@jacopkane/start-server-webpack-plugin
v2.2.5
Published
Automatically start your server once Webpack's build completes.
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start-server-webpack-plugin
Automatically start your server once Webpack's build completes.
Installation
$ npm install --save-dev start-server-webpack-plugin
Usage
In webpack.config.server.babel.js
:
import StartServerPlugin from "start-server-webpack-plugin";
export default {
// This script will be ran after building
entry: {
server: ...
},
...
plugins: [
...
// Only use this in DEVELOPMENT
new StartServerPlugin({
name: 'server.js',
nodeArgs: ['--inspect'], // allow debugging
args: ['scriptArgument1', 'scriptArgument2'], // pass args to script
signal: false | true | 'SIGUSR2', // signal to send for HMR (defaults to `false`, uses 'SIGUSR2' if `true`)
keyboard: true | false, // Allow typing 'rs' to restart the server. default: only if NODE_ENV is 'development'
}),
...
],
...
}
The name
argument in new StartServerPlugin(name)
refers to the built asset, which is named by the output options of webpack (in the example the entry server
becomes server.js
. This way, the plugin knows which entry to start in case there are several.
If you don't pass a name, the plugin will tell you the available names.
You can use nodeArgs
and args
to pass arguments to node and your script, respectively. For example, you can use this to use the node debugger.
To use Hot Module Reloading with your server code, set Webpack to "hot" mode and include the webpack/hot/poll
or webpack/hot/signal
modules. Make sure they are part of your server bundle, e.g. if you are using node-externals
put them in your whitelist. The latter module requires the signal
option.
License
MIT License 2016 © Eric Clemmons