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A starter project for building performant ECommerce applications with Next.js and React

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Jamstack ECommerce Next

Jamstack ECommerce Next provides a way to quickly get up and running with a fully configurable ECommerce site using Next.js.

Out of the box, the site uses completely static data coming from a provider at providers/inventoryProvider.js. You can update this provider to fetch data from any real API by changing the call in the getInventory function.

Home

Live preview

Click here to see a live preview.

Other Jamstack ECommerce pages

Category view

Category view

Item view

Item view

Cart view

Cart view

Admin panel

Admin panel

Getting started

  1. Clone the project
$ git clone https://github.com/jamstack-cms/jamstack-ecommerce.git
  1. Install the dependencies:
$ yarn

# or

$ npm install
  1. Run the project
$ npm run dev

# or to build

$ npm run build

Deploy to Vercel

Use the Vercel CLI

vercel

Deploy to AWS

npx serverless

About the project

Tailwind

This project is styled using Tailwind. To learn more how this works, check out the Tailwind documentation here.

Components

The main files, components, and images you may want to change / modify are:

Logo - public/logo.png
Button, ListItem, etc.. - components
Form components - components/formComponents
Context (state) - context/mainContext.js
Pages (admin, cart, checkout, index) - pages
Templates (category view, single item view, inventory views) - templates

How it works

As it is set up, inventory is fetched from a local hard coded array of inventory items. This can easily be configured to instead be fetched from a remote source like Shopify or another CMS or data source by changing the inventory provider.

Configuring inventory provider

Update utils/inventoryProvider.js with your own inventory provider.

Download images at build time

If you change the provider to fetch images from a remote source, you may choose to also download the images locally at build time to improve performance. Here is an example of some code that should work for this use case:

import fs from 'fs'
import axios from 'axios'
import path from 'path'

function getImageKey(url) {
  const split = url.split('/')
  const key = split[split.length - 1]
  const keyItems = key.split('?')
  const imageKey = keyItems[0]
  return imageKey
}

function getPathName(url, pathName = 'downloads') {
  let reqPath = path.join(__dirname, '..')
  let key = getImageKey(url)
  key = key.replace(/%/g, "")
  const rawPath = `${reqPath}/public/${pathName}/${key}`
  return rawPath
}

async function downloadImage (url) {
  return new Promise(async (resolve, reject) => {
    const path = getPathName(url)
    const writer = fs.createWriteStream(path)
    const response = await axios({
      url,
      method: 'GET',
      responseType: 'stream'
    })
    response.data.pipe(writer)
    writer.on('finish', resolve)
    writer.on('error', reject)
  })
}

export default downloadImage

You can use this function to map over the inventory data after fetching and replace the image paths with a reference to the location of the downloaded images, probably would look something like this:

await Promise.all(
  inventory.map(async (item, index) => {
    try {
      const relativeUrl = `../downloads/${item.image}`
      if (!fs.existsSync(`${__dirname}/public/downloads/${item.image}`)) {
        await downloadImage(image)
      }
      inventory[index].image = relativeUrl
    } catch (err) {
      console.log('error downloading image: ', err)
    }
  })
)

Updating with Auth / Admin panel

  1. Update pages/admin.js with sign up, sign, in, sign out, and confirm sign in methods.

  2. Update components/ViewInventory.js with methods to interact with the actual inventory API.

  3. Update components/formComponents/AddInventory.js with methods to add item to actual inventory API.

Roadmap

  • Full product and category search
  • Auto dropdown navigation for large number of categories
  • Ability to add more / more configurable metadata to item details
  • Themeing + dark mode
  • Optional user account / profiles out of the box
  • Make Admin Panel responsive
  • Have an idea or a request? Submit an issue or a pull request!

Other considerations

Server-side processing of payments

To see an example of how to process payments server-side with stripe, check out the Lambda function in the snippets folder.

Also, consider verifying totals by passing in an array of IDs into the function, calculating the total on the server, then comparing the totals to check and make sure they match.

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A starter project for building performant ECommerce applications with Next.js and React

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