Vue 2 Integration

This guide covers integrating @esmx/router with Vue 2.7+. Vue 2.7 introduced built-in Composition API support, which @esmx/router-vue relies on for its composables.

Vue 2.7+ Required

@esmx/router-vue requires Vue 2.7 or later. Earlier versions of Vue 2 do not support the Composition API and are not compatible.

Installation

Install the core router and the Vue integration package:

npm install @esmx/router @esmx/router-vue

The same @esmx/router-vue package works with both Vue 2.7+ and Vue 3. It detects the Vue version automatically.

Differences from Vue 3

Before diving in, here are the key differences from the Vue 3 integration:

AspectVue 3Vue 2.7+
Plugin installationapp.use(RouterPlugin)Vue.use(RouterPlugin)
App creationcreateApp() / createSSRApp()new Vue()
Mountingapp.mount('#app')new Vue().$mount('#app')
SSR renderer@vue/server-renderervue-server-renderer
Options API accessWorks via $router / $routeWorks via $router / $route
Composition APIuseRouter() / useRoute()useRouter() / useRoute()

The route definitions, composables, and components (RouterView, RouterLink) are identical.

Step-by-Step Setup

1. Define Your Routes

Same as Vue 3 — routes are framework-agnostic:

src/routes.ts
import type { RouteConfig } from '@esmx/router';

export const routes: RouteConfig[] = [
  {
    path: '/',
    component: () => import('./layouts/MainLayout.vue'),
    children: [
      { path: '', component: () => import('./pages/Home.vue') },
      { path: 'about', component: () => import('./pages/About.vue') },
      {
        path: 'users/:id',
        component: () => import('./pages/UserProfile.vue'),
        meta: { requiresAuth: true }
      }
    ]
  }
];

2. Create the App Factory

The main difference from Vue 3 is using new Vue() instead of createApp():

src/create-app.ts
import Vue from 'vue';
import { Router } from '@esmx/router';
import { RouterPlugin, useProvideRouter } from '@esmx/router-vue';
import App from './App.vue';

// Install the plugin globally (Vue 2 style)
Vue.use(RouterPlugin);

export function createVueApp(router: Router) {
  const app = new Vue({
    setup() {
      useProvideRouter(router);
      return () => (Vue as any).h(App);
    }
  });

  return { app, router };
}

Key differences from Vue 3:

  • Vue.use(RouterPlugin) is called on the Vue constructor, not on an app instance.
  • new Vue() replaces createApp() / createSSRApp().
  • useProvideRouter(router) works the same — it must be called inside setup().

3. Client Entry

src/entry.client.ts
import { Router, RouterMode } from '@esmx/router';
import { createVueApp } from './create-app';
import { routes } from './routes';

const router = new Router({
  appId: 'app',
  mode: RouterMode.history,
  routes
});

const { app } = createVueApp(router);
app.$mount('#app');

Note: Vue 2 uses $mount() instead of mount().

4. Server Entry (SSR)

Vue 2 uses vue-server-renderer instead of @vue/server-renderer:

src/entry.server.ts
import type { RenderContext } from '@esmx/core';
import { createRenderer } from 'vue-server-renderer';
import { Router, RouterMode } from '@esmx/router';
import { createVueApp } from './create-app';
import { routes } from './routes';

const renderer = createRenderer();

export default async (rc: RenderContext) => {
  const router = new Router({
    mode: RouterMode.memory,
    base: new URL(rc.params.url, 'http://localhost'),
    routes
  });

  await router.replace(rc.params.url);

  const { app } = createVueApp(router);
  const html = await renderer.renderToString(app);

  rc.html = `<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
    <meta charset="UTF-8">
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
    ${rc.preload()}
    ${rc.css()}
</head>
<body>
    <div id="app">${html}</div>
    ${rc.importmap()}
    ${rc.moduleEntry()}
    ${rc.modulePreload()}
</body>
</html>`;
};

5. Node Entry

Use createRspackVue2App instead of createRspackVue3App:

src/entry.node.ts
import http from 'node:http';
import type { EsmxOptions } from '@esmx/core';

export default {
  async devApp(esmx) {
    return import('@esmx/rspack-vue').then((m) =>
      m.createRspackVue2App(esmx)
    );
  },

  async server(esmx) {
    const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {
      esmx.middleware(req, res, async () => {
        const rc = await esmx.render({
          params: { url: req.url }
        });
        res.end(rc.html);
      });
    });

    server.listen(3000, () => {
      console.log('Server started: http://localhost:3000');
    });
  }
} satisfies EsmxOptions;

Using the Router in Components

Vue 2.7+ supports <script setup> with the Composition API. The composables are identical to Vue 3:

src/pages/UserProfile.vue
<template>
  <div>
    <h1>User {{ route.params.id }}</h1>
    <p>Current path: {{ route.path }}</p>

    <button @click="goHome">Go Home</button>
  </div>
</template>

<script setup lang="ts">
import { useRouter, useRoute } from '@esmx/router-vue';
import { watch } from 'vue';

const router = useRouter();
const route = useRoute();

function goHome() {
  router.push('/');
}

watch(() => route.path, (newPath) => {
  console.log('Route changed to:', newPath);
});
</script>

Options API

The RouterPlugin makes this.$router and this.$route available in all components:

src/pages/About.vue
<template>
  <div>
    <h1>About</h1>
    <p>Current path: {{ $route.path }}</p>
    <button @click="navigateHome">Go Home</button>
  </div>
</template>

<script lang="ts">
import { defineComponent } from 'vue';

export default defineComponent({
  mounted() {
    console.log('Current route:', this.$route.path);
    console.log('Route params:', this.$route.params);
  },
  methods: {
    navigateHome() {
      this.$router.push('/');
    }
  }
});
</script>

These work exactly the same as in Vue 3:

src/App.vue
<template>
  <div>
    <nav>
      <RouterLink to="/">Home</RouterLink>
      <RouterLink to="/about">About</RouterLink>
      <RouterLink to="/users/42">User 42</RouterLink>
    </nav>

    <RouterView />
  </div>
</template>

RouterLink supports the same props in both Vue 2 and Vue 3:

  • to — Target route (string or object)
  • type — Navigation type ('push', 'replace', 'pushWindow', etc.)
  • activeClass — CSS class when route matches
  • exact — Match mode ('include', 'exact', 'route')
  • tag — HTML tag to render (default: 'a')

Project File Structure

src/
├── entry.node.ts      # Node.js server setup, dev/build config
├── entry.server.ts    # SSR rendering logic
├── entry.client.ts    # Client-side mounting and app activation
├── create-app.ts      # Shared app factory
├── routes.ts          # Route definitions
├── App.vue            # Root component
├── layouts/
│   └── MainLayout.vue
└── pages/
    ├── Home.vue
    ├── About.vue
    └── UserProfile.vue

What's Next?