* HTTPS - for localhost I dont remember the workaround, browsers have made this increasingly more complicated from recent experiences
* Service Worker - This is where I said I had maybe 60 lines of JavaScript.
If you have these three things, a browser should pick up that your sites a PWA and server running it should be irrelevant... So you MUST have a minimal amount of JavaScript, but I did it using pure vanilla JS, you dont need a fancy framework.
On that same note, there might be a tool that could inject the bare JS necessary for this, but I dont think it exists, certainly could be built.
HTTPS isn't an issue, dropping whatever the command generates onto a HTTPS supporting server isn't an issue.
I want the manifest to be automatically generated from whatever is in the directory. The service worker should download everything from the manifest at first launch. I'm ok with a download-on-demand build option, but by default it should grab everything needed. If a user installs something, it should be assumed that they can use it offline.
I feel like the tool should already exist. If it does not yet exist, it seems like there must be a reason for that that I am not aware of.
The service worker thing is a weird amount of boilerplate. Every time I go back to making a PWA, I skip through 10 search results explaining what a service worker is (idc) until I just find whatever .js code I have to copy. And it's not some trivial one-liner.
I get that in theory a PWA can do offline stuff and whatever, but 99% of the time someone is only making a PWA to make the app installable on a phone home screen.
It is not a trivial one liner no, but you need 3 events implemented in your service-worker file, then in your main.js file you register it.
Service workers are just JavaScript that runs in the background in their own process in a browser. Could think of them as separate threads. Anyway, all of that can be done in less than 20 lines of JS?
I consider it simple compared to people building React apps and making the process more complicated than it needs to be just to build a PWA.
I was able to build a PWA out of a bootstrap HTML5 web app, with minimal JS for REST calls and ag-grid population.
* Manifest file
* HTTPS - for localhost I dont remember the workaround, browsers have made this increasingly more complicated from recent experiences
* Service Worker - This is where I said I had maybe 60 lines of JavaScript.
If you have these three things, a browser should pick up that your sites a PWA and server running it should be irrelevant... So you MUST have a minimal amount of JavaScript, but I did it using pure vanilla JS, you dont need a fancy framework.
On that same note, there might be a tool that could inject the bare JS necessary for this, but I dont think it exists, certainly could be built.