SSR specifically refers to front-end frameworks (for example React, Preact, Vue, and Svelte) that support running the same application in Node.js, pre-rendering it to HTML, and finally hydrating it on the client. If you are looking for integration with traditional server-side frameworks, check out the [Backend Integration guide](./backend-integration) instead.
The following guide also assumes prior experience working with SSR in your framework of choice, and will only focus on Vite-specific integration details.
This is a low-level API meant for library and framework authors. If your goal is to create an application, make sure to check out the higher-level SSR plugins and tools at [Awesome Vite SSR section](https://github.com/vitejs/awesome-vite#ssr) first. That said, many applications are successfully built directly on top of Vite's native low-level API.
Vite provides built-in support for server-side rendering (SSR). The Vite playground contains example SSR setups for Vue 3 and React, which can be used as references for this guide:
When building an SSR app, you likely want to have full control over your main server and decouple Vite from the production environment. It is therefore recommended to use Vite in middleware mode. Here is an example with [express](https://expressjs.com/):
Here `vite` is an instance of [ViteDevServer](./api-javascript#vitedevserver). `vite.middlewares` is a [Connect](https://github.com/senchalabs/connect) instance which can be used as a middleware in any connect-compatible Node.js framework.
The next step is implementing the `*` handler to serve server-rendered HTML:
- Instead of reading the root `index.html`, use the `dist/client/index.html` as the template instead, since it contains the correct asset links to the client build.
- Instead of `await vite.ssrLoadModule('/src/entry-server.js')`, use `import('./dist/server/entry-server.js')` instead (this file is the result of the SSR build).
- Move the creation and all usage of the `vite` dev server behind dev-only conditional branches, then add static file serving middlewares to serve files from `dist/client`.
Refer to the [Vue](https://github.com/vitejs/vite/tree/main/playground/ssr-vue) and [React](https://github.com/vitejs/vite/tree/main/playground/ssr-react) demos for working setup.
The above script will now generate `dist/client/ssr-manifest.json` for the client build (Yes, the SSR manifest is generated from the client build because we want to map module IDs to client files). The manifest contains mappings of module IDs to their associated chunks and asset files.
To leverage the manifest, frameworks need to provide a way to collect the module IDs of the components that were used during a server render call.
In the production branch of `server.js` we need to read and pass the manifest to the `render` function exported by `src/entry-server.js`. This would provide us with enough information to render preload directives for files used by async routes! See [demo source](https://github.com/vitejs/vite/blob/main/playground/ssr-vue/src/entry-server.js) for full example.
If the routes and the data needed for certain routes are known ahead of time, we can pre-render these routes into static HTML using the same logic as production SSR. This can also be considered a form of Static-Site Generation (SSG). See [demo pre-render script](https://github.com/vitejs/vite/blob/main/playground/ssr-vue/prerender.js) for working example.
If a dependency needs to be transformed by Vite's pipeline, for example, because Vite features are used untranspiled in them, they can be added to [`ssr.noExternal`](../config/ssr-options.md#ssrnoexternal).
If you have configured aliases that redirects one package to another, you may want to alias the actual `node_modules` packages instead to make it work for SSR externalized dependencies. Both [Yarn](https://classic.yarnpkg.com/en/docs/cli/add/#toc-yarn-add-alias) and [pnpm](https://pnpm.js.org/en/aliases) support aliasing via the `npm:` prefix.
Some frameworks such as Vue or Svelte compiles components into different formats based on client vs. SSR. To support conditional transforms, Vite passes an additional `ssr` property in the `options` object of the following plugin hooks:
The options object in `load` and `transform` is optional, rollup is not currently using this object but may extend these hooks with additional metadata in the future.
Before Vite 2.7, this was informed to plugin hooks with a positional `ssr` param instead of using the `options` object. All major frameworks and plugins are updated but you may find outdated posts using the previous API.
The default target for the SSR build is a node environment, but you can also run the server in a Web Worker. Packages entry resolution is different for each platform. You can configure the target to be Web Worker using the `ssr.target` set to `'webworker'`.
In some cases like `webworker` runtimes, you might want to bundle your SSR build into a single JavaScript file. You can enable this behavior by setting `ssr.noExternal` to `true`. This will do two things:
- Treat all dependencies as `noExternal`
- Throw an error if any Node.js built-ins are imported
The CLI commands `$ vite dev` and `$ vite preview` can also be used for SSR apps. You can add your SSR middlewares to the development server with [`configureServer`](/guide/api-plugin#configureserver) and to the preview server with [`configurePreviewServer`](/guide/api-plugin#configurepreviewserver).
By default, Vite generates the SSR bundle in ESM. There is experimental support for configuring `ssr.format`, but it isn't recommended. Future efforts around SSR development will be based on ESM, and commonjs remain available for backward compatibility. If using ESM for SSR isn't possible in your project, you can set `legacy.buildSsrCjsExternalHeuristics: true` to generate a CJS bundle using the same [externalization heuristics of Vite v2](https://v2.vitejs.dev/guide/ssr.html#ssr-externals).