With Vite or Webpack in Dev Mode

If you don't have Storybook in your project you can also test your theme with the dev server.

To do that, just uncomment some line in your entry point:

src/main.tsx
import { createRoot } from "react-dom/client";
import { StrictMode, lazy, Suspense } from "react";

import { getKcContextMock } from "./login/KcPageStory";

if (import.meta.env.DEV) {
    window.kcContext = getKcContextMock({
        pageId: "register.ftl",
        overrides: {}
    });
}

const KcLoginThemePage = lazy(() => import("./login/KcPage"));
const KcAccountThemePage = lazy(() => import("./account/KcPage"));

createRoot(document.getElementById("root")!).render(
    <StrictMode>
        <Suspense>
            {(() => {
                switch (window.kcContext?.themeType) {
                    case "login":
                        return <KcLoginThemePage kcContext={window.kcContext} />;
                    case "account":
                        return <KcAccountThemePage kcContext={window.kcContext} />;
                }
                return <h1>No Keycloak Context</h1>;
            })()}
        </Suspense>
    </StrictMode>
);

The pageId parameter of the getKcContextMock lets you decide what page you want to test. The overrides parameter lets you modify the default kcContext mock for the page. For example you can overwrite the kcContext.locale.currentLanguageTag to preview your page in a different language.

window.kcContext = getKcContextMock({
  pageId: "login.ftl",
  overrides: {
    locale: {
      currentLanguageTag: "zh-CN",
    },
  },
});

For rendering the Login page in Chinese.

You can then run the development server with:

npm run dev

When you're done testing, don't forget to comment back the import of the mock. Forgetting to do so will negatively impact the bundle size of your pages.