How to Setup Phoenix LiveView

Updated for LiveView 0.11.0 – 7th April 2020

Understanding Phoenix LiveView

Phoenix LiveView has been released on Hex! Although it’s still not a stable release (at the time of writing 0.11.0), it works really well and it’s packed of cool features.

Since the first version, I’m so impressed with how easy and fast I can develop a real-time application with LiveView, without using a complex JavaScript framework.

But to me, the most important LiveView’s aspect is the productivity boost! Be able to focus on where data reside and are processed while being sure that changes are pushed to the front-end, updating the UI automatically. It really feels like magic!

In this article we see how to get started with Phoenix LiveView by creating a new Phoenix app and going through the LiveView setup.

In the next articles we’ll see how to use this setup to build a simple LiveView application called Gallery, which we’ll use to develop our first LiveView page and understand how LiveView works under the hood.

In this app the user can interact with the LiveView page and go through a gallery of images by clicking the interface buttons.

Gallery app – LiveView

Create a new Phoenix project

Let’s first create a new Phoenix project. We need the latest stable Phoenix Framework and Node.js installed.

$ mix phx.new gallery --no-ecto

Since we don’t need any database, we use the --no-ecto option. Our gallery will just be a list of image urls.

Now, how can we setup LiveView? At the moment there are no LiveView generators, so we need to manually integrate it, changing some files and macros.

:phoenix_live_view in mix.exs

Let’s start by adding the phoenix_live_view library under the mix.exs dependencies. We can set the release version we find on Hex

defp deps do [ {:phoenix, "~> 1.4.16"}, ... {:phoenix_live_view, "~> 0.11.0"} ] end

or if you prefer to try the latest committed code, you can directly use the GitHub LiveView master branch

defp deps do [ {:phoenix, "~> 1.4.16"}, ... {:phoenix_live_view, github: "phoenixframework/phoenix_live_view"} ] end

In our case, we set the 0.11.0 version and get the dependencies running mix deps.get in the terminal

$ mix deps.get ... New: phoenix_live_view 0.6.0 * Getting phoenix_live_view (Hex package)

Signing Salt in config/config.exs

Now we need to update the endpoint configuration in config/config.exs , adding the LiveView signing salt.

To generate a new salt we use the mix task

$ mix phx.gen.secret 32 LIlgBfJ9j7xLJ6Almy982/ZydK/9y0vd

# config/config.exs config :gallery, GalleryWeb.Endpoint, ... live_view: [ signing_salt: "LIlgBfJ9j7xLJ6Almy982/ZydK/9y0vd" ]

LiveView Flash plug

Then, we go in lib/gallery_web/router.ex and, in our :browser pipeline, we exchange the plug :fetch_flash with the LiveView plug :fetch_live_flash line.

# lib/gallery_web/router.ex pipeline :browser do ... plug :fetch_session # plug :fetch_flash plug :fetch_live_flash plug :protect_from_forgery ... end

Imports in lib/gallery_web.ex

We now update the lib/gallery_web.ex web file, adding some import s to the controller , view and router functions

# lib/gallery_web.ex def controller do quote do ... import Phoenix.LiveView.Controller end end def view do quote do ... import Phoenix.LiveView.Helpers end end def router do quote do ... import Phoenix.LiveView.Router end end

Socket in lib/gallery_web/endpoint.ex

Next, we expose a new socket for LiveView updates in the endpoint module lib/gallery_web/endpoint.ex . This socket is used by LiveView to send updates and receive events.

defmodule GalleryWeb.Endpoint do use Phoenix.Endpoint, otp_app: :gallery @session_options [ store: :cookie, key: "_gallery_key", signing_salt: "rWCMKEW0" ] socket "/live", Phoenix.LiveView.Socket, websocket: [connect_info: [session: @session_options]] ... end

JavaScript and CSS

Now let’s focus on the client side. At first let’s check we have the CSRF meta tag inside the <head> tag, in the layout lib/gallery_web/templates/layout/app.html.eex

<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <%= csrf_meta_tag() %> ... </head> ... </html>

then we add the LiveView JavaScript library in assets/package.json .

{ "dependencies": { ... "phoenix_live_view": "file:../deps/phoenix_live_view" } }

This library will run on the browser, updating the DOM, managing events while talking with the LiveView process on the server.

To install the new javascript dependency we’ve just added, run on the terminal

$ npm install --prefix assets

We are almost ready, we just need to add five lines of javascript code in assets/js/app.js , which starts LiveView on the client with the csrfToken taken from the CSRF meta tag

// assets/js/app.js import {Socket} from "phoenix" import LiveSocket from "phoenix_live_view" let csrfToken = document.querySelector("meta[name='csrf-token']").getAttribute("content"); let liveSocket = new LiveSocket("/live", Socket, {params: {_csrf_token: csrfToken}}) liveSocket.connect()

and import the default LiveView CSS in assets/css/app.css

/* assets/css/app.css */ @import "../../deps/phoenix_live_view/assets/css/live_view.css";

Done! Let’s see if everything works

Great, the setup is finished and LiveView is ready! Let’s see now if everything works by creating a super-simple LiveView module that renders some text.

After creating the lib/gallery_web/live directory, we open in it a new file called gallery_live.ex . In this new file we define the GalleryWeb.GalleryLive module (our LiveView page – just copy/paste the code below. We will dig into LiveView functionalities in next articles)

defmodule GalleryWeb.GalleryLive do use Phoenix.LiveView def mount(_params, _session, socket) do {:ok, socket} end def render(assigns) do ~L""" <h1>LiveView is awesome!</h1> """ end end

Inside the render/1 function we have a LiveView template that will show the message “LiveView is awesome!” on our browser.

Almost there… we just need to add a live route in our router lib/gallery_web/router.ex

# lib/gallery_web/router.ex defmodule GalleryWeb.Router do use GalleryWeb, :router ... scope "/", GalleryWeb do ... live "/gallery", GalleryLive end end

and after running the Phoenix server

$ mix phx.server [info] Running GalleryWeb.Endpoint with cowboy 2.7.0 at 0.0.0.0:4000 (http) [info] Access GalleryWeb.Endpoint at http://localhost:4000 ...

opening the page http://localhost:4000/gallery we should see our LiveView page

LiveView without layout

It works, but the result is different from what we may expect: the view is without the default layout.

Live Layouts

When working with LiveViews there are three layouts we need to consider (in templates/layouts ):

The root layout root.html.eex , which is shared between both LiveViews and regular views.

layout , which is shared between both LiveViews and regular views. The app layout app.html.eex , which is just used by regular views (not LiveView!)

layout , which is just used by regular views (not LiveView!) The live layout live.html.leex , which is used only by LiveView.

root, app and live layouts

First, we need to set our root layout in the :browser pipeline in lib/gallery_web/router.ex , using the :put_root_layout plug.

# lib/gallery_web/router.ex defmodule GalleryWeb.Router do use DemoWeb, :router pipeline :browser do ... plug :fetch_live_flash ... plug :put_root_layout, {GalleryWeb.LayoutView, :root} end ... end

Then, we move our lib/gallery_web/templates/app.html.eex layout to root.html.eex , removing the get_flash(...) part which is specific to regular views, and place <%= @inner_content %> where we want to output our views.

Root layout

<!-- lib/gallery_web/templates/root.html.eex --> <!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> ... <%= csrf_meta_tag() %> </head> <body> <header> ... </header> <%= @inner_content %> <script type="text/javascript" src="<%= Routes.static_path(@conn, "/js/app.js") %>"> </script> </body> </html>

Then we create the App layout ( lib/gallery_web/templates/app.html.eex ), just for regular views, where we copy the <main> tag with get_flash functions we had in the default layout.

<!-- lib/gallery_web/templates/app.html.eex --> <main role="main" class="container"> <p class="alert alert-info" role="alert"><%= get_flash(@conn, :info) %></p> <p class="alert alert-danger" role="alert"><%= get_flash(@conn, :error) %></p> <%= render @view_module, @view_template, assigns %> </main>

And finally the Live layout ( lib/gallery_web/templates/live.html.leex ), for our LiveViews, where we use live_flash/2 function.

<!-- lib/gallery_web/templates/live.html.leex --> <main role="main" class="container"> <p><%= live_flash(@flash, :notice) %></p> <p><%= live_flash(@flash, :error) %></p> <%= @inner_content %> </main>

Just one last thing, if we want to use this live.html layout in our GalleryLive view, we need to update our LiveView to pass the :layout option to use Phoenix.LiveView :

defmodule GalleryWeb.GalleryLive do use Phoenix.LiveView, layout: {GalleryWeb.LayoutView, "live.html"} ... end

We can now refresh our page and enjoy our LiveView with the template! If you want to know more on how layouts work with LiveView, take a look at the official Live Layout documentation.

Working LiveView page

What’s next

In the following article, the Primitives of Phoenix LiveView we explore the Phoenix LiveView primitives, understanding the magic behind LiveView while learning how we can build a simple counter.

Take also a look at the Phoenix LiveView documentation. It’s a great read which gives a solid understanding of how things work and which kind of features are available.

Another great resource is the chrismccord/phoenix_live_view_example GitHub repo, where you find easy code examples showing all the different LiveView’s features.