You’ll often hear developers talking about “static” vs. “dynamic” sites, or you may have heard someone use the term Jamstack. What do these terms mean, and when does a “static” site become either a Jamstack or dynamic site? These questions sound simple, but they’re more nuanced than they appear. Let’s explore these terms to gain a deeper understanding of Jamstack.
Finding the line
What’s the difference between a chair and a stool? Most people will respond that a chair has four legs and back support, whereas a stool has three legs with no back support.
OK, that’s a great starting point, but what about these?
The more stool-like a chair becomes, the fewer people will unequivocally agree that it’s a chair. Eventually, we’ll reach a point where most people agree it’s a stool rather than a chair. It may sound like a silly exercise, but if we want to have a deep appreciation of what it means to be a chair, it’s a valuable one. We find out where the limits of a chair are for most people. We also build an understanding of the gray area beyond. Eventually, we get to the point where even the biggest die-hard chair fans concede and admit there’s a stool in front of them.
As interesting as chairs are, this is an article about website delivery technology. Let’s perform this same exercise for static, dynamic, and Jamstack websites.
At a high level
When you go to a website in your browser, there’s a lot going on behind the scenes:
- Your browser performs a DNS lookup to turn the domain name into an IP address.
- It requests an HTML file from that IP address.
- The webserver sends back the requested file.
- As the browser renders the web page, it may come across a reference for an asset, such as a CSS, JavaScript, or image file. The browser then performs a request for this asset.
- This cycle continues until the browser has all the files for the web page. It’s not unusual for a single webpage to make 50+ requests.
For every request, the response from the webserver is always a static file, even on a dynamic website. You could save these files to a USB drive, email them to a friend just like any other file on your computer.
When comparing static and dynamic, we’re talking about what the webserver is doing. On a static site, the files the browser requests already exist on the webserver. The webserver sends them back exactly as they are. On a dynamic site, the response gets generated by software. This software might connect to a database to retrieve data, build a layout from template files, and add today’s date to the footer. It does all of this for every request.
That’s the foundational difference between static and dynamic websites.
Where does Jamstack fit in?
Static websites are restrictive. They’re great for informational websites; however, you can’t have any dynamic content or behavior by definition. Jamstack blurs the line between static and dynamic. The idea is to take advantage of all the things that make static websites awesome while enabling dynamic functionality where necessary.
The ‘stack’ in Jamstack is a misnomer. The truth is, Jamstack is not a stack at all. It’s a philosophy that exhibits a striking resemblance to The 5 Pillars of the AWS Well-Architected Framework. The ambiguity in the term has led to extensive community discussion about what it means to be Jamstack.
What is Jamstack?
Jamstack is a superset of static. But to truly understand Jamstack, let’s start with the seeds that led to the coining of the term.
In 2002, the late Aaron Swartz published a blog post titled “Bake, Don’t Fry.” While Aaron didn’t coin “Bake, Don’t Fry,” it’s the first time I can find someone recognizing the benefits of static websites while breaking out perceived constraints of the word.
I care about not having to maintain cranky AOLserver, Postgres and Oracle installs. I care about being able to back things up with scp. I care about not having to do any installation or configuration to move my site to a new server. I care about being platform and server independent.
If we trawl through history, we can find similar frustrations that led to Jamstack seeds:
- Ben and Mena Trott created MovableType because of a
[d]issatisfaction with existing blog CMSes — performance, stability.
- Tom Preston-Werner created Jekyll to move away from complexity:
I already knew a lot about what I didn’t want. I was tired of complicated blogging engines like WordPress and Mephisto. I wanted to write great posts, not style a zillion template pages, moderate comments all day long, and constantly lag behind the latest software release.
- Steve Francia created Hugo for performance:
The past few years this blog has [been] powered by wordpress [sic] and drupal prior to that. Both are are fine pieces of software, but over time I became increasingly disappointed with how they are both optimized for writing content even though significantly most common usage is reading content. Due to the need to load the PHP interpreter on each request it could never be considered fast and consumed a lot of memory on my VPS.
The same themes surface as you look at the origins of many early Jamstack tools:
- Reduce complexity
- Improve performance
- Reduce vendor lock-in
- Better workflows for developers
In the past 20 years, JavaScript has evolved from a language for adding small interactions to a website to becoming a platform for building rich web applications in the browser. In parallel, we’ve seen a movement of splitting large applications into smaller microservices. These two developments gave rise to a new way of building websites where you could have a static front-end decoupled from a dynamic back-end.
In 2015, Mathias Biilmann wanted to talk about this modern way of building websites but was struggling with the constricting definition of static:
We were in this space of modern static websites. That’s a really bad description of what we’re doing, right? And we kept having that problem that, talking to people about static sites, they would think about something very static. They would think about a brochure or something with no moving parts. A little one-pager or something like that.
To break out of these constraints, he coined the term “Jamstack” to talk about this new approach, and it caught on like wildfire. What was old static technology from the 90s became new again and pushed to new limits. Many developers caught on to the benefits of the Jamstack approach, which helped Jamstack grow into the thriving ecosystem it is today.
Aaron Swartz put it nicely, 13 years before Jamstack was coined: keep a strict separation between input (which needs dynamic code to be processed) and output (which can usually be baked).
In other words, decouple the front end from the back end. Prerender content whenever possible. Layer on dynamic functionality where necessary. That’s the crux of Jamstack.
The reason you might want to build a Jamstack site over a dynamic site come down to the six pillars of Jamstack:
Security
Jamstack sites have fewer moving parts and less surface area for malicious exploitation from outside sources.
Scale
Jamstack sites are static where possible. Static sites can live entirely in a CDN, making them much easier and cheaper to scale.
Performance
Serving a web page from a CDN rather than generating it from a centralized server on-demand improves the page load speed.
Maintainability
Static websites are simple. You need a webserver capable of serving files. With a dynamic site, you might need an entire team to keep a website online and fast.
Portability
Again, a static website is made up of files. As long as you find a webserver capable of serving website files, you can move your site anywhere.
Developer experience
Git workflows are a core part of software development today. With many legacy CMSs, it’s difficult to have Git development workflows. With a Jamstack site, everything is a file making it seamless to use Git.
Chris touches on some of these points in a deep-dive comparison between Jamstack and WordPress. He also compares the reasons for choosing a Jamstack architecture versus a server-side one in “Static or Not?”.
Let’s use these pillars to evaluate Jamstack use cases.
Where is the edge of static and Jamstack?
Now that we have the basics of static and Jamstack, let’s dive in and see what lies at the edge of each definition. We have four categories each edge case can fall under.
- Static – This strictly adheres to the definition of static.
- Basically static – While not precisely static, most people would call it a static site.
- Jamstack – A static frontend decoupled from a dynamic backend.
- Dynamic – Renders web pages on-demand.
Many of these use cases can be placed in multiple categories. In this exercise, we’re putting them in the most restrictive category they fit.
JavaScript interaction Static
Let’s start with an easy one. I have a static site that uses JavaScript to create a slideshow of images.
The HTML page, JavaScript, and images are all static files. All of the HTML manipulation required for the slideshow to function happens in the browser with no external influence.
Cookies Static
I have a static site that adds a banner to the top of the page using JavaScript if a cookie exists. A cookie is just a header. The rest of the files are static.
External assets Basically Static
On a web page, we can load images or JavaScript from an external source. This external source may generate these assets dynamically on request. Would that mean we have a dynamic site?
Most people, including myself, would consider this a static site because it basically is. But if we’re strict to the definition, it doesn’t fit the bill. Having any part of the page generated dynamically defiles the sacred harmony of static.
iFrames Basically Static
An inline frame allows you to embed an HTML page within another HTML page. iFrames are commonly used for embedding Google Maps, Facebook Like buttons, and YouTube videos on a webpage.
Again, most people would still consider this a static site. However, these embeds are almost always from a dynamically-generated source.
Forms Basically Static
A static site can undoubtedly have a form on it. The dilemma comes when you submit it. If you want to do something with the data, you almost certainly need a dynamic back-end. There are plenty of form submission services you can use as the action for your form.
I can see two ways to argue this:
- You’re submitting a form to an external website, and it happens to redirect back afterward. This separation means the definition of static remains intact.
- This external service is a core workflow on your website, the definition of static no longer works.
In reality, most people would still consider this a static site.
Ajax requests Jamstack
An Ajax request allows a developer to request data from an external source without reloading the page. We’re in the same boat as the above situations of relying on a third party. It’s possible the endpoint for the Ajax call is a static JSON file, but it’s more likely that it’s dynamically-generated.
The nature of how Ajax data is typically used on a website pushes it past a static website into Jamstack territory. It fits well with Jamstack as you can have a site where you prerender everything you can, then use Ajax to layer on any dynamic functionality or content on the site.
Embedded eCommerce Jamstack
There are services that allow you to add eCommerce, even to static websites. Behind the scenes, they’re essentially making Ajax requests to manage items in a shopping cart and collect payment details.
Single page application (SPA) Jamstack
The title alone puts it out of static site contention. A SPA uses Ajax calls to request data. The presentation layer lives entirely in the front end, making it Jamtastic.
Ajax call to a serverless function Jamstack
Whether the endpoint of an Ajax call is serverless with something like AWS Lambda, goes to your Kubernetes clustered Node.js back-end, or a simple PHP back-end, it doesn’t matter. The key for Jamstack is the front end is independent of the back end.
Reverse proxy in front of a webserver Static
Adding a reverse proxy in front of the webserver for a static site must make it dynamic, right? Well, not so fast. While a proxy is software that adds a dynamic element to the network, as long as the file on the server is precisely the file the browser receives, it’s still static.
A webserver, modem, and every piece of network infrastructure in between are running software. If adding a proxy makes a static site dynamic, then nothing is static.
CDN Static
A CDN is a globally-distributed reverse proxy, so it falls into the same category as a reverse proxy. CDNs often add their own headers. This still doesn’t impact the prestigious static status as the headers aren’t part of the file sitting on the server’s hard drive.
CDN in front of a dynamic site with a 200-year cache expiration time Dynamic
OK, 200 years is a long expiry time, I’ll give you that. There are two reasons this is neither a static nor Jamstack site:
- The first request isn’t cached, so it generates on demand.
- CDNs aren’t designed for persistent storage. If, after one week, you’ve only had five hits on your website, the CDN might purge your web page from the cache. It can always retrieve the web page from the origin server, which would dynamically render the response.
WordPress with a static output Static
Using a WordPress plugin like WP2Static lets you create and manage your website in WordPress and output a static website whenever something changes.
When you do this, the files the browser requests already exist on the webserver, making it a static website—a subtle but important distinction from having a CDN in front of a dynamic site.
Edge computing Dynamic
Many companies are now offering the ability to run dynamic code at the edge of a CDN. It’s a powerful concept because you can have dynamic functionality without adding latency to the user. You can even use edge computation to manipulate HTML before sending it to the client.
It comes down to how you’re using edge functions. You could use an edge function to add a header to particular requests. I would argue this is still a static site. Push much beyond this, where you’re manipulating the HTML, and you’ve crossed the dynamic boundary.
It’s hard to argue it’s a Jamstack site as it doesn’t adhere to some of the fundamental benefits: scale, maintainability, and portability. Now, you have a piece of your core infrastructure that’s changing HTML on every request, and it will only work on that particular hosting infrastructure. That’s getting pretty far away from the blissful simplicity of a static site.
One of the elegant things about Jamstack is the front end and back end are decoupled. The backend is made up of APIs that output data. They don’t know or care how the data is used. The front end is the presentation layer. It knows where to get dynamic data from and how to render it. When you break this separation of concerns, you’ve crossed into a dynamic world.
Distributed Persistent Rendering (DPR) Dynamic
DPR is a strategy to reduce long build times on large static site generator (SSG) sites. The idea is the SSG builds a subset of the most popular pages. For the rest of the pages, the SSG builds them on-demand the first time they’re requested and saves them to persistent storage. After the initial request, the page behaves precisely like the rest of the built static pages.
Long build times limit large-scale use cases from choosing Jamstack. If all the SSG tooling were GoLang-based, we probably wouldn’t need DPR. However, that’s not the direction most Jamstack tooling has taken, and build performance can be excruciatingly long on big websites.
DPR is a means to an end and a necessity for Jamstack to grow. While it allows you to use Jamstack workflows on massive websites, ironically, I don’t think you can call a site using DPR a Jamstack site. Running software on-demand to generate a web page certainly sounds dynamicy. After the first request, a page served using DPR is a static page which makes DPR “more static” than putting a CDN in front of a dynamic site. However, it’s still a dynamic site as there isn’t a separation between frontend and backend, and it’s not portable, one of the pillars of a Jamstack site.
Incremental Static Regeneration (ISR) Dynamic
ISR is a similar but subtly different strategy to DPR to reduce long build times on large SSG sites. The difference is you can revalidate individual pages periodically to mimic a dynamic site without doing an entire site build.
Requests to a page without a cached version fall back to a stale version of that page or a generic loading page.
Again, it’s an exciting technology that expands what you can do with Jamstack workflows, but dynamically generating a page on-demand sounds like something a dynamic site would do.
Flat file CMS Dynamic
A flat file CMS uses text files for content rather than a database. While flat file CMSs remove a dynamic element from the stack, it’s still dynamically rendering the response.
The lines have been drawn
Exploring and debating these edge cases gives us a better understanding of the limits of all of these terms. The point of this exercise isn’t to be dogmatic about creating static or Jamstack websites. It’s to give us a common language to talk about the tradeoffs you make as you cross the boundary from one concept to another.
There’s absolutely nothing wrong with tradeoffs either. Not everything can be a purely static website. In many cases, the trade-offs make sense. For example, let’s say the front end needs to know the country of the visitor. There are two ways to do this:
- On page load, perform an Ajax call to query the country from an API. (Jamstack)
- Use an edge function to dynamically insert a country code into the HTML on response. (Dynamic)
If having the country code is a nice-to-have and the web page doesn’t need it immediately, then the first approach is a good option. The page can be static and the API call can fail gracefully if it doesn’t work. However, if the country code is required for the page, dynamically adding it using an edge function might make more sense. It’ll be faster as you don’t need to perform a second request/response cycle.
The key is understanding the problem you’re solving and thinking through the trade-offs you’re making with different approaches. You might end up with the majority of your site Jamstack and a portion dynamic. That’s totally fine and might be necessary for your use case. Typically, the closer you can get to static, the faster, more secure, and more scalable your site will be.
This is only the beginning of the discussion, and I’d love to hear your take. Where would you draw the lines? What do static and Jamstack mean to you? Are you sitting on a chair or stool right now?
The post Static vs. Dynamic vs. Jamstack: Where’s The Line? appeared first on CSS-Tricks. You can support CSS-Tricks by being an MVP Supporter.