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systemjs-hot-reloader-example

v1.1.3

Published

Hot Module Replacement for SystemJS

Downloads

3

Readme

systemjs-hot-reloader

npm version Build Status

Official Hot Module Replacement (HMR) for SystemJS. As you modify your source, systemjs-hot-reloader will add, remove, or swap out modules in the running application, without a page refresh (significantly speeding up development time).

systemjs-hot-reloader MUST be used in conjunction with event source such as:

systemjs-hot-reloader is a thin layer on top of systemjs-hmr, which provides the meat of the reloading logic. If you are a library author looking to integrate HMR into your library or want a better understanding of how HMR works in SystemJS then check it out.

Usage

Install with your client-side package manager (choose one)

  • jspm install --dev npm:systemjs-hot-reloader
  • yarn add --dev systemjs-hot-reloader
  • npm install --save-dev systemjs-hot-reloader

systemjs-hot-reloader requires SystemJS >0.19.x or >=0.20.8.

systemjs-hot-reloader MUST run before your application code otherwise SystemJS won't know how to resolve your app's @hot imports.

Assuming your app entry point is app.js, wrap your import statement so that you first load systemjs-hot-reloader.

<script>
    System.import('systemjs-hot-reloader').then((connect) => {
        connect()
        System.import('app.js')
    })
</script>

connect can be passed a number of custom options. To initialise a custom connection

<script>
    System.import('systemjs-hot-reloader').then((connect) => {
        connect({ host: '//localhost:1234' })
        System.import('app.js')
    })
</script>

Until SystemJS does automatically, you need to tell SystemJS how to handle the @hot imports when building your app. To do this, add the following to your jspm config file.

{
  ...
  "map": {
    ...
    "@hot": "@empty"
  }
}

systemjs-hot-reloader will automatically set SystemJS.trace = true, so you no longer need to set this manually, as with previous versions.

Production

In production, systemjs-hot-reloader maps to an empty module so you can leave the systemjs-hot-reloader import in your index.html.

State Hydration and Safe Module Unloads

As described here, state hydration is handled in the following way.

When hot module replacement is added to an application there are a few modifications we may need to make to our code base, since the assumption that your code will run exactly once has been broken.

When a new version of a module is imported it might very well want to reinitialize it's own state based on the state of the previous module instance, to deal with this case and to cleanly unload your module from the registry you can import the previous instance of your module as you would any other module, as well as export an __unload function that will be called upon System.unload, ie. when your module is reloaded.

/**
 * You can import the previous instance of your module as you would any other module.
 * On first load, module == false.
 */
import { module } from '@hot'

/**
 * Since all exports of the previous instance are available, you can simply export any state you might want to persist.
 *
 * Here we set and export the state of the file. If 'module == false' (first load),
 * then initialise the state to {}, otherwise set the state to the previously exported
 * state.
 */
export const _state = module ? module._state : {}

/**
 * If you're module needs to run some 'cleanup' code before being unloaded from the system, it can do so,
 * by exporting an `__unload` function that will be run just before the module is deleted from the registry,
 * ie. as your module is being unloaded in preparation for being reloaded.
 *
 * Here you would unsubscribe from listeners, or any other task that might cause issues in your application,
 * or prevent the module from being garbage collected.
 *
 * See SystemJS.unload API for more information.
 */
export const __unload = () => {
    console.log('Unload something (unsubscribe from listeners, disconnect from socket, etc...)')
    // force unload React components
    ReactDOM.unmountComponentAtNode(DOMNode);	// your container node
}

React

This section isn't yet finished. see https://github.com/gaearon/react-hot-loader/tree/next/docs for full instructions

If you also want the added benefit of your react component state persisting across reloads, you can use Dan Abramov's excellent react-hot-loader project, in conjunction with this one.

react-hot-loader functions as a babel transform for your react apps, so we need to add it as a babel plugin.

Install with your client-side package manager (choose one)

  • jspm install --dev npm:react-hot-loader
  • yarn add --dev react-hot-loader
  • npm install --save-dev react-hot-loader

Example Projects

Contributing

I've tried to keep both this, and systemjs-hmr as beginner friendly as possible with lots of comments. So please feel free to browse the code and contribute back to the project.

Credit

This project and the first HMR implementation was originally written by @capaj, and none of this would have been possible without Guy Bedford.