13

I’m trying to deploy a very basic angular app to elastic beanstalk. The project was created using the angular cli. I have not made any changes to the files in this project.

Here are the steps I took to deploy the app

  1. Executed ’ng build’ inside the root folder of my project
  2. Moved the @angular/cli dependency from devDependencies to dependencies in package.json
  3. Zipped the contents of the dist folder along with package.json
  4. Deployed zip folder to AWS EB configured with the node.js platform, node version 8.11.3, the same as my local environment.

I always end up with a ‘npm install failed’ error when I check eb-activity.log.

Am I missing something trivial here? Would really appreciate any help with deploying angular apps to EB.

3 Answers 3

15

While this does not specifically answer your question, I don't think Elastic Beanstalk is the right tool for the job. I strongly suggest hosting on a Static Website on S3, and if you want https and a custom domain name, put a CloudFront distribution in front of it.

  1. Create an S3 bucket, e.g. www.mydomainname.com

  2. Enable Static Website Hosting

  3. Set the Bucket Policy to public read

    {
        "Version": "2008-10-17",
        "Statement": [
            {
                "Sid": "PublicReadForGetBucketObjects",
                "Effect": "Allow",
                "Principal": "*",
                "Action": "s3:GetObject",
                "Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::www.mydomainname.com/*"
            }
        ]
    }
    
  4. Build the angular app locally, into a dist folder.

  5. Push the files to the website using the aws-cli

    aws s3 sync dist s3://www.mydomainname.com/

This solution will cost pennies, much lower than an Elastic Beanstalk solution (EC2, EBS, ELBs). Elastic Beanstalk is great for Monolithic apps, but their existence is numbered, and the wrong paradigm when you are talking SPA, IMO.

I know I'm pushing my luck now, but I would also strongly recommend using the Serverless Framework to build and deploy NodeJS API endpoints for your Angular App to interact with.

3
  • Exactly the solution I was looking for. Aug 22, 2020 at 14:29
  • @matt-d would a serverless deployment be possible with a framework like sails.js (in a no-frontend configuration), or is that too much for lambdas, since it has its own ORM wrapper etc.?
    – cygnus
    Apr 19, 2022 at 10:18
  • Azure has Static Web App just for this alone and it works like magic.
    – gajo357
    May 2, 2023 at 18:25
15

Follow the steps:

-- Angular app

  1. Create your Angular App
  2. Build your Angular App using ng build --prod command
  3. This will create a dist folder like 'dist/app-folder' with HTML, js, and CSS

The angular app you just built won’t work as a static website, it has to run on top of a Node.js server

-- Node.js App

  1. Created a new folder and create a Node.js project by running: npm init and follow the instructions
  2. Name entry point: (index.js) js to 'server.js'
  3. Install Express and Path using npm install express path --save command
  4. Create a file named 'server.js' into the project folder
  5. Now check the package.json file for a configuration named “main” the value should be 'server.js'
  6. Copy the Angular dist folder to Node.js app folder
  7. Open 'server.js' file paste below code
var path = require('path');        
const port = process.env.PORT ||3000;   
const app = express();

//Set the base path to the angular-test dist folder
app.use(express.static(path.join(__dirname, 'dist/yourappfolder')));

//Any routes will be redirected to the angular app
app.get('*', function(req, res) {
    res.sendFile(path.join(__dirname, 'dist/yourappfolder/index.html'));
});

//Starting server on port 8081
app.listen(port, () => {
    console.log('Server started!');
    console.log(port);
});
  1. Run Node.js project locally using 'node server.js' command
  2. The app should work on localhost:3000 port
  3. Take the dist folder, the server.js file, and the package.json file (of the server project) and compress them as a zip. DO NOT include the “node_modules” folder.
  4. Upload the zip to your AWS Elastic Beanstalk environment
  5. Browse your site

Hope this is useful!

1
  • 4
    Add const express = require('express'); at the beginning of the file. Nov 18, 2020 at 20:12
9

Got the deployment issue resolved! I used express to create a server and serve my angular app. I needed to add server.js to my dist/ folder. My server.js file looked like so

const express = require('express');
const http = require('http');

const app = express();

const port = process.env.PORT || 3001;

app.use(express.static(__dirname));

const server = http.createServer(app);

server.listen(port, ()=> console.log("Running..."));
3
  • add app.get('*', function(req, res) { res.redirect('/') }) to redirect to index.html Jan 12, 2020 at 20:30
  • tried your solution, I however fail with error binding to port 80. Though I have const port = process.env.PORT || 3001;
    – isawk
    Mar 22, 2020 at 23:12
  • Does it work for Angular Universal also? Inside my dist folder I have a folder with project's name and inside that I have two more folders, one is "Browser" and another is "Server". Could you help?
    – Rahul
    Mar 22, 2023 at 4:33

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.