Uses NX monorepo under the hood. An example Shopify application with a NestJS API backend, and a NextJS frontend.
Uses @nestjs-shopify/* packages.
The NestJS api
application is proxied via NX proxies to /api
. The api
application also contains
a global prefix to /api
.
Because we use NX proxies, we basically disable the usage of NextJS API requests in the pages/api
folder because the requests are always proxied to the backend.
This application uses Mikro-ORM for it's database. When performing offline auth, the authenticated shop gets inserted into the shops
table with an offline token. This token can then be used for webhook/background operations.
Install dependencies
npm install
Copy the example environment variables and fill in yours:
cp .env.example .env
The HOST
env var should be your full Ngrok URL eg: https://7c350f27f75f.ngrok.io
Run the migrations:
cd apps/api
npx mikro-orm schema:update -r
On terminal window 1:
npx nx run api:serve
On terminal window 2:
npx nx run web:serve
Visit https://<HOST>/?shop=<SHOP>
to start the OAuth installation procedure of your app.
The application allows for both Online and Offline authentication. But Shopify recommends using
offline
auth for only installing your application, and online
auth for loading data in your frontend.
The ProductsController
in this application that returns the total product count in Shopify, utilizes @ShopifyOnlineAuth()
decorator. That signals our application to look for online JWT tokens when calling the GET /api/products/count
route.
The frontend utilizes @shopify/app-bridge
to transparently fetch online tokens for us using the userLoggedInfetch
helper function.