small and lightweight pieces of code logic that are separate from your application code. Their name comes from the fact that they best perform on the edge (https://deno.com/blog/the-future-of-web-is-on-the-edge). Edge is a rather new term and refers to a paradigm of delivering a fast result by being as close to the executor as possible. That usually means that the piece of code that is supposed to execute is distributed to different server locations in the world. Depending on where it’s called from, the closest server takes the task.

Supabase’s Edge Functions service allows you to add custom edge functions that you can then execute whenever you need them. However, that leaves us with a question: when do you use them, and if they are that fast, why isn’t everything on the edge?

Edge functions can be considered to be background workers. They need to be small and have a limited processing...

pg-meta – an internal helper service for the database

When you use the dashboard to create a new table or add some more columns to a table, you would think that this is done via PostgREST, right? Well, PostgREST is built for data management, not database management.

Instead, database management is the task of the pg-meta service. It is a REST API that allows all kinds of manipulations on the database that is used by the other Supabase services. For example, when you create a new table with Studio, it talks to the pg-meta service by making a POST Request to /pg-meta/tables. It is secured and only accessible for the internal services or admins (e.g., when you log in to Studio, you are an admin).

However, why is pg-meta needed when all the services in the Supabase stack could also access the database directly? The following are some key reasons:

  • It abstracts away any underlying changes. In theory, you could even completely replace the database with a different database...

Kong – the overarching service orchestrator

The Supabase services are Docker containers, and those containers live in their own Docker network.So, whenever I say “Supabase service,” I’m referring to a Docker container. The fact that all Supabase services live within the same Docker network means that if one service, such as Storage, has a server running with an API for managing files in its container at localhost:3000, all the other services can access the API of that service with serviceName:3000 (so storage:3000). That also means that all the services can talk to each other via their REST APIs.

Usually, in production environments (such as supabase.com itself), none of the services are directly accessible to the outside, so from the outside, I cannot just use an API at storage:3000. Only containers that explicitly expose themselves to the public will be accessible to the outside, but none of the services in Supabase are—and this is best practice...

Introducing the production-grade ticket system project

In this book, you will build a production-ready, AI-enhanced multi-tenant ticket system with Next.js and Supabase, which you can take, deploy, extend, sell, or do whatever you like with.

To illustrate how Supabase integrates into a real-world application, it was obvious that this book would have to build a real-world application. Hence, I had to choose a framework (Next.js) to build an application together with you rather than just pinpointing to Supabase features. This means that, in the beginning, it may feel a little bit like a Next.js tutorial, but rest assured that this feeling changes over the course of this book. Even if you use another set of technology, you should feel well-guided.

Note

The system that we will build will be functional, contain best practices, and be secure for production usage.

However, what do I mean by a ticket system? We’re not talking about event tickets or bus tickets here; instead...

Summary

Wow, what a deep dive into the Supabase ecosystem! We peeled back the layers and got our hands dirty with the inner workings of this powerful platform. From the clever RLS in the database to the seamless chat between services via REST APIs, we saw how Supabase isn’t just smoke and mirrors—it’s smart engineering at its finest.

We uncovered how Supabase blends traditional permission checks with fancy FGA, making data management a breeze for developers. Let’s not forget the star of the show: those REST APIs that tie everything together, including the Supabase client that we’ll be using. We learned about those in this chapter as well.

However, we’re not just here to admire the architecture. All this knowledge is building toward something tangible: our multi-tenant ticket system. We’ve set the stage, and now it’s time to put the theory into practice.

As we move on to the next chapter, get ready to roll up your sleeves...

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Key benefits

  • Learn how to integrate Supabase and Next.js to create powerful and scalable web apps
  • Explore real-world scenarios with a multi-tenant ticket system
  • Master real-time data handling, secure file storage, and application security enhancement, while discovering the full potential of the database beyond holding data
  • Purchase of the print or Kindle book includes a free PDF eBook

Description

Discover the powerful capabilities of Supabase, the cutting-edge, open-source platform flipping the script on backend architecture. Guided by David Lorenz, a battle-tested software architect with over two decades of development experience, this book will transform the way you approach your projects and make you a Supabase expert. In this comprehensive guide, you'll build a secure, production-grade multi-tenant ticket system, seamlessly integrated with Next.js. You’ll build essential skills for effective data manipulation, authentication, and file storage, as well as master Supabase's advanced capabilities including automating tasks with cron scheduling, performing similarity searches with artificial intelligence, testing your database, and leveraging real-time updates. By the end of the book, you'll have a deeper understanding of the platform and be able to confidently utilize Supabase in your own web applications, all thanks to David's excellent expertise.

Who is this book for?

This book is for developers looking for a hassle-free, universal solution to building robust apps using Supabase and its integration libraries. While a basic understanding of JavaScript is useful, it’s not essential as the book focuses on Supabase for creating high-performance web apps using Next.js. Experienced professionals from non-JavaScript backgrounds will find this book useful. Familiarity with Postgres, although helpful, is not mandatory as the book explains all the SQL statements used.

What you will learn

  • Explore essential features for effective web app development
  • Handle user registration, login/logout processes, and user metadata
  • Navigate multi-tenant applications and understand the potential pitfalls and best practices
  • Discover how to implement real-time functionality
  • Find out how to upload, download, and manipulate files
  • Explore preventive measures against data manipulation and security breaches, ensuring robust web app security
  • Increase efficiency and streamline task automation through personalized email communication, webhooks, and cron jobs

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Publication date : Aug 09, 2024
Length: 534 pages
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Table of Contents

19 Chapters
Part 1:Creating the Foundations of the Ticket System App Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 1: Unveiling the Inner Workings of Supabase and Introducing the Book’s Project Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 2: Setting Up Supabase with Next.js Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 3: Creating the Ticket Management Pages, Layout, and Components Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Part 2: Adding Multi-Tenancy and Learning RLS Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 4: Adding Authentication and Application Protection Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 5: Crafting Multi-Tenancy through Database and App Design Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 6: Enforcing Tenant Permissions with RLS and Handling Tenant Domains Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 7: Adding Tenant-Based Signups, including Google Login Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Part 3: Managing Tickets and Interactions Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 8: Implementing Dynamic Ticket Management Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 9: Creating a User List with RPCs and Setting Ticket Assignees Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 10: Enhancing Interactivity with Realtime Comments Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 11: Adding, Securing, and Serving File Uploads with Supabase Storage Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Part 4: Diving Deeper into Security and Advanced Features Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 12: Avoiding Unwanted Data Manipulation and Undisclosed Exposures Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 13: Adding Supabase Superpowers and Reviewing Production Hardening Tips Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Index Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Other Books You May Enjoy Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Customer reviews

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Eric Biggs Oct 03, 2024
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
Dave walks through the entire process of building real applications with Supabase. Anyone interested in using Supabase as a platform can take what they learn in this book and apply it in the real world.
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Soham Purohit Aug 16, 2024
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
I got a digital copy of this book 'Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase' and I must say, it's a game-changer! The book provides a comprehensive guide to building scalable, secure, and efficient applications using Supabase.The author's expertise shines through in the clear explanations, real-world examples, and attention to detail. I particularly appreciated the sections on database design, security, and multi-tenancy.What sets this book apart is its focus on production-grade applications, making it an invaluable resource for developers looking to build high-quality software.Whether you're new to Supabase or an experienced developer, this book has something for everyone. I highly recommend it to anyone looking to elevate their development skills.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
Amazon Customer Aug 10, 2024
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
This book is an absolute gem for anyone diving into Supabase! From start to finish, it provides a comprehensive and well-structured guide that goes beyond the basics.What truly stands out is the final chapter:"As we turn the last page of this guide, we're reminded that each topic covered opens a door to further exploration and learning." This sentiment perfectly captures the dynamic nature of Supabase and reinforces the value of the book as not just a reference, but a launchpad for deeper mastery. I now feel equipped with the knowledge and confidence to navigate the world of Supabase like a pro.Highly recommended for anyone serious about building production-grade applications with Supabase!
Amazon Verified review Amazon
Andre Thomas Sep 04, 2024
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
It has been a joy to get 🦄 David Lorenz book, Building Production-Grade Web Applications with Supabase. Before being asked to review it, I hadn’t heard about Supabase or how it could be of use to me in my profession—I’m a full stack .NET Engineer—but after reading the first few pages, I realized that this was a technology that I could use on personal and professional projects.What I particularly love about this book is how it starts. It doesn’t go right into the how but it starts with the “what” and “why”: What is Supabase? Why do I need it? And the “what” wasn’t merely a textbook definition. Lorenz walks readers through the foundation of Supabase and what it is at its core. This is especially meaningful to me because it hard for me to understand subjects and concepts without grasping its building blocks. So, after the first section, I was fully bought in and excited to see how I could implement this into my own project because, right now, and don’t tell anybody this but, I’m using a data file to populate the data on my CV site 😭. Ok maybe it’s not that bad but this book is a Godsend because I now have an easy way to implement a data layer with all the fixins.Another reason I enjoyed this read is because the examples are easy to follow and you can tell that he is aware enough to future proof this book so that it can be a helpful resource in years to come.And for all you Next.js/React.js lovers out there, his main example(s) is/are done using a Next.js project. Also a plus for me because my site is a Next.js app.I definitely recommend this book. A small price for a large investment.
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Chriko Sep 30, 2024
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
Absolutely brilliant book. David not only manages to help you create the project of the book. His way of explaining helps you to realize any complex project afterwards.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
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