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

webpack-assets-manifest

v5.2.1

Published

This Webpack plugin will generate a JSON file that matches the original filename with the hashed version.

Downloads

2,985,314

Readme

Webpack Assets Manifest

Node.js CI codecov

This webpack plugin will generate a JSON file that matches the original filename with the hashed version.

Installation

pnpm add -D webpack-assets-manifest
npm install webpack-assets-manifest -D
yarn add webpack-assets-manifest -D

New in version 5

  • Compatible with webpack 5 only (5.1+ required).
  • Supports finding asset modules.
  • Updated options schema to prevent additional properties. This helps with catching typos in option names.
  • :warning: Updated default value of the output option to be assets-manifest.json. This is to prevent confusion when working with Web app manifests or WebExtension manifests.

New in version 4

  • Requires Node 10+.

  • Compatible with webpack 4 only (4.40+ required).

  • Added options: enabled, entrypointsUseAssets, contextRelativeKeys.

  • Updated writeToDisk option to default to auto.

  • Use lock files for various operations.

  • done hook is now an AsyncSeriesHook.

  • :warning: The structure of the entrypoints data has been updated to include preload and prefetch assets. Assets for an entrypoint are now included in an assets property under the entrypoint.

    Example:

    {
      "entrypoints": {
        "main": {
          "assets": {
            "css": ["main.css"],
            "js": ["main.js"]
          },
          "prefetch": {
            "js": ["prefetch.js"]
          },
          "preload": {
            "js": ["preload.js"]
          }
        }
      }
    }

Usage

In your webpack config, require the plugin then add an instance to the plugins array.

const path = require("path");
const WebpackAssetsManifest = require("webpack-assets-manifest");

module.exports = {
  entry: {
    // Your entry points
  },
  output: {
    path: path.join(__dirname, "dist"),
    filename: "[name]-[hash].js",
    chunkFilename: "[id]-[chunkhash].js",
  },
  module: {
    // Your loader rules go here.
  },
  plugins: [
    new WebpackAssetsManifest({
      // Options go here
    }),
  ],
};

Sample output

{
  "main.js": "main-9c68d5e8de1b810a80e4.js",
  "main.css": "main-9c68d5e8de1b810a80e4.css",
  "images/logo.svg": "images/logo-b111da4f34cefce092b965ebc1078ee3.svg"
}

Options (read the schema)

enabled

Type: boolean

Default: true

Is the plugin enabled?

output

Type: string

Default: assets-manifest.json

This is where to save the manifest file relative to your webpack output.path.

assets

Type: object

Default: {}

Data is stored in this object.

Sharing data

You can share data between instances by passing in your own object in the assets option.

This is useful in multi-compiler mode.

const data = Object.create(null);

const manifest1 = new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  assets: data,
});

const manifest2 = new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  assets: data,
});

contextRelativeKeys

Type: boolean

Default: false

Keys are relative to the compiler context.

space

Type: int

Default: 2

Number of spaces to use for pretty printing.

replacer

Type: null, function, or array

Default: null

Replacer reference

You'll probably want to use the transform hook instead.

fileExtRegex

Type: regex

Default: /\.\w{2,4}\.(?:map|gz)$|\.\w+$/i

This is the regular expression used to find file extensions. You'll probably never need to change this.

writeToDisk

Type: boolean, string

Default: 'auto'

Write the manifest to disk using fs.

:warning: If you're using another language for your site and you're using webpack-dev-server to process your assets during development, you should set writeToDisk: true and provide an absolute path in output so the manifest file is actually written to disk and not kept only in memory.

sortManifest

Type: boolean, function

Default: true

The manifest is sorted alphabetically by default. You can turn off sorting by setting sortManifest: false.

If you want more control over how the manifest is sorted, you can provide your own comparison function. See the sorted example.

new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  sortManifest(a, b) {
    // Return -1, 0, or 1
  },
});

merge

Type: boolean, string

Default: false

If the output file already exists and you'd like to add to it, use merge: true. The default behavior is to use the existing keys/values without modification.

new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  output: "/path/to/manifest.json",
  merge: true,
});

If you need to customize during merge, use merge: 'customize'.

If you want to know if customize was called when merging with an existing manifest, you can check manifest.isMerging.

new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  merge: 'customize',
  customize(entry, original, manifest, asset) {
    if ( manifest.isMerging ) {
      // Do something
    }
  },
}),

publicPath

Type: string, function, boolean,

Default: null

When using publicPath: true, your webpack config output.publicPath will be used as the value prefix.

const manifest = new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  publicPath: true,
});

When using a string, it will be the value prefix. One common use is to prefix your CDN URL.

const manifest = new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  publicPath: "//cdn.example.com",
});

If you'd like to have more control, use a function. See the custom CDN example.

const manifest = new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  publicPath(filename, manifest) {
    // customize filename here
    return filename;
  },
});

entrypoints

Type: boolean

Default: false

Include compilation.entrypoints in the manifest file.

entrypointsKey

Type: string, boolean

Default: entrypoints

If this is set to false, the entrypoints will be added to the root of the manifest.

entrypointsUseAssets

Type: boolean

Default: false

Entrypoint data should use the value from assets, which means the values could be customized and not just a string file path. This new option defaults to false so the new behavior is opt-in.

integrity

Type: boolean

Default: false

Include the subresource integrity hash.

integrityHashes

Type: array

Default: [ 'sha256', 'sha384', 'sha512' ]

Hash algorithms to use when generating SRI. For browsers, the currently the allowed integrity hashes are sha256, sha384, and sha512.

Other hash algorithms can be used if your target environment is not a browser. If you were to create a tool to audit your S3 buckets for data integrity, you could use something like this example to record the md5 hashes.

integrityPropertyName

Type: string

Default: integrity

This is the property that will be set on each entry in compilation.assets, which will then be available during customize. It is customizable so that you can have multiple instances of this plugin and not have them overwrite the currentAsset.integrity property.

You'll probably only need to change this if you're using multiple instances of this plugin to create different manifests.

apply

Type: function

Default: null

Callback to run after setup is complete.

customize

Type: function

Default: null

Callback to customize each entry in the manifest.

You can use this to customize entry names for example. In the sample below, we adjust img keys so that it's easier to use them with a template engine:

new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  customize(entry) {
    if (entry.key.startsWith('img/')) {
      return { key: entry.key.split('img/')[1], value: entry.value };
    }

    return o;
  }
}

The function is called per each entry and provides you a way to intercept and rewrite each object. The result is then merged into a whole manifest.

View the example to see what else you can do with this function.

transform

Type: function

Default: null

Callback to transform the entire manifest.

done

Type: function

Default: null

Callback to run after the compilation is done and the manifest has been written.


Hooks

This plugin is using hooks from Tapable.

The apply, customize, transform, and done options are automatically tapped into the appropriate hook.

| Name | Type | Callback signature | | -------------- | ------------------- | ---------------------------------------------- | | apply | SyncHook | function(manifest){} | | customize | SyncWaterfallHook | function(entry, original, manifest, asset){} | | transform | SyncWaterfallHook | function(assets, manifest){} | | done | AsyncSeriesHook | async function(manifest, stats){} | | options | SyncWaterfallHook | function(options){} | | afterOptions | SyncHook | function(options){} |

Tapping into hooks

Tap into a hook by calling the tap method on the hook as shown below.

If you want more control over exactly what gets added to your manifest, then use the customize and transform hooks. See the customized and transformed examples.

const manifest = new WebpackAssetsManifest();

manifest.hooks.apply.tap("YourPluginName", function (manifest) {
  // Do something here
  manifest.set("some-key", "some-value");
});

manifest.hooks.customize.tap(
  "YourPluginName",
  function (entry, original, manifest, asset) {
    // customize entry here
    return entry;
  }
);

manifest.hooks.transform.tap("YourPluginName", function (assets, manifest) {
  // customize assets here
  return assets;
});

manifest.hooks.options.tap("YourPluginName", function (options) {
  // customize options here
  return options;
});

manifest.hooks.done.tap("YourPluginName", function (manifest, stats) {
  console.log(`The manifest has been written to ${manifest.getOutputPath()}`);
  console.log(`${manifest}`);
});

manifest.hooks.done.tapPromise("YourPluginName", async (manifest, stats) => {
  await yourAsyncOperation();
});

These hooks can also be set by passing them in the constructor options.

new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  done(manifest, stats) {
    console.log(`The manifest has been written to ${manifest.getOutputPath()}`);
    console.log(`${manifest}`);
  },
});

Manifest methods

If the manifest instance is passed to a hook, you can use the following methods to manage what goes into the manifest.

  • has(key)
  • get(key)
  • set(key, value)
  • setRaw(key, value)
  • delete(key)

If you want to write the manifest to another location, you can use writeTo(destination).

new WebpackAssetsManifest({
  async done(manifest) {
    await manifest.writeTo("/some/other/path/assets-manifest.json");
  },
});