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@gravity-ui/app-builder

v0.13.1

Published

Develop and build your React client-server projects, powered by typescript and webpack

Downloads

3,636

Readme

@gravity-ui/app-builder · npm package CI

Develop and build your client-server projects, powered by typescript and webpack.

Install

npm install --save-dev @gravity-ui/app-builder

Usage

@gravity-ui/app-builder provides CLI (npx app-builder). You can view available commands with the --help flag.

Develop your project

npx app-builder dev # to view supported options add the --help flag.

Build your project

npx app-builder build # to view supported options add the --help flag.

Configuration

You can use any of these files:

  • app-builder.config.ts
  • app-builder.config.js
  • app-builder.config.json
  • app-builder property in your package.json

You can also specify a custom filename using the --config flag

TypeScript/JavaScript

import {defineConfig} from '@gravity-ui/app-builder';

export default defineConfig({
  client: {
    // client settings
  },
  server: {
    // server settings
  },
});

Conditional config

If the config needs to be conditionally determined, it can export a function instead:

import {defineConfig} from '@gravity-ui/app-builder';

export default defineConfig(
  async function (
    /** @type dev | build */
    command,
    /**
     * values specified with --env flag
     *
     * @type {[k in string]: string}
     *
     * @example
     *   With follow command:
     *       app-build dev --env=path.to.member1=value1 --env=path.to.member2=value2
     *   you get:
     *       env = {path: {to: {member1: 'value1', member2: 'value2'}}}
     */
    env,
  ) {
    return {
      verbose: command === 'dev',
      client: {
        // client settings
      },
      server: {
        // server settings
      },
    };
  },
);

export default config;

package.json

{
  "app-builder": {
    "client": {
      // client settings
    },
    "server": {
      // server settings
    }
  },
  "scripts": {
    "dev": "app-builder dev",
    "build": "app-builder build"
  }
}

Common

  • target (client | server) — select compilation unit.
  • verbose (boolean) - turn on verbose output.

Server

app-builder compiles server with typescript. Default folder for server code is src/server. There is must be file tsconfig.json

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "outDir": "../../dist/server"
  }
}

and index.ts - server entrypoint.

outDir - must be configured to place compiled files to {rootDir}/dist/server. The server is started with the command node {rootDir}/dist/server/index.js.

Options

All server settings are used only in dev mode:

  • port (number | true) — specify port that server listens. The port will be used to pass through requests from the client to the server. If set to true, the port will be selected automatically. The server is started with the command APP_PORT=${port} node dist/server/index.js --port ${port}.
  • watch (string[]) — by default app-builder monitors only src/server directory. If you need to watch other directories, specify them here.
  • watchThrottle (number) — use to add an extra throttle, or delay restarting.
  • inspect/inspectBrk (number | true) — listen for a debugging client on specified port. If specified true, try to listen on 9229.

Client

app-builder bundles client with webpack. Client code must be in src/ui folder. src/ui/entries - each file in this folder is used as entrypoint. dist/public/build is output directory for bundles.

Options

All paths must be specified relative rootDir of the project.

  • modules (string[]) — Tell webpack what directories should be searched when resolving modules. modules automatically populates with baseUrl from src/ui/tsconfig.json.
  • alias (Record<string, string>) — Create aliases to import or require certain modules more easily, more

With this {rootDir}/src/ui/tsconfig.json:

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "baseDir": ".",
    "paths": {
      "~units": ["units/*"]
    }
  }
}

modules will contain ["{rootDir}/src"] and aliases - {"~units": ["{rootDir}/src/units"]};

  • includes (string[]) — additional compilation paths. Example: includes: ['node_modules/my-lib', 'src/shared']
  • images (string[]) — Additional paths for images. Example: images: ['node_modules/my-lib/img']
  • icons (string[]) — Additional paths for svg icons. By default, all svgs with paths including icons/ will be processed. Example: icons: [node_modules/@fortawesome/fontawesome-pro/svgs]
  • publicPathPrefix (string) — publicPath prefix, will be added to /build/
  • symlinks (boolean) — Follow symbolic links while looking for a file. more
  • externals — specify dependencies that shouldn't be resolved by webpack, but should become dependencies of the resulting bundle. more
  • node — include polyfills or mocks for various node stuff. more
  • fallback — Redirect module requests when normal resolving fails. more
  • polyfill — allow enable Node.js process object polyfill.
  • hiddenSourceMap (boolean=true) - if false - source maps will be generated for prod builds
  • disableSourceMapGeneration (boolean) — disable sourcemap generation;
  • definitions — add additional options to DefinePlugin. more
  • newJsxTransform (boolean=true) — use new JSX Transform.
  • svgr (SvgrConfig) — svgr plugin options. more
  • entryFilter (string[]) — filter used entrypoints.
  • excludeFromClean (string[]) — do not clean provided paths before build.
  • forkTsCheker (false | ForkTsCheckerWebpackPluginOptions) - config for ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin more. If false, ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin will be disabled.
  • cache (boolean | FileCacheOptions | MemoryCacheOptions) — Cache the generated webpack modules and chunks to improve build speed. more
  • babelCacheDirectory (boolean | string) — Set directory for babel-loader cache (`default: node_modules/.cache/babel-loader``)
  • babel ((config: babel.TransformOptions, options: {configType: 'development' | 'production'}) => babel.TransformOptions | Promise<babel.TransformOptions>) - Allow override the default babel transform options.
  • webpack ((config: webpack.Configuration, options: {configType: 'development' | 'production'}) => webpack.Configuration | Promise<webpack.Configuration>) - Allow override the default configuration.
Dev build
  • devServer (Object) — webpack dev server options.
    • ipc (string) — the Unix socket to listen to. If ipc and port are not defined, then the socket {rootDir}/dist/run/client.sock is used.
    • port (number | true) — specify a port number to listen for requests on. If true, the free port will be selected automatically.
    • webSocketPath (string) — tells clients connected to devServer to use the provided path to connect. Default is ${publicPathPrefix}/build/sockjs-node.
    • type ('https') — allow to serve over HTTPS.
    • options (import('https').ServerOptions) — allow to provide your own certificate.
  • watchOptions — a set of options used to customize watch mode, more
    • watchPackages (boolean) - watch all changes in node_modules.
  • reactRefresh (false | (options: ReactRefreshPluginOptions) => ReactRefreshPluginOptions) — disable or configure react-refresh in dev mode, more
  • detectCircularDependencies (true | CircularDependenciesOptions) - detect modules with circular dependencies, more
  • lazyCompilation (true | LazyCompilationConfig) — enable experimental lazy compilation feature
    • true — enable feature
    • LazyCompilationConfig
      • port (number) — port where to listen to from the server
      • entries (boolean=true) — if false - disables lazy compilation for src/ui/entries folder content
Production build
  • analyzeBundle (true | statoscope) — tools to analyze bundle.
    • true — enable webpack-bundle-analyzer plugin. Report generated to dist/public/build/stats.html
    • statoscope — enable statoscope plugin. Reports generated to dist/public/build/stats.json and dist/public/build/report.json
  • reactProfiling (boolean) — use react profiler API in production, this option also disable minimization. The API is required by React developers tools for profile.
  • statoscopeConfig (Options) — @statoscope/webpack-plugin configuration options. Might be used to override the defaults. Requires analyzeBundle: statoscope.
  • cdn (CdnUploadConfig | CdnUploadConfig[]) - upload bundled client files to CDN.
    • bucket (string) — bucket name
    • prefix (string) — path to files inside the bucket
    • region (string) — AWS region or any string
    • endpoint (string) - cdn host to upload files
    • compress (boolean) - upload also gzip and brotli compressed versions of files
    • additionalPattern (string[]) — patterns for uploading additional files. By default, only files generated by webpack are loaded.
  • sentryConfig (Options) — @sentry/webpack-plugin configuration options.
Optimization
  • vendors (string[] | (defaultVendors: string[]) => string[]) — additional libraries or a function returning libraries for a vendor chunk;
  • momentTzsettings for moment-timezone (by default data is truncated);
  • contextReplacement (object)
    • highlight.js (string[]) — list of language names to include, e.g. ['javascript', 'python', 'bash'];
    • locale: (string[]=['ru']) — list of moment.js or day.js locales to include, e.g. ['de', 'es']. Locale En is always present.
  • safari10 (boolean) — Enables safari10 terser's option. Terser options
  • transformCssWithLightningCss (boolean) — use Lighting CSS to transform and minimize css instead of PostCSS and cssnano
  • terser ((options: TerserOptions) => TerserOptions) - modify or return a custom Terser options.
Monaco editor support
  • monaco (object) — use monaco-editor-webpack-plugin

    • fileName (string) — custom filename template for worker scripts.
    • languages (string[]) - include only a subset of the languages supported. If you don't need support for all languages, set needed languages explicitly, since it may significantly affect build time.
    • features (string[]) - include only a subset of the editor features.
    • customLanguages (IFeatureDefinition[]) - include custom languages (outside of the ones shipped with the monaco-editor).
WebWorker support

Web workers allow you to run JavaScript code in a separate thread from the main UI thread. This can improve the performance and responsiveness of your web application by offloading intensive tasks to the background.

To create a web worker, you need to write a script file that defines the logic of the worker. For example, this file (my.worker.ts) implements a simple function that adds two numbers and sends the result back to the main thread:

// my.worker.ts
self.onmessage = async (ev) => {
  const {a = 0, b = 0} = ev.data || {};
  const result = a + b;
  self.postMessage({
    result,
  });
};

app-builder provides built-in support for web workers for files with the .worker.[jt]s suffix. You can choose between two variants of getting web workers by setting the newWebWorkerSyntax option:

  • newWebWorkerSyntax: false (default) - use the worker-loader to import web workers. Content of worker file will be included in main bundle as blob. This variant does not support dynamic imports inside worker. For example:
// main.ts
import MyWorker from './my.worker.ts';

const worker = new MyWorker();

In this variant, you need to add some type declarations for the worker files::

// worker.d.ts
declare module '*.worker.ts' {
  class WebpackWorker extends Worker {}

  export default WebpackWorker;
}
  • newWebWorkerSyntax: true - use the webpack 5 web workers syntax to import web workers. This variant allows to use dynamic imports inside worker and load worker bundle from CDN. For example:
import {Worker} from '@gravity-ui/app-builder/worker';

const MyWorker = new Worker(new URL('./my.worker', import.meta.url));

To use the web worker in your main script, you need to communicate with it using the postMessage and onmessage methods. For example:

// main.ts

const worker = '...'; // Worker creation, first or second variant

worker.onmessage = ({data: {result}}) => {
  console.log(result);
};

worker.postMessage({a: 1, b: 2});