Rules of Micro-Frontends

Ruben Casas - Dec 29 '20 - - Dev Community

I always wondered how large web applications were built! I discovered the secret a while back and it became my passion. After experiencing the advantages and pains of using Micro-Frontends at scale, I have decided to document this journey and share some of the “best practices”.

This is an opinionated list of best practices when designing applications that follow the Micro-frontend pattern. Each “rule” should be examined and its benefits/downsides evaluated against your specific use case.

Zero coupling between Micro-frontends

To achieve the benefits of this architecture, accidental coupling should be avoided as much as possible; this will unlock the flexibility and scalability that the Micro-Frontend pattern has to offer as well as future-proofing your applications by allowing incremental upgrades or future complete rewrites of parts of your application.

Each Micro-frontend should be able to render in isolation or inside a container application. The data required should be loaded by each Micro-Frontend and avoid data waterfalls.

Do:

✅ Share libraries that can be swapped without affecting other Micro-frontends.
✅ Load all the data it needs to render.

Do Not:

❌ Have a centralised store/share data across different Micro-Frontends.
❌ Share libraries that are in active development.

Separate Code Bases

Each Micro-Frontend should have its own codebase and the version control of choice shouldn’t have any impact on the way the project is developed or deployed. Having all projects under a single monorepo or individual repositories is fine.

Do:

✅ Use Monorepos.
✅ Use individual repos.

 Each Micro-frontend should be deployed independently

Each Micro-Frontend should have it’s own CI / CD pipeline and be able to deploy to production on demand without any dependencies on other Micro-frontends. A common antipattern that should be avoided is “The deployment queue of hell” where different Micro-frontends are so tightly coupled that they need to be deployed in a specific order to avoid breaking the application.

Do:

✅ Have separate CI / CD pipelines.
✅ Release on demand.

Do Not:

❌ Have Release schedules.
❌ Have incremental/sequential deployments that require previous versions.

Micro-Frontends should be tested Independently

Because Micro-Frontends are required to render independently as well as inside a container application, it makes sense to also test them independently using unit and integration tests for both scenarios.

Do:

✅ Have unit and integration tests for each Micro-Frontend rendering in isolation.
✅ Run integration tests for Micro-Frontends rendering inside the container applications as part of end-to-end testing.

 Micro-Frontends should be versioned

When a new Micro-Fronted is deployed to production, the previous version should not be deleted and the new version should be tagged with a version number using semantic versioning or similar. It is up to the container applications to decide what specific version of a particular Micro-Frontend to use (Managed) or always use the latest version instead (Evergreen).

Do:

✅ Use Semantic versioning.
✅ Use a specific version or “latest”.

Do Not:

❌ Require a global deployment to change versions.
❌ Delete previous versions.

Minimal Communication.

Communication between Micro-Frontends should be minimal and simple, avoiding global state and framework-specific solutions as much as possible.

If two or more Micro-Frontends are sharing a lot of messages to provide their minimal functionality, they might be too tightly coupled and they could share a similar enough purpose that they should be considered to be integrated into one.

Do:

✅ Keep messages small and simple.
✅ Avoid state and communication frameworks if possible.

Do Not:

❌ Share state.
❌ Have unnecessary communication.

CSS should be scoped

CSS from loaded from one Micro-fronted should not affect others.

Do:

✅ Scope your CSS.
✅ Use a CSS-in-JS or namespacing library (like CSS Modules).

Do Not:

❌ Use global CSS.

Final Recommendations

✅ Try to create autonomous teams.
✅ Try to arrange your Micro-Frontends around business functionality.
✅ Reusability is a nice “side effect” not the target.
❌ Don’t Force this architectural style just because it is “new”.
❌ You don’t need multiple javascript frameworks.
❌ You don’t need a “micro-frontend framework”.
❌ Micro-Frontends don’t have to be “micro”.

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