This is a template for building a Shopify app using the Remix framework.
Rather than cloning this repo, you can use your preferred package manager and the Shopify CLI with these steps.
Visit the shopify.dev
documentation for more details on the Remix app package.
Before you begin, you'll need the following:
- Node.js: Download and install it if you haven't already.
- Shopify Partner Account: Create an account if you don't have one.
- Test Store: Set up either a development store or a Shopify Plus sandbox store for testing your app.
If you used the CLI to create the template, you can skip this section.
Using yarn:
yarn install
Using npm:
npm install
Using pnpm:
pnpm install
Using yarn:
yarn dev
Using npm:
npm run dev
Using pnpm:
pnpm run dev
Press P to open the URL to your app. Once you click install, you can start development.
Local development is powered by the Shopify CLI. It logs into your partners account, connects to an app, provides environment variables, updates remote config, creates a tunnel and provides commands to generate extensions.
To authenticate and query data you can use the shopify
const that is exported from /app/shopify.server.js
:
export async function loader({ request }) {
const { admin } = await shopify.authenticate.admin(request);
const response = await admin.graphql(`
{
products(first: 25) {
nodes {
title
description
}
}
}`);
const {
data: {
products: { nodes },
},
} = await response.json();
return json(nodes);
}
This template comes preconfigured with examples of:
- Setting up your Shopify app in /app/shopify.server.ts
- Querying data using Graphql. Please see: /app/routes/app._index.tsx.
- Responding to mandatory webhooks in /app/routes/webhooks.tsx
Please read the documentation for @shopify/shopify-app-remix to understand what other API's are available.
This template uses Prisma to store session data, by default using an SQLite database.
The database is defined as a Prisma schema in prisma/schema.prisma
.
This use of SQLite works in production if your app runs as a single instance. The database that works best for you depends on the data your app needs and how it is queried. You can run your database of choice on a server yourself or host it with a SaaS company. Here’s a short list of databases providers that provide a free tier to get started:
Database | Type | Hosters |
---|---|---|
MySQL | SQL | Digital Ocean, Planet Scale, Amazon Aurora, Google Cloud SQL |
PostgreSQL | SQL | Digital Ocean, Amazon Aurora, Google Cloud SQL |
Redis | Key-value | Digital Ocean, Amazon MemoryDB |
MongoDB | NoSQL / Document | Digital Ocean, MongoDB Atlas |
To use one of these, you can use a different datasource provider in your schema.prisma
file, or a different SessionStorage adapter package.
Remix handles building the app for you, by running the command below with the package manager of your choice:
Using yarn:
yarn build
Using npm:
npm run build
Using pnpm:
pnpm run build
When you're ready to set up your app in production, you can follow our deployment documentation to host your app on a cloud provider like Heroku or Fly.io.
When you reach the step for setting up environment variables, you also need to set the variable NODE_ENV=production
.
Using the Vercel Preset is recommended when hosting your Shopify Remix app on Vercel. You'll also want to ensure imports that would normally come from @remix-run/node
are imported from @vercel/remix
instead. Learn more about hosting Remix apps on Vercel here.
// vite.config.ts
import { vitePlugin as remix } from "@remix-run/dev";
import { defineConfig, type UserConfig } from "vite";
import tsconfigPaths from "vite-tsconfig-paths";
+ import { vercelPreset } from '@vercel/remix/vite';
installGlobals();
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [
remix({
ignoredRouteFiles: ["**/.*"],
+ presets: [vercelPreset()],
}),
tsconfigPaths(),
],
});
If you get this error:
The table `main.Session` does not exist in the current database.
You need to create the database for Prisma. Run the setup
script in package.json
using your preferred package manager.
Embedded Shopify apps must maintain the user session, which can be tricky inside an iFrame. To avoid issues:
- Use
Link
from@remix-run/react
or@shopify/polaris
. Do not use<a>
. - Use the
redirect
helper returned fromauthenticate.admin
. Do not useredirect
from@remix-run/node
- Use
useSubmit
or<Form/>
from@remix-run/react
. Do not use a lowercase<form/>
.
This only applies if you app is embedded, which it will be by default.
Shopify apps are best when they are embedded into the Shopify Admin. This template is configured that way. If you have a reason to not embed your please make 2 changes:
- Change the
isEmbeddedApp
prop to false for theAppProvider
in/app/routes/app.jsx
- Remove any use of App Bridge APIs (
window.shopify
) from your code - Update the config for shopifyApp in
app/shopify.server.js
. PassisEmbeddedApp: false
If you change your app's scopes and authentication goes into a loop and fails with a message from Shopify that it tried too many times, you might have forgotten to update your scopes with Shopify.
To do that, you can run the deploy
CLI command.
Using yarn:
yarn deploy
Using npm:
npm run deploy
Using pnpm:
pnpm run deploy
This template registers webhooks after OAuth completes, using the afterAuth
hook when calling shopifyApp
.
The package calls that hook in 2 scenarios:
- After installing the app
- When an access token expires
During normal development, the app won't need to re-authenticate most of the time, so the subscriptions aren't updated.
To force your app to update the subscriptions, you can uninstall and reinstall it in your development store.
That will force the OAuth process and call the afterAuth
hook.
Webhooks subscriptions created in the Shopify admin will fail HMAC validation. This is because the webhook payload is not signed with your app's secret key.
Create webhook subscriptions using the shopifyApp
object instead.
Test your webhooks with the Shopify CLI or by triggering events manually in the Shopify admin(e.g. Updating the product title to trigger a PRODUCTS_UPDATE
).
By default the graphql.vscode-graphql extension for VS Code will assume that GraphQL queries or mutations are for the Shopify Admin API. This is a sensible default, but it may not be true if:
- You use another Shopify API such as the storefront API.
- You use a third party GraphQL API.
in this situation, please update the .graphqlrc.ts config.
See hosting on Vercel.
When you trigger a webhook event using the Shopify CLI, the admin
object will be undefined
. This is because the CLI triggers an event with a valid, but non-existent, shop. The admin
object is only available when the webhook is triggered by a shop that has installed the app.
Webhooks triggered by the CLI are intended for initial experimentation testing of your webhook configuration. For more information on how to test your webhooks, see the Shopify CLI documentation.
To test streaming using defer/await during local development you'll need to use the Shopify CLI slightly differently:
- First setup ngrok: https://ngrok.com/product/secure-tunnels
- Create an ngrok tunnel on port 8080:
ngrok http 8080
. - Copy the forwarding address. This should be something like:
https://f355-2607-fea8-bb5c-8700-7972-d2b5-3f2b-94ab.ngrok-free.app
- In a separate terminal run
yarn shopify app dev --tunnel-url=TUNNEL_URL:8080
replacingTUNNEL_URL
for the address you copied in step 3.
By default the CLI uses a cloudflare tunnel. Unfortunately it cloudflare tunnels wait for the Response stream to finish, then sends one chunk.
This will not affect production, since tunnels are only for local development.
Shopify apps are built on a variety of Shopify tools to create a great merchant experience.
The Remix app template comes with the following out-of-the-box functionality:
- OAuth: Installing the app and granting permissions
- GraphQL Admin API: Querying or mutating Shopify admin data
- REST Admin API: Resource classes to interact with the API
- Webhooks: Callbacks sent by Shopify when certain events occur
- AppBridge: This template uses the next generation of the Shopify App Bridge library which works in unison with previous versions.
- Polaris: Design system that enables apps to create Shopify-like experiences
This template uses Remix. The following Shopify tools are also included to ease app development:
- Shopify App Remix provides authentication and methods for interacting with Shopify APIs.
- Shopify App Bridge allows your app to seamlessly integrate your app within Shopify's Admin.
- Polaris React is a powerful design system and component library that helps developers build high quality, consistent experiences for Shopify merchants.
- Webhooks: Callbacks sent by Shopify when certain events occur
- Polaris: Design system that enables apps to create Shopify-like experiences