dd-webpack-service v1.0.20
Simple Webpack service for generating Webpack 1.x configuration
Getting Started
Ensure you have a package.json
(npm init
) and that the required peer dependencies are installed:
npm i react react-dom react-hot-loader@3.0.0-beta.2 babel-polyfill --save
npm i webpack --save-dev
Install the webpack service:
npm i dd-webpack-service --save-dev
Create a webpack server file, e.g. server.js
:
var path = require('path')
var webpackService = require('dd-webpack-service').webpackService
var isDevelopment = process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production'
var config = webpackService.getConfig({
isDevelopment: isDevelopment,
entry: path.resolve(__dirname, './src/index.jsx'),
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, './public'),
filename: '[name].js',
},
html: {
title: 'My App',
appMountId: 'root',
},
})
webpackService.run(config)
Create your application code in the folder referenced by your path
property set above:
// index.jsx
import 'babel-polyfill'
import React from 'react'
import { render } from 'react-dom'
import { AppContainer } from 'react-hot-loader'
import App from './App'
render(
<AppContainer>
<App />
</AppContainer>,
document.getElementById('root')
)
if (module.hot) {
module.hot.accept('./App', () => {
// If you use Webpack 2 in ES modules mode, you can
// use <App /> here rather than require() a <NextApp />.
const NextApp = require('./App').default // eslint-disable-line global-require
render(
<AppContainer>
<NextApp />
</AppContainer>,
document.getElementById('root')
)
})
}
// App.jsx
/* eslint-disable react/prefer-stateless-function */
import React, { Component } from 'react'
class App extends Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
<p>Test</p>
</div>
)
}
}
export default App
Create an npm start
script to run your server.js
in package.json
:
"scripts": {
"start": "node server.js",
...
}
Navigate to http://localhost:8080
to view your application with hot module replacement.
Note if you wish to change the default port from
8080
, then specify aport
property within the options passed towebpackService.getConfig
.
ES6/2015
You can also develop your server.js
file in ES6/2015 by using babel-node
within your package.json
start script. Install the babel-cli
package to have access to babel-node
.
npm i babel-cli --save-dev
"scripts": {
"start": "babel-node --presets es2015,stage-0,react server.js",
...
}
// server.js
import path from 'path'
import { webpackService } from 'dd-webpack-service'
const isDevelopment = process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production'
const config = webpackService.getConfig({
isDevelopment,
entry: path.resolve(__dirname, './src/index.jsx'),
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, './public'),
filename: '[name].js',
},
html: {
title: 'My App',
appMountId: 'root',
},
})
webpackService.run(config)
Webpack Production Build
To create a production build, you want to run the following build
script in your package.json
:
"build": "cross-env NODE_ENV=production webpack",
Note that
cross-env
is an npm package that allows you to set node environment variables cross platform, usenpm i cross-env --save-dev
to have access.
Webpack will need a webpack.config.js
file in the project root which exports your Webpack configuration object.
Note that an alternative to using a
webpack.config.js
file for production builds is to use the Webpack JavaScript API to run Webpack. See the React Starter Kit source code for an example of this.
If you wish to use ES6 within your webpack config file, then you need to do the following two steps:
- Call your file
webpack.config.babel.js
- Install the
babel-register
npm package (npm i babel-register --save-dev
) - Set babel presets "es2015" (and "stage-0" if you want latest features) either in a
.babelrc
file or within ababel
section in yourpackage.json
file
With these in place, you can then seperate out your Webpack options into a separate webpack.config.babel.js
file:
// webpack.config.babel.js
import webpack from 'webpack'
import { webpackService } from 'dd-webpack-service'
import options from './options'
import packages from './package.json'
const isDevelopment = process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production'
const config = webpackService.getConfig({
isDevelopment: isDevelopment,
port: 3000,
... other webpack settings here
})
// In production, use separate vendor chunk
// See https://github.com/webpack/webpack/issues/1189
if (!isDevelopment) {
config.entry = {
'js/main': options.entry,
'vendor': Object.keys(packages.dependencies)
}
config.plugins.splice(
1,
0,
new webpack.optimize.CommonsChunkPlugin('vendor', 'js/vendor.js')
)
}
export default config
The server.js
file can then be simplified to:
import { webpackService } from 'dd-webpack-service'
import config from './webpack.config.babel'
webpackService.run(config)
Testing
In order to run tests with Webpack, dd-webpack-service
uses Karma Webpack. Firstly, you can set your test
scripts within package.json
:
"scripts": {
...
"test": "karma start",
"test:watch": "npm test -- --auto-watch --no-single-run --reporters progress"
},
Next, Karma requires a karma.config.js
file which exports a function which takes the Karma config to set any Karma related options. Part of these options is a webpack
section which takes the Webpack configuration.
dd-webpack-service
provides a KarmaService
which can take a webpack configuration object, and the Karma config object, and return a Karma configuration object with sensible defaults. The dd-webpack-service
WebpackService provides a getTestConfig
function which provides a sensible Webpack test configuration.
// karma.config.js
var webpackService = require('dd-webpack-service').webpackService
var karmaService = require('dd-webpack-service').karmaService
var options = require('./options.js')
module.exports = function setKarmaConfig(config) {
const webpackConfig = webpackService.getTestConfig(options)
const karmaConfig = karmaService.getConfig(config, webpackConfig)
config.set(karmaConfig)
}
// options.js
var path = require('path')
module.exports = {
entry: path.resolve(__dirname, './demo/index.jsx'),
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, './demo'),
filename: '[name].js',
},
html: {
title: 'My App',
appMountId: 'root',
},
}
Using a separate ES5 based options.js
file allows us to share the Webpack configuration options between Karma and our webpack configuration file.
ES6 / 2015
Currently Karma configuration files do not yet support ES6/2015.
However, a workaround is to use babel-register
within your karma.conf.js
file before requiring an ES6/2015 based configuration file:
// karma.conf.js
require('babel-core/register');
module.exports = require('./karma.conf.babel').default;
// karma.conf.babel.js
import { webpackService, karmaService } from 'dd-webpack-service'
import options from './options'
export default config => {
const webpackConfig = webpackService.getTestConfig(options)
const karmaConfig = karmaService.getConfig(config, webpackConfig)
config.set(karmaConfig)
}
Note that tests should be written in
__tests__
folders and follow the*-spec.js
naming convention
Developers
For maintainers of dd-webpack-service
:
Initial Setup
npm set init.author.name "..."
npm set init.author.email "...@..."
npm set init.author.url "http://..."
npm adduser
Publishing
- Increment version in
package.json
npm run push
Note the
push
script will run the buildnpm run build
and thennpm publish
to push the package to the npm registry (https://registry.npmjs.org).
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago
8 years ago