@regru/webpack-babel-multi-target-plugin
v2.3.2
Published
A Webpack plugin that works with Babel to allow deployment of ES2015 builds targeted to modern browsers, with an ES5 fallback for legacy browsers.
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Readme
webpack-babel-multi-target-plugin
This project, inspired by Phil Walton's article
Deploying es2015 Code in Production Today,
adds tooling to simplify the additional configuration with a
Webpack plugin, BabelMultiTargetPlugin
.
Setup and Configuration
Using the plugin requires making a few small changes to your existing webpack configuration:
Replace any instances of
'babel-loader'
withBabelMultiTargetPlugin.loader()
- Do not use a
Loader
configuration object here - see Options Reference below for information on customizing options for'babel-loader'
- Do not use a
Set
resolve.mainFields
to favor modern ES modules, which allows webpack to load the most modern source possible. There are several intersecting de-facto standards flying around, so this should cover as much as possible:
mainFields: [
// rxjs and Angular Package Format
// these are generally shipped as a higher ES language level than `module`
'es2015',
'esm2015',
'fesm2015',
// current leading de-facto standard - see https://github.com/rollup/rollup/wiki/pkg.module
'module',
// previous de-facto standard, superceded by `module`, but still in use by some packages
'jsnext:main',
// Angular Package Format - lower ES level
'esm5',
'fesm5',
// standard package.json fields
'browser',
'main',
],
Add an instance of
BabelMultiTargetPlugin
to the webpack configuration'splugins
propertyBabelMultiTargetPlugin
does not require any configuration - but can be customized (see Options Reference below)Remove any
.babelrc
- see Options Reference below for setting preset optionsRemove any references to
babel-loader
from yourpackage.json
- it is a direct dependency ofwebpack-babel-multi-target-plugin
, and may cause unexpected issues if there are duplicate instances due to a version mismatchTypeScript
- Loader rules must use
BabelMultiTargetPlugin.loader()
after your compiler loader (remember, loaders are run bottom to top) - Set
tsconfig
totarget
es6 or higher
- Loader rules must use
Vue
- Replace
'vue-loader'
withBabelMultiTargetPlugin.loader('vue-loader')
- Replace
Upgrading from v1.x
- Change usages of
BabelMultiTargetPlugin.loader
toBabelMultiTargetPlugin.loader()
Usage with ES6 Dynamic Imports (including Angular "Lazy" Routes)
When using ES6's import(...)
syntax, you may use Webpack's built-in chunk naming syntax to control the naming
of the resulting chunk:
import(/* webpackChunkName: "my-dynamic-import" */'./some-other-module')
When working with imports that use an expression within the import syntax, BabelMultiTargetPlugin
adds the [resource]
tag to allow better control over the naming of the resulting chunk. The [resource]
tag will be replaced by the
relative path of the imported module, minus the file extension.
/*
* ./src/
* - plugins
* - a
* plugin.js
* - b
* plugin.js
*
*/
// ./src/loader.js
import(/* webpackChunkName: "[resource]" */`./plugins/${plugin}/plugin.js`)
In the above example, the resulting chunks for the plugin files would be (depending on the target configuration):
a-plugin.js
(legacy bundle for./src/plugins/a/plugin.js
)a-plugin.modern.js
(modern bundle for./src/plugins/a/plugin.js
)b-plugin.js
(legacy bundle for./src/plugins/b/plugin.js
)b-plugin.modern.js
(modern bundle for./src/plugins/b/plugin.js
)
Naming Angular Lazy Routes
Adding the included NamedLazyChunksPlugin
will allow similar human-friendly chunk naming for Angular lazy routes:
// webpack.config.js
const BabelMultiTargetPlugin = require('webpack-babel-multi-target-plugin').BabelMultiTargetPlugin
const NamedLazyChunksPlugin = require('webpack-babel-multi-target-plugin').NamedLazyChunksPlugin
module.exports = {
...
plugins: [
new BabelMultiTargetPlugin(),
new NamedLazyChunksPlugin(),
],
}
NamedLazyChunkPlugin
can also be used with plain ES6 Dynamic Imports as an alternative to Webpack's chunk naming
syntax.
Configuration Defaults
BabelMultiTargetPlugin
does not require any options to be set. The
default behavior is:
Generate "modern" and "legacy" bundles.
The "modern" bundle assets will have their filenames appended with
.modern
, while the "legacy" bundle assets will remain the same. This enables these assets to be deployed without breaking anything since it will still have the required polyfills."modern" browsers are the last 2 versions of each browser, excluding versions that don't support
<script type="module">
Options Reference
babel.plugins
(string[]
) - a list of Babel plugins to use.@babel/plugin-syntax-dynamic-import
is included automatically.babel.presetOptions
(BabelPresetOptions
) - options passed to@babel/preset-env
. See Babel's preset-env options documentation for more info.- Default:
{ modules: false, useBuiltIns: 'usage' }
- IMPORTANT:
modules
is forced tofalse
to avoid problems with transformed commonjs modules
- Default:
doNotTarget
(RegExp[]
) - an array ofRegExp
patterns for modules which will be excluded from targeting (see How It Works below)exclude
(RegExp[]
) - an array ofRegExp
patterns for modules which will be excluded from transpilingtargets
({ [browserProfile: string]: BabelTargetOptions }
) - a map of browser profiles to target definitions. This is used to control the transpilation for each browser target. See Configuration Defaults above for default values.targets[browserProfile].key
(string
) - Used internally to identify the target, and is appended to the filename of an asset iftagAssetsWithKey
is set totrue
. Defaults tobrowserProfile
if not set.targets[browserProfile].tagAssetsWithKey
(boolean
) - Determines whether thekey
is appended to the filename of the target's assets. Defaults totrue
for the "modern" target, andfalse
for the "legacy" target. Only one target can have this property set tofalse
.targets[browserProfile].browsers
Defines the browserslist used by@babel/preset-env
for this target.targets[browserProfile].esModule
(boolean
) - Determines whether this target can be referenced by a<script type="module">
tag. Only one target may have this property set totrue
.targets[browserProfile].noModule
(boolean
) - Determines whether this target can be referenced by a<script nomodule>
tag. Only one target may have this property set totrue
.targets[browserProfile].additionalModules
(string[]
) - An optional array of modules that will be prepended to the entry module for the target.
safari10NoModuleFix
(boolean
|'external'
,'inline'
|'inline-data'
|'inline-data-base64'
) - Embeds a polyfill/workaround to allow thenomodule
attribute to function correctly in Safari 10.1. See #9 for more information.false
- disabled (default)true
|'inline'
- adds the nomodule fix in an inline script (HtmlWebpackPlugin
only)'inline-data'
- adds the nomodule fix using a script tag with a data url (HtmlWebpackPlugin
only)'inline-data-base64'
- adds the nomodule fix using a script tag with a base64-encoded data url (HtmlWebpackPlugin
only)'external'
- adds the nomodule fix as a separate file linked with a<script src>
tag
normalizeModuleIds
: (boolean
) - EXPERIMENTAL. Removes the babel targeting query from module ids so they use what the module id would be without usingBabelMultiTargetPlugin
, and adds a check to webpack's bootstrapping code that stops bundle code from executing if it detects that webpack has already been bootstrapped elsewhere. This has the effect of preventing duplicate modules from loading in instances where the browser loads both bundles (e.g. Safari 10.1).
Configuration Examples
Basic Usage
// webpack.config.js
const BabelMultiTargetPlugin = require('webpack-babel-multi-target-plugin').BabelMultiTargetPlugin;
module.exports = {
entry: 'src/main.js',
resolve: {
mainFields: [
'es2015',
'module',
'main',
],
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.js$/,
use: [
BabelMultiTargetPlugin.loader(),
],
},
],
},
plugins: [
new BabelMultiTargetPlugin(),
],
};
TypeScript
// webpack.config.js
const BabelMultiTargetPlugin = require('webpack-babel-multi-target-plugin').BabelMultiTargetPlugin;
module.exports = {
entry: 'src/main.ts',
resolve: {
mainFields: [
'es2015',
'module',
'main',
],
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.js$/,
use: [
BabelMultiTargetPlugin.loader(),
],
},
{
test: /\.ts$/,
use: [
BabelMultiTargetPlugin.loader(),
'awesome-typescript-loader'
],
options: {
useCache: true,
cacheDirectory: 'node_modules/.cache/awesome-typescript-loader',
},
},
],
},
plugins: [
new BabelMultiTargetPlugin(),
],
};
With Options
// webpack.config.js
const BabelMultiTargetPlugin = require('webpack-babel-multi-target-plugin').BabelMultiTargetPlugin;
module.exports = {
entry: 'src/main.js',
resolve: {
mainFields: [
'es2015',
'module',
'main',
],
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.js$/,
use: [
BabelMultiTargetPlugin.loader(),
],
},
],
},
plugins: [
new BabelMultiTargetPlugin({
babel: {
// babel preset-env plugin options go here
},
// excludes the untargetable-library module from being targeted
doNotTarget: [
/node_modules\/untargetable-library/,
],
// excludes the transpiling-trouble module from being transpiled
exclude: [
/node_modules\/transpiling-trouble/
],
// swap which target gets the name appended
targets: {
// results in the "modern" bundle being output as main.js
// the default is main.modern.js
modern: {
tagAssetsWithKey: false,
},
// results in the "legacy" bundle being output as main.old-and-broke.js
// the default is main.js
legacy: {
key: 'old-and-broke',
tagAssetsWithKey: true,
},
},
}),
],
};
Don't Transpile ES5-only Libraries
Some libraries may cause runtime errors if they are transpiled - often, they will already have been transpiled by Babel as part of the author's publishing process. These errors may look like:
Cannot assign to read only property 'exports' of object '\#\<Object\>'
or
__webpack_require__(...) is not a function
These libraries most likely need to be excluded from Babel's
transpilation. While the plugin will automatically attempt to filter out
CommonJs modules, you can also specify libraries to be excluded in the
BabelMultiTargetPlugin
constructor:
new BabelMultiTargetPlugin({
exclude: [
/node_modules\/some-es5-library/,
/node_modules\/another-es5-library/,
],
});
Example Projects
Several simple use cases are provided to show how the plugin works.
Install Example Project Dependencies
# installs dependencies for all example projects; requires bash
npm run install-examples
Build the Example Projects
# builds all example projects
npm run examples
# build just the specified example projects
npm run angular-five typescript-plain
Example Project Dev Server
# builds and serves all example projects
npm start
# builds and serves just the specified example projects
npm start angular-five typescript-plain
Examples will be available at http://HOST:PORT/examples/EXAMPLE_NAME
.
How It Works
This plugin works by effectively duplicating each entry point, and giving it
a target. Each target corresponds to a browser definition that is passed
to Babel. As the compilation processes each entry point, the target filters
down from the entry point through each of its dependencies. Once the
compilation is complete, any CSS outputs are merged into a single
module so they are not duplicated (since CSS will be the same regardless
of ES supported level). If HtmlWebpackPlugin
is being used, the script tags are updated to use the appropriate
type="module"
and nomodule
attributes.
Blind Targeting
In some circumstances, such as lazy-loaded routes and modules with Angular, Vue, and ES6 dynamic imports, it may not be possible to determine the entry point of a module. In these cases, the plugin will assign the module a target on its own. It does this by creating an array of the targets, and removing and assigning one target each time it encounters a given resource.
If you encounter a BlindTargetingError
while attempting to use this
plugin, please create an issue with a simple reproduction.
Benefits
Automatically sets up your index HTML files with both "modern" and "legacy" bundles
Uses ES2015 source when available, and attempts to automatically avoid re-transpiling ES5/CommonJs code
Avoid using between 30-70 KB of polyfill code on browsers that don't need them (depends on project size and features used)
Caveats
Increased build time - since the plugin duplicates entry points, everything has to be done twice. This can be helped with appropriate cache configurations where they are available (Babel, TypeScript, etc), but it may make sense to avoid using this plugin during development.
May not play nice with hard-source-webpack-plugin
Code Splitting - Since CommonJs dependencies can be shared between "modern" and "legacy" bundles, apps with multiple entries or lazy-loaded modules may end up with a large number of "vendor" chunks.
Angular Apps: if a dependency does not provide ES modules and imports
@angular/core
as a CommonJs dependency (e.g.require('@angular/core')
), things will break, particularly when using lazy routing modules.
Testing
The output generated by this plugin is tested on the following browsers courtesy of BrowserStack:
- Chrome
- Firefox
- Edge
- Safari (including 10.1 on Mac OS and 10.3 on iOS)
- IE 11