Build an API for your front end using Pages Functions
In this tutorial, you will build a full-stack Pages application. Your application will contain:
- A front end, built using Cloudflare Pages and the React framework.
- A JSON API, built with Pages Functions, that returns blog posts that can be retrieved and rendered in your front end.
If you prefer to work with a headless CMS rather than an API to render your blog content, refer to the headless CMS tutorial.
To begin, create a new Pages application using the React framework.
In your terminal, create a new React project called blog-frontend
using the create-react-app
command. Go into the newly created blog-frontend
directory and start a local development server:
To set up your React project:
- Install the React Router in the root of your
blog-frontend
directory.
With npm
:
With yarn
:
- Clear the contents of
src/App.js
. Copy and paste the following code to import the React Router intoApp.js
, and set up a new router with two routes:
- In the
src
directory, create a new folder calledcomponents
. - In the
components
directory, create two files:posts.js
, andpost.js
. These files will load the blog posts from your API, and render them. - Populate
posts.js
with the following code:
- Populate
post.js
with the following code:
You will now create a Pages Functions that stores your blog content and retrieves it via a JSON API.
To create the Pages Function that will act as your JSON API:
- Create a
functions
directory in yourblog-frontend
directory. - In
functions
, create a directory namedapi
. - In
api
, create aposts.js
file in theapi
directory. - Populate
posts.js
with the following code:
This code gets blog data (from data.js
, which you will make in step 8) and returns it as a JSON response from the path /api/posts
.
- In the
api
directory, create a directory namedpost
. - In the
post
directory, create adata.js
file. - Populate
data.js
with the following code. This is where your blog content, blog title, and other information about your blog lives.
- In the
post
directory, create an[[id]].js
file. - Populate
[[id]].js
with the following code:
[[id]].js
is a dynamic route which is used to accept a blog post id
.
After you have configured your Pages application and Pages Function, deploy your project using the Wrangler or via the dashboard.
In your blog-frontend
directory, run wrangler pages deploy
to deploy your project to the Cloudflare dashboard.
To deploy via the Cloudflare dashboard, you will need to create a new Git repository for your Pages project and connect your Git repository to Cloudflare. This tutorial uses GitHub as its Git provider.
Create a new GitHub repository by visiting repo.new. After creating a new repository, prepare and push your local application to GitHub by running the following commands in your terminal:
Deploy your application to Pages:
- Log in to the Cloudflare dashboard and select your account.
- In Account Home, select Workers & Pages > Create application > Pages > Connect to Git.
- Select the new GitHub repository that you created and, in the Set up builds and deployments section, provide the following information:
Configuration option | Value |
---|---|
Production branch | main |
Build command | npm run build |
Build directory | build |
After configuring your site, begin your first deploy. You should see Cloudflare Pages installing blog-frontend
, your project dependencies, and building your site.
By completing this tutorial, you have created a full-stack Pages application.
- Learn about Pages Functions routing