npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin2

v0.4.2

Published

Runs typescript type checker and linter on separate process.

Downloads

1

Readme

Fork TS Checker Webpack Plugin

Npm version Build Status

Webpack plugin that runs typescript type checker on a separate process.

Installation

This plugin requires minimum webpack 2.3, typescript 2.1 and optionally tslint 5.0

npm install --save-dev fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin

Basic webpack config (with ts-loader)

var ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin = require('fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin');

var webpackConfig = {
  context: __dirname, // to automatically find tsconfig.json
  entry: './src/index.ts',
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.tsx?$/,
        loader: 'ts-loader',
        options: {
          // disable type checker - we will use it in fork plugin
          transpileOnly: true 
        }
      }
    ]
  },
  plugins: [
    new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin()
  ]
};

Motivation

There is already similar solution - awesome-typescript-loader. You can add CheckerPlugin and delegate checker to the separate process. The problem with awesome-typescript-loader was that, in our case, it was a lot slower than ts-loader on an incremental build (~20s vs ~3s). Secondly, we use tslint and we wanted to run this, along with type checker, in a separate process. This is why we've created this plugin. To provide better performance, plugin reuses Abstract Syntax Trees between compilations and shares these trees with tslint. It can be scaled with a multi-process mode to utilize maximum CPU power.

Modules resolution

It's very important to be aware that this plugin uses typescript's, not webpack's modules resolution. It means that you have to setup tsconfig.json correctly. For example if you set files: ['./src/someFile.ts'] in tsconfig.json, this plugin will check only someFile.ts for semantic errors. It's because of performance. The goal of this plugin is to be as fast as possible. With typescript's module resolution we don't have to wait for webpack to compile files (which traverses dependency graph during compilation) - we have a full list of files from the begin.

To debug typescript's modules resolution, you can use tsc --traceResolution command.

TSLint

If you have installed tslint, you can enable it by setting tslint: true or tslint: './path/to/tslint.json'. We recommend changing defaultSeverity to a "warning" in tslint.json file. It helps to distinguish lints from typescript's diagnostics.

Options

  • tsconfig string: Path to tsconfig.json file. Default: path.resolve(compiler.options.context, './tsconfig.json').

  • tslint string | true: Path to tslint.json file or true. If true, uses path.resolve(compiler.options.context, './tslint.json'). Default: undefined.

  • watch string | string[]: Directories or files to watch by service. Not necessary but improves performance (reduces number of fs.stat calls).

  • async boolean: True by default - async: false can block webpack's emit to wait for type checker/linter and to add errors to the webpack's compilation.We recommend to set this tofalsein projects where type checking is faster than webpack's build - it's better for integration with other plugins. Another scenario where you might want to set this tofalseis if you use theoverlayfunctionality ofwebpack-dev-server`.

  • ignoreDiagnostics number[]: List of typescript diagnostic codes to ignore.

  • ignoreLints string[]: List of tslint rule names to ignore.

  • colors boolean: If false, disables built-in colors in logger messages. Default: true.

  • logger object: Logger instance. It should be object that implements method: error, warn, info. Default: console.

  • formatter 'default' | 'codeframe' | ((message: NormalizedMessage, useColors: boolean) => string): Formatter for diagnostics and lints. By default uses default formatter. You can also pass your own formatter as a function (see src/NormalizedMessage.js and src/formatter/ for api reference).

  • formatterOptions object: Options passed to formatters (currently only codeframe - see available options)

  • silent boolean: If true, logger will not be used. Default: false.

  • checkSyntacticErrors boolean: This option is useful if you're using ts-loader in happyPackMode with HappyPack or thread-loader to parallelise your builds. It will ensure that the plugin checks for both syntactic errors (eg const array = [{} {}];) and semantic errors (eg const x: number = '1';). By default the plugin only checks for semantic errors. This is because when ts-loader is used in transpileOnly mode, ts-loader will still report syntactic errors. When used in happyPackMode it does not. Default: false.

  • memoryLimit number: Memory limit for service process in MB. If service exits with allocation failed error, increase this number. Default: 2048.

  • workers number: You can split type checking to a few workers to speed-up increment build. Be careful - if you don't want to increase build time, you should keep free 1 core for build and 1 core for a system (for example system with 4 CPUs should use max 2 workers). Second thing - node doesn't share memory between workers - keep in mind that memory usage will increase. Be aware that in some scenarios increasing workers number can increase checking time. Default: ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin.ONE_CPU.

  • vue boolean: If true, the linter and compiler will process VueJs single-file-component (.vue) files. See the Vue section further down for information on how to correctly setup your project.

Pre-computed consts:

  • ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin.ONE_CPU - always use one CPU
  • ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin.ALL_CPUS - always use all CPUs (will increase build time)
  • ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin.ONE_CPU_FREE - leave only one CPU for build (probably will increase build time)
  • ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin.TWO_CPUS_FREE - recommended - leave two CPUs free (one for build, one for system)

Different behaviour in watch mode

If you turn on webpacks watch mode the fork-ts-checker-notifier-webpack-plugin will take care of logging type errors, not webpack itself. That means if you set silent: true you won't see type errors in your console in watch mode.

You can either set silent: false to show the logging from fork-ts-checker-notifier-webpack-plugin or set async: false. Now webpack itself will log type errors again, but note that this can slow down your builds depending on the size of your project.

Notifier

You may already be using the excellent webpack-notifier plugin to make build failures more obvious in the form of system notifications. There's an equivalent notifier plugin designed to work with the fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin. It is the fork-ts-checker-notifier-webpack-plugin and can be found here. This notifier deliberately has a similar API as the webpack-notifier plugin to make migration easier.

Known Issue Watching Non-Emitting Files

At present there is an issue with the plugin regarding the triggering of type-checking when a change is made in a source file that will not emit js. If you have a file which contains only interfaces and / or types then changes to it will not trigger the type checker whilst in watch mode. Sorry about that.

We hope this will be resolved in future; the issue can be tracked here.

Plugin Hooks

This plugin provides some custom webpack hooks (all are sync):

| Event name | Description | Params | |------------|-------------|--------| |fork-ts-checker-cancel| Cancellation has been requested | cancellationToken | |fork-ts-checker-waiting| Waiting for results | hasTsLint | |fork-ts-checker-service-before-start| Async plugin that can be used for delaying fork-ts-checker-service-start | - | |fork-ts-checker-service-start| Service will be started | tsconfigPath, tslintPath, watchPaths, workersNumber, memoryLimit | |fork-ts-checker-service-start-error | Cannot start service | error | |fork-ts-checker-service-out-of-memory| Service is out of memory | - | |fork-ts-checker-receive| Plugin receives diagnostics and lints from service | diagnostics, lints | |fork-ts-checker-emit| Service will add errors and warnings to webpack compilation ('build' mode) | diagnostics, lints, elapsed | |fork-ts-checker-done| Service finished type checking and webpack finished compilation ('watch' mode) | diagnostics, lints, elapsed |

Vue

  1. Turn on the vue option in the plugin in your webpack config:
    new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin({
      tslint: true,
      vue: true
    })
  1. To activate TypeScript in your .vue files, you need to ensure your script tag's language attribute is set to ts or tsx (also make sure you include the .vue extension in all your import statements as shown below):
<script lang="ts">
import Hello from '@/components/hello.vue'

// ...

</script>
  1. Ideally you are also using ts-loader (in transpileOnly mode). Your Webpack config rules may look something like this:
{
  test: /\.ts$/,
  loader: 'ts-loader',
  include: [resolve('src'), resolve('test')],
  options: {
    appendTsSuffixTo: [/\.vue$/],
    transpileOnly: true
  }
},
{
  test: /\.vue$/,
  loader: 'vue-loader',
  options: vueLoaderConfig
},
  1. Add rules to your tslint.json and they will be applied to Vue files. For example, you could apply the Standard JS rules tslint-config-standard like this:
{
    "defaultSeverity": "error",
    "extends": [
      "tslint-config-standard"
    ]
}
  1. Ensure your tsconfig.json includes .vue files:
// tsconfig.json
{
  "include": [
    "src/**/*.ts",
    "src/**/*.vue"
  ],
  "exclude": [
      "node_modules"
  ]
}
  1. It accepts any wildcard in your TypeScript configuration:
// tsconfig.json
{
  "compilerOptions": {
    
    // ...

    "baseUrl": ".",
    "paths": {
      "@/*": [
        "src/*"
      ],
      "~/*": [
        "src/*"
      ]
    }
  }
}

// In a .ts or .vue file...
import Hello from '@/components/hello.vue'
  1. If you are working in VSCode, you can get extensions Vetur and TSLint Vue to complete the developer workflow.

License

MIT