A React Starter App that displays how web developers can integrate their front end with AWS on the backend. The App interacts with AWS Cognito, API Gateway, Lambda and DynamoDB on the backend.
This sample application has been archived in favor of Amplify JS Samples. While the archived repository will still work, please go +1 this feature request for AWS Mobile React Starter Kit sample if you are looking to use this sample.
Bootstrap a React application on AWS. This sample automatically provisions a Serverless infrastructure with authentication, authorization, website hosting, API access and database operations. It also includes user registration and MFA support. The sample use case is a “Restaurant” ordering system where after a user registers and logs in they can view different restaurant menus, select items and place orders.
This starter uses the AWS Amplify JavaScript library to add cloud support to the application.
You will be building a React application with User Registration & Sign-in that allows you to perform CRUD operations against a DynamoDB table by using an Express application running in AWS Lambda. Lambda will be invoked by API Gateway using Proxy Integration with greedy paths that only authenticated users can access. The Express server is running with the AWS Serverless Express framework.
AWS Services used:
npm install -g awsmobile-cli
Create your backend resources and download the sample code inside of my-project folder.
$ awsmobile start my-project react
Finally run the app:
$ cd my-project
$ awsmobile run
Done!
To publish your application to Amazon S3 and Amazon CloudFront:
$ awsmobile publish
$ npm install
$ npm start
Done!
Federated sign-in controls for Google, Facebook and Amazon are provided in the user interface by default; however, the client ids for these providers are not valid. Dummy values are provided in the federated
object within index.js so that the user interface controls appear. You can remove any of the controls by deleting the appropriate keys from the federated
object.
You may also remove federated sign-in entirely by removing the ‘federated={federated}’ statement from the ReactDOM.render call in index.js.
Enabling federated sign-in is a three step process:
Register your application with the provider(s).
The identity providers will request information about your application, and will supply you with an application ID and other keys that your application(s) will use for authentication. Keep in mind that some providers may supply separate application IDs for multiple applications even when these applications are sharing AWS resources.
Enable the provider for your application.
There are multiple ways of enabling a federated identity provider for your application.
The AWS Mobile CLI provides commands for enabling providers.
$ awsmobile user-signin enable
$ awsmobile user-signin configure
If you select Facebook:
? Facebook App ID xxxxxxx
If you select Google:
? Google Web App Client ID xxxxxxx
? Google Android Client ID xxxxxxx
? Google iOS Client ID xxxxxxx
$awsmobile push
AWS Mobile Hub allows you to register an identity provider by accessing the User Sign-In section and selecting the provider under the Add sign-in Providers section.
The AWS Cognito and IAM Consoles allow you to register identity providers as well. Please see the respective documentation for these services.
federated
object in index.js.Links to additional information about federated identity providers may be found here.
This application is using a custom nav with it’s own logout button. However, the Authenticator component can provide a default Greetings component which displays the username and a login/logout button. You can enable this by removing the Greetings element from the Authenticator’s ‘hide’ array in index.js.
http://localhost:8080
and view the Authenticator component. Choose Sign Up Now and type in a username, password, email address and phone number.Alternatively, if you have enabled federated sign-in you can select the provider and skip to step 5.
You should recieve a 6-digit verification code via SMS. Type this into the screen and select Validate.
Now that you are registered you will be redirected to the Login page. Type in the username and password then select Login.
You will recieve another SMS verification code. This is the MFA flow upon user login. Enter the code into the screen and select Validate.
The application demonstrates both loading sample data into the database as well as listing data and navigation. As a first time user press Insert Restaurants to load sample restaurants into the application.
Now that data has been loaded select List Restaurants to display the list of restaurants that were added in the previous step. This also uses the signing process described above.
Click on the name of a restaurant to see a menu.
Press Order to place an order in the system. This will add an order entry to a DynamoDB table as well as store information in the local browser for tracking.
Press Orders in the navigation bar. You will see some information immediately from local storage and other information returned asynchronously from a call to API Gateway.
The following steps outline how you can build and deploy the application using the S3 and CloudFront resources created by the Import phase above:
Navigate to ./aws-mobile-react-sample/client
and build for production by running:
$ awsmobile publish
This will automatically run the npm run-script build
command, upload your application to Amazon S3 and Amazon CloudFront, and open your default web browser to the Amazon S3 static web hosting page.
If you are using a CI/CD process you may choose to automate this process. The following shows how to use a webpack plugin with AWS Credentials to automate deployment to S3:
./aws-mobile-react-sample/client/
directory and edit webpack.config.js file. Add the following to the top of the file:const S3Plugin = require('webpack-s3-plugin');
plugins:[]
section towards the bottom:new S3Plugin({
// Only upload css and js
include: /.*\.(css|js)/,
// s3Options are required
s3Options: {
accessKeyId: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID,
secretAccessKey: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY,
},
s3UploadOptions: {
Bucket: 'MyBucket'
}
})
NOTE: Replace the AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
and MyBucket
with appropriate values such as your account keys for automation and the S3 bucket created during the import process.
npm install --save webpack-s3-plugin
$ awsmobile publish
The Registration and Login components leverage AWS Amplify to make calls to Amazon Cognito User Pools and Amazon Cognito Federated Identities . As an example of using it in your own application first create a React application with Create React App:
npm install -g create-react-app
create-react-app my-app
cd my-app/
npm start
If the application runs successfully, copy the Auth
, configuration
and css
folders from ./aws-mobile-react-sample/client/src
to ./my-app/src
that was created by Create React App. Next copy index.js
and Main.jsx
from ./aws-mobile-react-sample/client/src
to ./my-app/src
. Edit the copied Main.jsx
so that the return()
function matches the below code:
return (
<div>
{
!logOut && (
<BrowserRouter>
<div>
<Navbar className='nav-bar' brand='WebApp' right>
<NavItem onClick={this.signOut}>Logout</NavItem>
</Navbar>
<App/>
</div>
</BrowserRouter>
)
}
{
logOut && (<AppRoute authStatus={false}/>)
}
</div>
);
Next, from your ./my-app
directory, run:
$npm install --save aws-amplify react-router-dom react-materialize react-transition-group@^1.1.3 semantic-ui-react css-loader
Edit Main.jsx and comment out the following:
//import Home from './Home';
//import Menu from './API/Menu';
//import Orders from './API/Order';
Also add import App from './App';
to the top of Main.jsx
and save the file.
Edit index.js
and replace the require('file-loader....')
statement towards the top with:
require('file-loader?name=[name].[ext]./index.html');
Finally to add the styling to the page edit ./my-app/public/index.html
and add the following to the head:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="http://fonts.googleapis.com/icon?family=Material+Icons">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/materialize/0.98.0/css/materialize.min.css">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/semantic-ui/2.2.2/semantic.min.css">
And add the following to the body:
<script src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.1.1.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/materialize/0.98.0/js/materialize.min.js"></script>
You can now run your application created with Create React App with a new login page added:
npm start
The application should start and allow you to register users and login taking you to the normal page created with Create React App.
The sample application uses API Gateway and Lambda to run an Express application which reads and writes to a DynamoDB table. Included in the sample is a helper function for making signed requests to API Gateway. We’ll show how to use this helper for making unauthenticated requests to API Gateway below and you can use the Login example above to get authenticated credentials which this sample would use.
As with the previous section first create a React application with Create React App:
npm install -g create-react-app
create-react-app my-app
cd my-app/
npm start
If you didn’t do the previous section, copy configuration
from ./aws-mobile-react-sample/client/src
to ./my-app/src
.
Edit ./my-app/src/App.js
with the following imports at the top:
import Link from 'link-react';
import { Table } from 'semantic-ui-react';
import awsmobile from './configuration/aws-exports';
import Amplify,{API} from 'aws-amplify';
Amplify.configure(awsmobile);
** NOTE: To make calls to API Gateway through AWS Amplify, you need your IdentityPoolID in aws-exports.js. For further documentation, refer to AWS Amplify
Modify the App
component like so (NOTE: you are NOT modifying the render function YET):
class App extends Component {
state = {
data: []
}
fetch = async () => {
this.setState(() => {
return {
loading: true
}
});
API.get('ReactSample','/items/restaurants')
.then(resp => {
this.setState({
data: resp
});
console.log("response is : ", resp);
})
.catch (err => console.log(err))
}
}
//render logic below
render()....more code
Now, change the render()
function like so:
render() {
return (
<div className="App">
<Link onClick={this.fetch}>
List restaurants
</Link>
<div>
<div>
{(
<Table>
<Table.Header>
<Table.Row>
<Table.HeaderCell>Name</Table.HeaderCell>
<Table.HeaderCell>Address</Table.HeaderCell>
<Table.HeaderCell>Contact</Table.HeaderCell>
<Table.HeaderCell>Rating</Table.HeaderCell>
</Table.Row>
</Table.Header>
<Table.Body>
{this.state.data.map((data, idx) =>
<Table.Row key={idx}>
<Table.Cell>{data.name}</Table.Cell>
<Table.Cell>{data.address}</Table.Cell>
<Table.Cell>{data.phone}</Table.Cell>
<Table.Cell>{data.rating}</Table.Cell>
</Table.Row>
)}
</Table.Body>
</Table>
)}
</div>
</div>
</div>
);
}
}
export default App;
Save the file. Finally install the dependencies:
npm install --save link-react semantic-ui-react
Depending on if you want to do Authenticated or UnAuthenticated requests to API Gateway, you will need the following modification:
Authenticated Requests
Note: If you are doing an authenticated, signed request you’ll also need to perform a couple more steps. First install querystring-browser
npm install --save querystring-browser@^1.0.4
Next you will need to configure this as a webpack alias:
resolve: {
extensions: ['.js', '.jsx'],
alias: {
querystring: 'querystring-browser'
}
}
For our Create React App sample you will need to modify either webpack.config.dev.js
or webpack.config.prod.js
in the ./my-app/node_modules/react-scripts/config
directory. Look for the resolve:
field inside module.exports
and add the querystring: 'querystring-browser'
entry under the alias
field.
UnAuthenticated Requests
Navigate to the API Gateway console, click on the ReactSample-MobileHub API and select Resources on the left hand side of the page. Under the /items node select ANY and then click on Method Request in the right hand side of the console. Click the dropdown labeled Authorization and select NONE. Press the Update tick box to save your changes.
In the same part of the console, select the /items/{proxy +} node followed and click ANY and then Method Request. Repeat the process of setting Authorization to NONE and saving your change.
Next deploy your changes by select Actions at the top of the page, then Deploy API and select Development as the Deployment stage. Click Deploy.
Additionally you will need to make an alteration to the ./my-app/src/App.js
by changing the this.setState()
function from:
this.setState({
data: resp
});
To:
this.setState({
data: resp.data
});
Finally, after making your modifications for either the Authenticated or UnAuthenticated request run the following command to launch your Create React App again:
npm start
Click List restaurants at the top of the page to use the AWS Amplify API component.
The sample application invokes a Lambda function running Express which will make CRUD operations to DynamoDB depending on the route which is passed from the client application. You may wish to modify this backend behavior for your own needs. The steps outline how you could add functionality to “create a Restaurant” by showing what modifications would be needed in the Lambda function and the corresponding client modifications to make the request.
* Restaurant methods *
var putCallback = function(err, data) {
if (err) {
console.log(err)
}
}
function createMenu(restaurant_id) {
var item1 = {}
item1.id = uuid.v1()
item1.restaurant_id = restaurant_id
item1.name = "Golden Ratio Bacon Skewers"
item1.description = "Fibonacci on a stick! Who doesn’t like bacon on a stick that keeps going?"
item1.photos = []
dynamoDb.put({
Item: item1,
TableName: MENU_TABLE_NAME
}, putCallback)
var item2 = {}
item2.id = uuid.v1()
item2.restaurant_id = restaurant_id
item2.name = "Abelian Cucumber Salad"
item2.description = "A cool and refreshing salad for any hot summer day."
item2.photos = []
dynamoDb.put({
Item: item2,
TableName: MENU_TABLE_NAME
}, putCallback)
var item3 = {}
item3.id = uuid.v1()
item3.restaurant_id = restaurant_id
item3.name = "Chili-Cucumber orientable Corn"
item3.description = "Feel like you’re connected to nature with corn that wraps around your belly."
item3.photos = []
dynamoDb.put({
Item: item3,
TableName: MENU_TABLE_NAME
}, putCallback)
var item4 = {}
item4.id = uuid.v1()
item4.restaurant_id = restaurant_id
item4.name = "Finite Short-Rib Fields"
item4.description = "No utensils! BBQ is finger food!"
item4.photos = []
dynamoDb.put({
Item: item4,
TableName: MENU_TABLE_NAME
}, putCallback)
var item5 = {}
item5.id = uuid.v1()
item5.restaurant_id = restaurant_id
item5.name = "Easy Fractal Salad"
item5.description = "This symmetric pasta salad features feta, artichoke hearts, and kale."
item5.photos = []
dynamoDb.put({
Item: item5,
TableName: MENU_TABLE_NAME
}, putCallback)
}
* Restaurant methods *
comment) add in a new POST route:app.post('/items/restaurants/new', function(req, res){
var restaurant = {}
restaurant.id = uuid.v1()
restaurant.name = req.body.name
restaurant.description = req.body.description
restaurant.address = req.body.address
restaurant.phone = req.body.phone
restaurant.rating =req.body.rating
dynamoDb.put({
Item: restaurant,
TableName: RESTAURANTS_TABLE_NAME
}, function(err,data){
if (err){
res.json({ message: err })
}else {
res.json({
message: "New Restaurant added!"
})
}
})
createMenu(restaurant.id)
})
Save the file and in the Mobile Hub console for your project click the Cloud Logic card. Expand the View resource details section and note the name of the Lambda function in the list for the next step.
In a terminal navigate to ./aws-mobile-react-sample/backend/lambda
and run:
zip -r lambda-archive.zip .
aws lambda update-function-code --function-name FUNCTION_NAME --zip-file fileb://lambda-archive.zip
REPLACE the FUNCTION_NAME with your Lambda function name from the previous step.
Alternatively you could click the Lambda function resource in the Mobile Hub console which opens the Lambda console and press the Upload button on that page to upload the lambda-archive.zip file.
./aws-mobile-react-sample/client/src
directory edit Home.jsx
with the following code BEFORE the render() method:newRestaurant = () => {
let body = JSON.stringify({
'name': 'New Name',
'description': 'New description',
'address': 'New address',
'phone': 'New phone',
'rating': 'New rating'
});
let requestParams = {
method: 'POST',
url: apiRestarauntUri + '/new',
headers: {'content-type': 'application/json'},
body
}
this.restResponse = restRequest(requestParams)
.then(data => {
sessionStorage.setItem('latestOrder', data.id);
console.log(data);
alert('Added successfully');
})
.catch (function(error){
console.log(error);
});
}
Note that url: apiRestarauntUri + '/new'
matches the path you made for the Express route in the Lambda function you uploaded.
return
statement of the render
method add in a new button next to the others:<Button primary onClick={this.newRestaurant}>
New Restaurant
</Button>
Save your changes and run your application again with npm start
. You should have a new button after logging in. Press New Restaurant and then List Restaurants to see the new entry in the system.
The website hosting location for this sample uses an S3 bucket as the CloudFront origin. The S3 bucket is by default configured as publicly accessable for testing purposes. To learn more about restricting this access further, see Amazon S3 Security Considerations and Amazon CloudFront Security Considerations.
This sample app uses sessionStorage to persist user tokens (accessKeyId
, secretAccessKey
and sessionToken
). They are deleted when the browser is closed and not available when new tabs are opened. You can take further actions to secure these tokens by encrypting them.
The Lambda function in this sample will read and write to DynamoDB and it’s role will be granted the appropriate permissions to perform such actions. If you wish to modify the sample to perform a more restricted set of actions see Authentication and Access Control for Amazon DynamoDB.