Vite plugin and Svelte preprocessor designed to seamlessly integrate the Islands architecture into SvelteKit applications.
The islands architecture is a rendering pattern, which encourages small, focused chunks of interactivity within server-rendered web pages. The output of islands is progressively enhanced HTML, with more specificity around how the enhancement occurs. Rather than a single application being in control of full-page rendering, there are multiple entry points. The script for these "islands" of interactivity can be delivered and hydrated independently, allowing the rest of the page to be just static HTML.
For more information, check out the detailed explanation on patterns.dev.
npm i sveltekit-islands
First, for the plugin to work correctly (and for its usage to make sense in the first place), you
must enable prerender
and disable csr
globally. To do this, add these two lines to your global
layout:
// src/routes/+layout.server.(js|ts)
export const prerender = true;
export const csr = false;
Second, you must add the Vite plugin to your Vite config and the Svelte preprocessor to your Svelte
config. Additionally, you must pass { script: true }
to vitePreprocess
:
// vite.config.(js|ts)
import { sveltekit } from '@sveltejs/kit/vite';
import { defineConfig } from 'vite';
import { islandsPlugin } from 'sveltekit-islands/plugin';
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [sveltekit(), islandsPlugin()]
});
// svelte.config.js
import adapter from '@sveltejs/adapter-static';
import { vitePreprocess } from '@sveltejs/vite-plugin-svelte';
import { islandsPreprocessor } from 'sveltekit-islands/preprocessor';
/** @type {import('@sveltejs/kit').Config} */
const config = {
preprocess: [vitePreprocess({ script: true }), islandsPreprocessor()],
kit: {
adapter: adapter({
pages: 'build',
assets: 'build',
fallback: null,
precompress: false,
strict: true
})
}
};
Warning
Currently, only the static adapter is officially supported and known to be working. Feel free to open an issue if your adapter of choice doesn't work.
You're now ready to go!
To create an island, use the Island
component:
<Island
component="{YourComponent}"
props="{{ someProp: "value" }}"
<!-- any other props -->
/>
Under the hood, the Island
component makes use of
@11ty/is-land
and forwards all props to the is-land
element.
For more information on what props you can pass, check out their README.
This project makes sense for websites that are content-heavy, but are mostly static and require little interactivity sprinkled in, like landing pages, blogs, etc.
I initially hacked this together for use in my blog, where each blog post is parsed from Markdown, turned into tokens and rendered to HTML via a bunch of Svelte components. I didn't want to have client-side rendering enabled, as there is no reason for it. The content is fully static, and having client-side rendering would just affect the performance negatively, but I still wanted to add some small elements that would require client-side JS, like the copy button on the code blocks, or Turbo for improving the browsing experience for people who browse it with JavaScript enabled.
Instead of inlining script tags in the HTML for interactivity and writing plain old vanilla JavaScript, this project allows you to use Svelte components for that, mounted specifically where and when they're needed, which in my opinion is a much better experience.
As mentioned earlier, this project makes use of @11ty/is-land
for the actual islands.
This project is also heavily inspired by Geoff Rich's blog post on the topic, in which he demonstrates the basic idea. I took it a notch further by making it completely seamless.