storybook-builder-vite-vue2
v0.1.32
Published
A plugin to run and build Storybooks with Vite
Downloads
3,468
Readme
Storybook builder for Vite and Vue 2
Build your stories with vite for fast startup times and near-instant HMR.
Table of Contents
Installation
Requirements:
- Vite 2.5 or newer
- Storybook 6.4.0 or newer
npm install storybook-builder-vite-vue2 --save-dev
or
yarn add --dev storybook-builder-vite-vue2
or
pnpm add --save-dev storybook-builder-vite-vue2
Note: when using pnpm
, you may need to enable shamefully-hoist, until https://github.com/storybookjs/builder-vite/issues/55 can be fixed.
Usage
In your main.js
configuration file,
set core: { builder: "storybook-builder-vite-vue2" }
.
For autoreload of react stories to work, they need to have a
.stories.tsx
or.stories.jsx
file suffix. See also #53
The builder supports both development mode in Storybook, and building a static production version.
If you were previously using @storybook/manager-webpack5
, you'll need to remove it, since currently the vite builder only works with manager-webpack4
, which is the default and does not need to be installed manually.
Customize Vite config
The builder will not read your vite.config.js
file by default.
In .storybook/main.js
(or whatever your Storybook config file is named)
you can override the Vite config:
// use `mergeConfig` to recursively merge Vite options
const { mergeConfig } = require('vite');
module.exports = {
async viteFinal(config, { configType }) {
// return the customized config
return mergeConfig(config, {
// customize the Vite config here
resolve: {
alias: { foo: 'bar' },
},
});
},
// ... other options here
};
The viteFinal
function will give you config
which is
the builder's own Vite config. You can tweak this as you want,
for example to set up aliases, add new plugins etc.
The configType
variable will be either "DEVELOPMENT"
or "PRODUCTION"
.
The function should return the updated Vite configuration.
TypeScript
Configure your .storybook/main.ts
to use TypeScript:
import type { StorybookViteConfig } from '@storybook/builder-vite';
const config: StorybookViteConfig = {
// other storybook options...,
async viteFinal(config, options) {
// modify and return config
},
};
export default config;
Or alternatively, you can use named exports:
import type { ViteFinal } from '@storybook/builder-vite';
export const viteFinal: ViteFinal = async (config, options) => {
// modify and return config
};
See Customize Vite config for details about using viteFinal
.
Note about working directory
The builder will by default enable Vite's server.fs.strict
option, for increased security. The default project root
is set to the parent directory of the
storybook configuration directory. This can be overridden in viteFinal.
Getting started with Vue2 Vite project
npx sb@next init --builder storybook-builder-vite-vue2 && npm run storybook
Known issues
- HMR: saving a story file does not hot-module-reload, a full reload happens instead. HMR works correctly when saving component files.
- Prebundling: Vite restarts if it detects new dependencies which it did not know about and needs to pre-bundle. This breaks within storybook, with confusing error messages. If you see a message in your terminal like
[vite] new dependencies found:
, please add those dependencies to youroptimizeDeps.include
inviteFinal
. E.g.config.optimizeDeps.include = [...(config.optimizeDeps?.include ?? []), "storybook-dark-mode"],
. Vite 2.9.0+ may improve this behavior.
Contributing
The Vite builder cannot build itself. Are you willing to contribute?
https://github.com/storybookjs/builder-vite/issues/11
Have a look at the GitHub issues for known bugs. If you find any new bugs, feel free to create an issue or send a pull request!
Please read the How to contribute guide.
About this codebase
The code is a monorepo with the core storybook-builder-vite
package,
and examples (examples/vue
) to test the builder implementation with.
Similar to the main storybook monorepo, you need yarn to develop this builder, because the project is organized as yarn workspaces. This lets you write new code in the core builder package, and instantly use them from the example packages.