backpack-core
v0.8.4
Published
Backpack is a minimalistic build system for Node.js
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Backpack is minimalistic build system for Node.js. Inspired by Facebook's create-react-app, Zeit's Next.js, and Remy's Nodemon, Backpack lets you create modern Node.js apps and services with zero configuration. Backpack handles all the file-watching, live-reloading, transpiling, and bundling, so you don't have to. It comes with a few ~~conventions~~ defaults (like support for the latest JavaScript awesomeness (i.e. async/await, object rest spread, and class properties)), but everything can be customized to fit your project's needs. Best of all, you can easily add Backpack to your existing Node.js project with just a single dependency.
Backpack comes with the "battery-pack included":
- Latest ES6 features (including module syntax, async/await, object rest spread)
- SUPER friendly, human readable error messages
- Live reload (on saves, add/delete file, etc.)
- Zero-config, one dependency.
HOWEVER, you can configure Backpack to your project's needs by extending the underlying Webpack 2 configuration.
How to use
Install it:
npm i backpack-core --save
and add a script to your package.json like this:
{
"scripts": {
"dev": "backpack"
}
}
After that there are just a few ~~conventions~~ defaults:
src/index.js
: the entry of your app.
...actually that's it.
You can then run your application in development mode:
npm run dev
Successful builds will show a console like this. Note: screenshot taken from running the basic example
Custom configuration
For custom advanced behavior, you can create a backpack.config.js
in the root of your project's directory (next to package.json
).
// backpack.config.js
// IMPORTANT: This file is not going through babel transformation.
// You can however use the ES2015 features supported by your Node.js version.
module.exports = {
/* config options here */
};
Customizing webpack config
To extend webpack, you can define a function that extends its config via backpack.config.js
.
// backpack.config.js
module.exports = {
webpack: (config, options, webpack) => {
// Perform customizations to config
// Important: return the modified config
return config;
},
};
Customizing babel config
To extend our usage of babel
, you can define a .babelrc
file at the root of your app. This file is optional.
If found, Backpack will consider it to be the source of truth. Thus it must define what Backpack needs as well, which is the backpack-core/babel
preset.
This is designed so that you are not surprised by modifications we could make to the default babel
configurations.
Here's an example .babelrc
file:
{
"presets": [
"backpack-core",
"stage-0"
],
}
Note: This works exactly like Next.js does.
Building for Production
Add a npm script for the build step:
{
"scripts": {
"dev": "backpack",
"build": "backpack build"
}
}
Then run the build command and start your app
npm run build
node ./build/main.js
CLI Commands
backpack dev
Runs backpack in development mode.
Your code will reload if you make edits.
You will see the build errors in the console that look like this.
backpack build
Builds the app for production to the build
folder.
It correctly bundles your production mode and optimizes the build for the best performance.
You can run your production application with the following command:
node ./build/main.js
Your application is ready to be deployed!
Note: Make sure to add the build
directory to your .gitignore
to keep compiled code out of your git repository
FAQ
Yes and No.
Yes in that they will all make your life easier.
No in that it that Backpack is focused on server-only applications. You should use create-react-app or Next.js for your frontend and then build your backend with Backpack.
Technically, yes. However, we strongly advise against it at the moment. Backpack handles file-watching and reloading in a way that will make things like webpack-hot-middleware annoying to work with.
We track V8. Since V8 has wide support for ES6 and async and await, we transpile those. Since V8 doesn’t support class decorators, we don’t transpile those.
Backpack is focused on server-only applications. We've been using it for building out Node.js backends and microservices. Under the hood, Webpack and a few other tools make the magic happen. Hence Backend + Webpack = Backpack.
Inspiration
Authors
- Jared Palmer (@jaredpalmer) - The Palmer Group
MIT License