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John Reilly
John Reilly

Posted on • Edited on • Originally published at johnnyreilly.com

Azure Static Web Apps: dynamic redirects with Azure Functions

Azure Static Web Apps can perform URL redirects using the routes section in the staticwebapp.config.json. However it is limited. This post will demonstrate dynamic URL redirects with Azure Functions.

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The limits of routes in staticwebapp.config.json

I recently found myself fixing up some redirects for my blog, which runs on Azure Static Web Apps. I had quite a few redirects to implement and I ended up with a very large routes section. It was so large that I exceeded the 20kb limit that affect Azure Static Web Apps.

I bemoaned this on Twitter and got some great advice from Anthony Chu who works on Azure Static Web Apps:

Tweet that reads: Your best bet today might be to use a function that handles 404 response overrides. You can do the lookup with it and return a redirect if found. There might be a small cold start on those routes but for this case maybe it’s okay.

Anthony went on to share details of an example implementation that Nuxt.js has implemented. I took this as a challenge to implement something similar for my blog. Let's see how we got on.

Adding an Azure Function to our Azure Static Web App

The first thing we need to do is add an Azure Function to our Azure Static Web App. All Static Web Apps can be backed by an Azure Function App. We can create a simple JavaScript HttpTrigger Azure Function following this guide. I used JavScript as it seemed like the simplest option. If we wanted a different language we could use one.

We're going to name the single function fallback, so it will be served up at /api/fallback. The code of the function is:

//@ts-check
const { parseURL } = require('ufo');
const routes = require('./redirects');

/**
 *
 * @param { import("@azure/functions").Context } context
 * @param { import("@azure/functions").HttpRequest } req
 */
async function fallback(context, req) {
  const originalUrl = req.headers['x-ms-original-url'];
  if (originalUrl) {
    // This URL has been proxied as there was no static file matching it.
    context.log(`x-ms-original-url: ${originalUrl}`);

    const parsedURL = parseURL(originalUrl);

    const matchedRoute = routes.find((route) =>
      parsedURL.pathname.includes(route.route)
    );

    if (matchedRoute) {
      context.log(`Redirecting ${originalUrl} to ${matchedRoute.redirect}`);

      context.res = {
        status: matchedRoute.statusCode,
        headers: { location: matchedRoute.redirect },
      };
      return;
    }
  }

  context.log(
    `No explicit redirect for ${originalUrl} so will redirect to 404`
  );

  context.res = {
    status: 302,
    headers: {
      location: originalUrl
        ? `/404?originalUrl=${encodeURIComponent(originalUrl)}`
        : '/404',
    },
  };
}

module.exports = fallback;
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What's happening here? Well, we're using the ufo package to parse the URL which we grab from the x-ms-original-url header. We then look for a match in our redirects.js, which is a big list of potential redirects.

If we find a match, we redirect based upon that match. Otherwise we redirect to the custom 404 screen in our app. And we include the original URL in the query string for visibility. (With this in place, any unhandled redirects should show up in Google Analytics etc.)

JSDoc types with @azure/functions

You'll notice that we're using JSDoc types in the above code and enabling type checking through use of // @ts-check. We're providing types to our function through the @azure/functions package which we've added as a devDependency. You don't have to do this, but it's a nice way to get some type safety.

Consuming the Azure Function from our Azure Static Web App

Now our Azure Function is in place, we need to configure our Azure Static Web App to use it. In our staticwebapp.config.json we'll make some changes:

  "navigationFallback": {
    "rewrite": "/api/fallback"
  },
  "platform": {
    "apiRuntime": "node:18"
  },
  "routes": [
    {
      "route": "/404",
      "statusCode": 404
    },
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Here we:

  • Point to our apps navigation fallback to our fallback function (/api/fallback) - this will be called whenever a URL is not matched by a static file.
  • We declare an apiRuntime of Node.js 18 - this is the version of Node.js that our Azure Function is using.
  • Whenever the /404 route is hit in our app, we ensure the status code presented is 404.
  • We remove the route redirects we had in place as these will now be handled by /api/fallback (this isn't shown in the above snippet)

Deploying our Azure Function

We need to deploy our Function, and we achieve that by tweaking the our GitHub Action that deploys our Static Web App. We add the following:

api_location: '/blog-website/api'
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And now our Azure Function will be built and deployed alongside our blog.

Testing our Azure Function

We can demonstrate this works pretty easily. Let's take a super old blog post of mine, where I upgraded to TypeScript 0.9.5 (!!!) The route has changed since I originally posted back in 2014. If we go to https://blog.johnnyreilly.com/2014/01/upgrading-to-typescript-095-personal.html (the old Blogger URL), we'll be redirected (301'd to be specific - signalling a permanent move) to https://blog.johnnyreilly.com/2014/01/09/upgrading-to-typescript-095-personal - the new URL. This is demonstrated in the following screenshot - note the location header in the response:

screenshot of redirect in Chrome Devtools

This particular redirect is driven by an entry in our redirects.js file:

  {
    route: '/2014/01/upgrading-to-typescript-095-personal.html',
    redirect: '/2014/01/09/upgrading-to-typescript-095-personal',
    statusCode: 301,
  },
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Conclusion

I'd love it if there was a way to do this without an Azure Function. Imagine a staticwebapp.config.js that could be used to configure redirects. That would be awesome. But for now, this is a pretty good solution. Thanks to Anthony Chu for the inspiration and the example. (And thanks to the Nuxt.js team for the example too!)

If you'd like to see what it looked like when this landed in this very blog, then look at this pull request.

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