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I have created an app that allows users to search through tables of data, these tables pull data from a json file I have on my react app.
Long story short, the chunk files on the browser exposes this json data and although it isn't sensitive information we have had people steal the data and develop their own tools with it for financial gain. Since I work within government (council) we are trying to avoid this. blah blah blah lots of legal stuff, loop holes blah blah blah
screenshot of website source
I know this question has been asked in similar ways on this website many times but none of the options have worked for me
I have tried
create-react-app is showing all my code in production, how to hide it?
How do I hide the source code when deploying react app with firebase?
How to stop exposing source code of react in developer tools of browser?
Reactjs:How to hide node modules and webconfig in the devtools on production app?
For disabling chunks
Can I turn off create-react-app chunking mechanism?
Disabling chunks with rewire still creates chunks after npm build
How can I disable chunk(code splitting) with webpack4?
Disable file chunking with CRACO
and other external website.
I understand that disabling the chunks will affect the performance of the website but honestly I don't mind that. I just don't want it accessible to the user. I have managed to hide all of the other source code but the static folder still remains. I just need that main.chunk.js gone.
I know the answer is somewhere in my webpack.config.js file so I'll show what the code is currently. I've been tweaking at it as you can see.
// Source maps are resource heavy and can cause out of memory issue for large source files.
const shouldUseSourceMap = false;
// Some apps do not need the benefits of saving a web request, so not inlining the chunk
// makes for a smoother build process.
const shouldInlineRuntimeChunk = false;
//const shouldInlineRuntimeChunk = process.env.INLINE_RUNTIME_CHUNK !== 'false';
// Check if TypeScript is setup
const useTypeScript = fs.existsSync(paths.appTsConfig);
// style files regexes
const cssRegex = /\.css$/;
const cssModuleRegex = /\.module\.css$/;
const sassRegex = /\.(scss|sass)$/;
const sassModuleRegex = /\.module\.(scss|sass)$/;
// This is the production and development configuration.
// It is focused on developer experience, fast rebuilds, and a minimal bundle.
module.exports = function(webpackEnv) {
const isEnvDevelopment = webpackEnv === 'development';
const isEnvProduction = webpackEnv=== 'production';
// Webpack uses `publicPath` to determine where the app is being served from.
// It requires a trailing slash, or the file assets will get an incorrect path.
// In development, we always serve from the root. This makes config easier.
const publicPath = isEnvProduction
? paths.servedPath
: isEnvDevelopment && '/';
// Some apps do not use client-side routing with pushState.
// For these, "homepage" can be set to "." to enable relative asset paths.
const shouldUseRelativeAssetPaths = publicPath === './';
// `publicUrl` is just like `publicPath`, but we will provide it to our app
// as %PUBLIC_URL% in `index.html` and `process.env.PUBLIC_URL` in JavaScript.
// Omit trailing slash as %PUBLIC_URL%/xyz looks better than %PUBLIC_URL%xyz.
const publicUrl = isEnvProduction
? publicPath.slice(0, -1)
: isEnvDevelopment && '';
// Get environment variables to inject into our app.
const env = getClientEnvironment(publicUrl);
// common function to get style loaders
const getStyleLoaders = (cssOptions, preProcessor) => {
const loaders = [
isEnvDevelopment && require.resolve('style-loader'),
isEnvProduction && {
loader: MiniCssExtractPlugin.loader,
options: Object.assign(
{},
shouldUseRelativeAssetPaths ? { publicPath: '../../' } : undefined
),
},
{
loader: require.resolve('css-loader'),
options: cssOptions,
},
{
// Options for PostCSS as we reference these options twice
// Adds vendor prefixing based on your specified browser support in
// package.json
loader: require.resolve('postcss-loader'),
options: {
// Necessary for external CSS imports to work
// https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/2677
ident: 'postcss',
plugins: () => [
require('postcss-flexbugs-fixes'),
require('postcss-preset-env')({
autoprefixer: {
flexbox: 'no-2009',
},
stage: 3,
}),
],
sourceMap: isEnvProduction && shouldUseSourceMap,
},
},
].filter(Boolean);
if (preProcessor) {
loaders.push({
loader: require.resolve(preProcessor),
options: {
sourceMap: isEnvProduction && shouldUseSourceMap,
},
});
}
return loaders;
};
return {
mode: isEnvProduction ? 'none' : isEnvDevelopment && 'none',
// Stop compilation early in production
bail: isEnvProduction,
devtool: isEnvProduction
? shouldUseSourceMap
? 'source-map'
: false
: isEnvDevelopment && 'cheap-module-source-map',
// These are the "entry points" to our application.
// This means they will be the "root" imports that are included in JS bundle.
entry: [
// Include an alternative client for WebpackDevServer. A client's job is to
// connect to WebpackDevServer by a socket and get notified about changes.
// When you save a file, the client will either apply hot updates (in case
// of CSS changes), or refresh the page (in case of JS changes). When you
// make a syntax error, this client will display a syntax error overlay.
// Note: instead of the default WebpackDevServer client, we use a custom one
// to bring better experience for Create React App users. You can replace
// the line below with these two lines if you prefer the stock client:
// require.resolve('webpack-dev-server/client') + '?/',
// require.resolve('webpack/hot/dev-server'),
isEnvDevelopment &&
require.resolve('react-dev-utils/webpackHotDevClient'),
// Finally, this is your app's code:
paths.appIndexJs,
// We include the app code last so that if there is a runtime error during
// initialization, it doesn't blow up the WebpackDevServer client, and
// changing JS code would still trigger a refresh.
].filter(Boolean),
output: {
// The build folder.
},
optimization: {
minimize: isEnvProduction,
minimizer: [
// This is only used in production mode
new TerserPlugin({
terserOptions: {
parse: {
// we want terser to parse ecma 8 code. However, we don't want it
// to apply any minfication steps that turns valid ecma 5 code
// into invalid ecma 5 code. This is why the 'compress' and 'output'
// sections only apply transformations that are ecma 5 safe
// https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/pull/4234
ecma: 8,
},
compress: {
ecma: 5,
warnings: false,
// Disabled because of an issue with Uglify breaking seemingly valid code:
// https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/2376
// Pending further investigation:
// https://github.com/mishoo/UglifyJS2/issues/2011
comparisons: false,
// Disabled because of an issue with Terser breaking valid code:
// https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/5250
// Pending futher investigation:
// https://github.com/terser-js/terser/issues/120
inline: 2,
},
mangle: {
safari10: true,
},
output: {
ecma: 5,
comments: false,
// Turned on because emoji and regex is not minified properly using default
// https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/2488
ascii_only: true,
},
},
// Use multi-process parallel running to improve the build speed
// Default number of concurrent runs: os.cpus().length - 1
parallel: true,
// Enable file caching
cache: false,
sourceMap: shouldUseSourceMap,
}),
// This is only used in production mode
new OptimizeCSSAssetsPlugin({
cssProcessorOptions: {
parser: safePostCssParser,
map: shouldUseSourceMap
? {
// `inline: false` forces the sourcemap to be output into a
// separate file
inline: false,
// `annotation: true` appends the sourceMappingURL to the end of
// the css file, helping the browser find the sourcemap
annotation: false,
}
: false,
},
}),
],
// Automatically split vendor and commons
// https://twitter.com/wSokra/status/969633336732905474
// https://medium.com/webpack/webpack-4-code-splitting-chunk-graph-and-the-splitchunks-optimization-be739a861366
splitChunks: {
chunks: 'all',
maxSize: 0,
name: false,
},
// Keep the runtime chunk separated to enable long term caching
// https://twitter.com/wSokra/status/969679223278505985
runtimeChunk: false,
},
resolve: {
// This allows you to set a fallback for where Webpack should look for modules.
// We placed these paths second because we want `node_modules` to "win"
// if there are any conflicts. This matches Node resolution mechanism.
// https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/253
modules: ['node_modules'].concat(
// It is guaranteed to exist because we tweak it in `env.js`
process.env.NODE_PATH.split(path.delimiter).filter(Boolean)
),
// These are the reasonable defaults supported by the Node ecosystem.
// We also include JSX as a common component filename extension to support
// some tools, although we do not recommend using it, see:
// https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/290
// `web` extension prefixes have been added for better support
// for React Native Web.
extensions: paths.moduleFileExtensions
.map(ext => `.${ext}`)
.filter(ext => useTypeScript || !ext.includes('ts')),
alias: {
// Support React Native Web
// https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2016/08/a-glimpse-into-the-future-with-react-native-for-web/
'react-native': 'react-native-web',
},
plugins: [
// Adds support for installing with Plug'n'Play, leading to faster installs and adding
// guards against forgotten dependencies and such.
PnpWebpackPlugin,
// Prevents users from importing files from outside of src/ (or node_modules/).
// This often causes confusion because we only process files within src/ with babel.
// To fix this, we prevent you from importing files out of src/ -- if you'd like to,
// please link the files into your node_modules/ and let module-resolution kick in.
// Make sure your source files are compiled, as they will not be processed in any way.
new ModuleScopePlugin(paths.appSrc, [paths.appPackageJson]),
],
},
resolveLoader: {
plugins: [
// Also related to Plug'n'Play, but this time it tells Webpack to load its loaders
// from the current package.
PnpWebpackPlugin.moduleLoader(module),
],
},
module: {
strictExportPresence: true,
rules: [
// Disable require.ensure as it's not a standard language feature.
{ parser: { requireEnsure: false } },
// First, run the linter.
// It's important to do this before Babel processes the JS.
{
test: /\.(js|mjs|jsx)$/,
enforce: 'pre',
use: [
{
options: {
formatter: require.resolve('react-dev-utils/eslintFormatter'),
eslintPath: require.resolve('eslint'),
// #remove-on-eject-begin
baseConfig: {
extends: [require.resolve('eslint-config-react-app')],
},
ignore: false,
useEslintrc: false,
// #remove-on-eject-end
},
loader: require.resolve('eslint-loader'),
},
],
include: paths.appSrc,
},
{
// "oneOf" will traverse all following loaders until one will
// match the requirements. When no loader matches it will fall
// back to the "file" loader at the end of the loader list.
oneOf: [
// "url" loader works like "file" loader except that it embeds assets
// smaller than specified limit in bytes as data URLs to avoid requests.
// A missing `test` is equivalent to a match.
{
test: [/\.bmp$/, /\.gif$/, /\.jpe?g$/, /\.png$/],
loader: require.resolve('url-loader'),
options: {
limit: 10000,
name: 'static/media/[name].[hash:8].[ext]',
},
},
// Process application JS with Babel.
// The preset includes JSX, Flow, TypeScript, and some ESnext features.
{
test: /\.(js|mjs|jsx|ts|tsx)$/,
include: paths.appSrc,
loader: require.resolve('babel-loader'),
options: {
customize: require.resolve(
'babel-preset-react-app/webpack-overrides'
),
// #remove-on-eject-begin
babelrc: false,
configFile: false,
presets: [require.resolve('babel-preset-react-app')],
// Make sure we have a unique cache identifier, erring on the
// side of caution.
// We remove this when the user ejects because the default
// is sane and uses Babel options. Instead of options, we use
// the react-scripts and babel-preset-react-app versions.
cacheIdentifier: getCacheIdentifier(
isEnvProduction
? 'production'
: isEnvDevelopment && 'development',
[
'babel-plugin-named-asset-import',
'babel-preset-react-app',
'react-dev-utils',
'react-scripts',
]
),
// #remove-on-eject-end
plugins: [
[
require.resolve('babel-plugin-named-asset-import'),
{
loaderMap: {
svg: {
ReactComponent: '#svgr/webpack?-svgo,+ref![path]',
},
},
},
],
],
// This is a feature of `babel-loader` for webpack (not Babel itself).
// It enables caching results in ./node_modules/.cache/babel-loader/
// directory for faster rebuilds.
cacheDirectory: true,
cacheCompression: isEnvProduction,
compact: isEnvProduction,
},
},
// Process any JS outside of the app with Babel.
// Unlike the application JS, we only compile the standard ES features.
{
test: /\.(js|mjs)$/,
exclude: /#babel(?:\/|\\{1,2})runtime/,
loader: require.resolve('babel-loader'),
options: {
babelrc: false,
configFile: false,
compact: false,
presets: [
[
require.resolve('babel-preset-react-app/dependencies'),
{ helpers: true },
],
],
cacheDirectory: true,
cacheCompression: isEnvProduction,
// #remove-on-eject-begin
cacheIdentifier: getCacheIdentifier(
isEnvProduction
? 'production'
: isEnvDevelopment && 'development',
[
'babel-plugin-named-asset-import',
'babel-preset-react-app',
'react-dev-utils',
'react-scripts',
]
),
// #remove-on-eject-end
// If an error happens in a package, it's possible to be
// because it was compiled. Thus, we don't want the browser
// debugger to show the original code. Instead, the code
// being evaluated would be much more helpful.
sourceMaps: false,
},
},
// "postcss" loader applies autoprefixer to our CSS.
// "css" loader resolves paths in CSS and adds assets as dependencies.
// "style" loader turns CSS into JS modules that inject <style> tags.
// In production, we use MiniCSSExtractPlugin to extract that CSS
// to a file, but in development "style" loader enables hot editing
// of CSS.
// By default we support CSS Modules with the extension .module.css
{
test: cssRegex,
exclude: cssModuleRegex,
use: getStyleLoaders({
importLoaders: 1,
sourceMap: isEnvProduction && shouldUseSourceMap,
}),
// Don't consider CSS imports dead code even if the
// containing package claims to have no side effects.
// Remove this when webpack adds a warning or an error for this.
// See https://github.com/webpack/webpack/issues/6571
sideEffects: true,
},
// Adds support for CSS Modules (https://github.com/css-modules/css-modules)
// using the extension .module.css
{
test: cssModuleRegex,
use: getStyleLoaders({
importLoaders: 1,
sourceMap: isEnvProduction && shouldUseSourceMap,
modules: true,
getLocalIdent: getCSSModuleLocalIdent,
}),
},
// Opt-in support for SASS (using .scss or .sass extensions).
// By default we support SASS Modules with the
// extensions .module.scss or .module.sass
{
test: sassRegex,
exclude: sassModuleRegex,
use: getStyleLoaders(
{
importLoaders: 2,
sourceMap: isEnvProduction && shouldUseSourceMap,
},
'sass-loader'
),
// Don't consider CSS imports dead code even if the
// containing package claims to have no side effects.
// Remove this when webpack adds a warning or an error for this.
// See https://github.com/webpack/webpack/issues/6571
sideEffects: true,
},
// Adds support for CSS Modules, but using SASS
// using the extension .module.scss or .module.sass
{
test: sassModuleRegex,
use: getStyleLoaders(
{
importLoaders: 2,
sourceMap: isEnvProduction && shouldUseSourceMap,
modules: true,
getLocalIdent: getCSSModuleLocalIdent,
},
'sass-loader'
),
},
// "file" loader makes sure those assets get served by WebpackDevServer.
// When you `import` an asset, you get its (virtual) filename.
// In production, they would get copied to the `build` folder.
// This loader doesn't use a "test" so it will catch all modules
// that fall through the other loaders.
{
loader: require.resolve('file-loader'),
// Exclude `js` files to keep "css" loader working as it injects
// its runtime that would otherwise be processed through "file" loader.
// Also exclude `html` and `json` extensions so they get processed
// by webpacks internal loaders.
exclude: [/\.(js|mjs|jsx|ts|tsx)$/, /\.html$/, /\.json$/],
options: {
name: 'static/media/[name].[hash:8].[ext]',
},
},
// ** STOP ** Are you adding a new loader?
// Make sure to add the new loader(s) before the "file" loader.
],
},
],
},
plugins: [
// Generates an `index.html` file with the <script> injected.
new HtmlWebpackPlugin(
Object.assign(
{},
{
inject: true,
template: paths.appHtml,
},
isEnvProduction
? {
minify: {
removeComments: true,
collapseWhitespace: true,
removeRedundantAttributes: true,
useShortDoctype: true,
removeEmptyAttributes: true,
removeStyleLinkTypeAttributes: true,
keepClosingSlash: true,
minifyJS: true,
minifyCSS: true,
minifyURLs: true,
},
}
: undefined
)
),
// Inlines the webpack runtime script. This script is too small to warrant
// a network request.
isEnvProduction &&
shouldInlineRuntimeChunk &&
new InlineChunkHtmlPlugin(HtmlWebpackPlugin, [/runtime~.+[.]js/]),
// Makes some environment variables available in index.html.
// The public URL is available as %PUBLIC_URL% in index.html, e.g.:
// <link rel="shortcut icon" href="%PUBLIC_URL%/favicon.ico">
// In production, it will be an empty string unless you specify "homepage"
// in `package.json`, in which case it will be the pathname of that URL.
// In development, this will be an empty string.
new InterpolateHtmlPlugin(HtmlWebpackPlugin, env.raw),
// This gives some necessary context to module not found errors, such as
// the requesting resource.
new ModuleNotFoundPlugin(paths.appPath),
// Makes some environment variables available to the JS code, for example:
// if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production') { ... }. See `./env.js`.
// It is absolutely essential that NODE_ENV is set to production
// during a production build.
// Otherwise React will be compiled in the very slow development mode.
new webpack.DefinePlugin(env.stringified),
// This is necessary to emit hot updates (currently CSS only):
isEnvDevelopment && new webpack.HotModuleReplacementPlugin(),
// Watcher doesn't work well if you mistype casing in a path so we use
// a plugin that prints an error when you attempt to do this.
// See https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/240
isEnvDevelopment && new CaseSensitivePathsPlugin(),
// If you require a missing module and then `npm install` it, you still have
// to restart the development server for Webpack to discover it. This plugin
// makes the discovery automatic so you don't have to restart.
// See https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/186
isEnvDevelopment &&
new WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin(paths.appNodeModules),
isEnvProduction &&
new MiniCssExtractPlugin({
// Options similar to the same options in webpackOptions.output
// both options are optional
filename: 'static/css/[name].[contenthash:8].css',
chunkFilename: 'static/css/[name].[contenthash:8].chunk.css',
}),
// Generate a manifest file which contains a mapping of all asset filenames
// to their corresponding output file so that tools can pick it up without
// having to parse `index.html`.
new ManifestPlugin({
fileName: 'asset-manifest.json',
publicPath: publicPath,
}),
// Moment.js is an extremely popular library that bundles large locale files
// by default due to how Webpack interprets its code. This is a practical
// solution that requires the user to opt into importing specific locales.
// https://github.com/jmblog/how-to-optimize-momentjs-with-webpack
// You can remove this if you don't use Moment.js:
new webpack.IgnorePlugin(/^\.\/locale$/, /moment$/),
// Generate a service worker script that will precache, and keep up to date,
// the HTML & assets that are part of the Webpack build.
isEnvProduction &&
new WorkboxWebpackPlugin.GenerateSW({
clientsClaim: true,
exclude: [/\.map$/, /asset-manifest\.json$/],
importWorkboxFrom: 'cdn',
navigateFallback: publicUrl + '/index.html',
navigateFallbackBlacklist: [
// Exclude URLs starting with /_, as they're likely an API call
new RegExp('^/_'),
// Exclude URLs containing a dot, as they're likely a resource in
// public/ and not a SPA route
new RegExp('/[^/]+\\.[^/]+$'),
],
}),
// TypeScript type checking
useTypeScript &&
new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin({
typescript: resolve.sync('typescript', {
..........
};
};
The web app is currently deployed on Firebase and all URLs redirect to index.html.
Just want to know if it is even possible to do this? Thanks in advance and sorry if the question seems confusing but I am not that experienced with programming and I have become lost with this.
Having an issue trying to deploy a .Net Core 2.2 MVC app with React Spa app on an IIS server using a nested URL. I would like to be able to host this app at http://localhost/apps/webApp, but keep running into issues with the static files paths trying to read as http://localhost/manifest.json etc...
I've tried several solutions on Stack that haven't been able to help. I've tried changing webpack config, web.config, parameters in Startup.cs. This is my first try at deploying a React app, in MVC app, on IIS. To make it easier, I used the VS 2019 React boilerplate app and ejected from create-react-app to give me access to the webpack.config.js
Startup.cs
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Builder;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Hosting;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.HttpsPolicy;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.SpaServices.ReactDevelopmentServer;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.SpaServices.Webpack;
using Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration;
using Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection;
using System;
namespace WebApplication1
{
public class Startup
{
public Startup(IConfiguration configuration)
{
Configuration = configuration;
}
public IConfiguration Configuration { get; }
// This method gets called by the runtime. Use this method to add services to the container.
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
services.AddMvc().SetCompatibilityVersion(CompatibilityVersion.Version_2_1);
// In production, the React files will be served from this directory
services.AddSpaStaticFiles(configuration =>
{
configuration.RootPath = "ClientApp/build";
});
}
// This method gets called by the runtime. Use this method to configure the HTTP request pipeline.
public void Configure(IApplicationBuilder app, IHostingEnvironment env)
{
if (env.IsDevelopment())
{
app.UseDeveloperExceptionPage();
}
else
{
app.UseExceptionHandler("/Error");
app.UseHsts();
}
app.UseHttpsRedirection();
//app.Use((context, next) =>
//{
// if (!string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(System.IO.Path.GetExtension(context.Request.Path)))
// {
// context.Request.Path = FormattableString.Invariant($"/{System.IO.Path.GetFileName(context.Request.Path)}");
// }
// return next();
//});
app.UseStaticFiles();
app.UseSpaStaticFiles();
app.UseMvc(routes =>
{
routes.MapRoute(
name: "default",
template: "{controller}/{action=Index}/{id?}");
});
app.UseSpa(spa =>
{
spa.Options.SourcePath = "ClientApp";
if (env.IsDevelopment())
{
spa.UseReactDevelopmentServer(npmScript: "start");
}
});
}
}
}
webpack.config.dev.js
'use strict';
const autoprefixer = require('autoprefixer');
const path = require('path');
const webpack = require('webpack');
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
const CaseSensitivePathsPlugin = require('case-sensitive-paths-webpack-plugin');
const InterpolateHtmlPlugin = require('react-dev-utils/InterpolateHtmlPlugin');
const WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin = require('react-dev-utils/WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin');
const eslintFormatter = require('react-dev-utils/eslintFormatter');
const ModuleScopePlugin = require('react-dev-utils/ModuleScopePlugin');
const getClientEnvironment = require('./env');
const paths = require('./paths');
// Webpack uses `publicPath` to determine where the app is being served from.
// In development, we always serve from the root. This makes config easier.
const publicPath = '/';
// `publicUrl` is just like `publicPath`, but we will provide it to our app
// as %PUBLIC_URL% in `index.html` and `process.env.PUBLIC_URL` in JavaScript.
// Omit trailing slash as %PUBLIC_PATH%/xyz looks better than %PUBLIC_PATH%xyz.
const publicUrl = '';
// Get environment variables to inject into our app.
const env = getClientEnvironment(publicUrl);
// This is the development configuration.
// It is focused on developer experience and fast rebuilds.
// The production configuration is different and lives in a separate file.
module.exports = {
// You may want 'eval' instead if you prefer to see the compiled output in DevTools.
// See the discussion in https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/343.
devtool: 'cheap-module-source-map',
// These are the "entry points" to our application.
// This means they will be the "root" imports that are included in JS bundle.
// The first two entry points enable "hot" CSS and auto-refreshes for JS.
entry: [
// We ship a few polyfills by default:
require.resolve('./polyfills'),
// Include an alternative client for WebpackDevServer. A client's job is to
// connect to WebpackDevServer by a socket and get notified about changes.
// When you save a file, the client will either apply hot updates (in case
// of CSS changes), or refresh the page (in case of JS changes). When you
// make a syntax error, this client will display a syntax error overlay.
// Note: instead of the default WebpackDevServer client, we use a custom one
// to bring better experience for Create React App users. You can replace
// the line below with these two lines if you prefer the stock client:
// require.resolve('webpack-dev-server/client') + '?/',
// require.resolve('webpack/hot/dev-server'),
require.resolve('react-dev-utils/webpackHotDevClient'),
// Finally, this is your app's code:
paths.appIndexJs,
// We include the app code last so that if there is a runtime error during
// initialization, it doesn't blow up the WebpackDevServer client, and
// changing JS code would still trigger a refresh.
],
output: {
// Add /* filename */ comments to generated require()s in the output.
pathinfo: true,
// This does not produce a real file. It's just the virtual path that is
// served by WebpackDevServer in development. This is the JS bundle
// containing code from all our entry points, and the Webpack runtime.
filename: 'static/js/bundle.js',
// There are also additional JS chunk files if you use code splitting.
chunkFilename: 'static/js/[name].chunk.js',
// This is the URL that app is served from. We use "/" in development.
publicPath: publicPath,
// Point sourcemap entries to original disk location (format as URL on Windows)
devtoolModuleFilenameTemplate: info =>
path.resolve(info.absoluteResourcePath).replace(/\\/g, '/'),
},
resolve: {
// This allows you to set a fallback for where Webpack should look for modules.
// We placed these paths second because we want `node_modules` to "win"
// if there are any conflicts. This matches Node resolution mechanism.
// https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/253
modules: ['node_modules', paths.appNodeModules].concat(
// It is guaranteed to exist because we tweak it in `env.js`
process.env.NODE_PATH.split(path.delimiter).filter(Boolean)
),
// These are the reasonable defaults supported by the Node ecosystem.
// We also include JSX as a common component filename extension to support
// some tools, although we do not recommend using it, see:
// https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/290
// `web` extension prefixes have been added for better support
// for React Native Web.
extensions: ['.web.js', '.mjs', '.js', '.json', '.web.jsx', '.jsx'],
alias: {
// Support React Native Web
// https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2016/08/a-glimpse-into-the-future-with-react-native-for-web/
'react-native': 'react-native-web',
},
plugins: [
// Prevents users from importing files from outside of src/ (or node_modules/).
// This often causes confusion because we only process files within src/ with babel.
// To fix this, we prevent you from importing files out of src/ -- if you'd like to,
// please link the files into your node_modules/ and let module-resolution kick in.
// Make sure your source files are compiled, as they will not be processed in any way.
new ModuleScopePlugin(paths.appSrc, [paths.appPackageJson]),
],
},
module: {
strictExportPresence: true,
rules: [
// TODO: Disable require.ensure as it's not a standard language feature.
// We are waiting for https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/2176.
// { parser: { requireEnsure: false } },
// First, run the linter.
// It's important to do this before Babel processes the JS.
{
test: /\.(js|jsx|mjs)$/,
enforce: 'pre',
use: [
{
options: {
formatter: eslintFormatter,
eslintPath: require.resolve('eslint'),
},
loader: require.resolve('eslint-loader'),
},
],
include: paths.appSrc,
},
{
// "oneOf" will traverse all following loaders until one will
// match the requirements. When no loader matches it will fall
// back to the "file" loader at the end of the loader list.
oneOf: [
// "url" loader works like "file" loader except that it embeds assets
// smaller than specified limit in bytes as data URLs to avoid requests.
// A missing `test` is equivalent to a match.
{
test: [/\.bmp$/, /\.gif$/, /\.jpe?g$/, /\.png$/],
loader: require.resolve('url-loader'),
options: {
limit: 10000,
name: 'static/media/[name].[hash:8].[ext]',
},
},
// Process JS with Babel.
{
test: /\.(js|jsx|mjs)$/,
include: paths.appSrc,
loader: require.resolve('babel-loader'),
options: {
// This is a feature of `babel-loader` for webpack (not Babel itself).
// It enables caching results in ./node_modules/.cache/babel-loader/
// directory for faster rebuilds.
cacheDirectory: true,
},
},
// "postcss" loader applies autoprefixer to our CSS.
// "css" loader resolves paths in CSS and adds assets as dependencies.
// "style" loader turns CSS into JS modules that inject <style> tags.
// In production, we use a plugin to extract that CSS to a file, but
// in development "style" loader enables hot editing of CSS.
{
test: /\.css$/,
use: [
require.resolve('style-loader'),
{
loader: require.resolve('css-loader'),
options: {
importLoaders: 1,
},
},
{
loader: require.resolve('postcss-loader'),
options: {
// Necessary for external CSS imports to work
// https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/2677
ident: 'postcss',
plugins: () => [
require('postcss-flexbugs-fixes'),
autoprefixer({
browsers: [
'>1%',
'last 4 versions',
'Firefox ESR',
'not ie < 9', // React doesn't support IE8 anyway
],
flexbox: 'no-2009',
}),
],
},
},
],
},
// "file" loader makes sure those assets get served by WebpackDevServer.
// When you `import` an asset, you get its (virtual) filename.
// In production, they would get copied to the `build` folder.
// This loader doesn't use a "test" so it will catch all modules
// that fall through the other loaders.
{
// Exclude `js` files to keep "css" loader working as it injects
// it's runtime that would otherwise processed through "file" loader.
// Also exclude `html` and `json` extensions so they get processed
// by webpacks internal loaders.
exclude: [/\.js$/, /\.html$/, /\.json$/],
loader: require.resolve('file-loader'),
options: {
name: 'static/media/[name].[hash:8].[ext]',
},
},
],
},
// ** STOP ** Are you adding a new loader?
// Make sure to add the new loader(s) before the "file" loader.
],
},
plugins: [
// Makes some environment variables available in index.html.
// The public URL is available as %PUBLIC_URL% in index.html, e.g.:
// <link rel="shortcut icon" href="%PUBLIC_URL%/favicon.ico">
// In development, this will be an empty string.
new InterpolateHtmlPlugin(env.raw),
// Generates an `index.html` file with the <script> injected.
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
inject: true,
template: paths.appHtml,
}),
// Add module names to factory functions so they appear in browser profiler.
new webpack.NamedModulesPlugin(),
// Makes some environment variables available to the JS code, for example:
// if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development') { ... }. See `./env.js`.
new webpack.DefinePlugin(env.stringified),
// This is necessary to emit hot updates (currently CSS only):
new webpack.HotModuleReplacementPlugin(),
// Watcher doesn't work well if you mistype casing in a path so we use
// a plugin that prints an error when you attempt to do this.
// See https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/240
new CaseSensitivePathsPlugin(),
// If you require a missing module and then `npm install` it, you still have
// to restart the development server for Webpack to discover it. This plugin
// makes the discovery automatic so you don't have to restart.
// See https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/186
new WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin(paths.appNodeModules),
// Moment.js is an extremely popular library that bundles large locale files
// by default due to how Webpack interprets its code. This is a practical
// solution that requires the user to opt into importing specific locales.
// https://github.com/jmblog/how-to-optimize-momentjs-with-webpack
// You can remove this if you don't use Moment.js:
new webpack.IgnorePlugin(/^\.\/locale$/, /moment$/),
],
// Some libraries import Node modules but don't use them in the browser.
// Tell Webpack to provide empty mocks for them so importing them works.
node: {
dgram: 'empty',
fs: 'empty',
net: 'empty',
tls: 'empty',
child_process: 'empty',
},
// Turn off performance hints during development because we don't do any
// splitting or minification in interest of speed. These warnings become
// cumbersome.
performance: {
hints: false,
},
};
Is there anywhere else I should be looking? I'm just hoping to get everything from http://localhost/manifest.json, favicon.ico, etc... to http://localhost/apps/webApp/manifest.json ...
I started a new project with the latest version of create-react-app. I'm trying to consume a private NPM library. This library ships the code and it's the responsibility of the app importing the packages to transpile the components from it.
I included the path of the library to babel-loader but webpack still doesn't apply babel to it.
This is the error message I'm getting from the only component I imported to my project:
./node_modules/PRIVATE-LIBRARY/Page404/index.js
SyntaxError: /home/victor/app/node_modules/PRIVATE-LIBRARY/Page404/index.js: Unexpected token (12:2)
10 |
11 | const Page404 = () => (
> 12 | <div className="page404">
| ^
13 | <div className="page404__content">
14 | <h2 className="page404__title">This is not the page<br/> you are looking for</h2>
And this is my webpack.config.dev.js file
'use strict';
const path = require('path');
const webpack = require('webpack');
const PnpWebpackPlugin = require('pnp-webpack-plugin');
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
const CaseSensitivePathsPlugin = require('case-sensitive-paths-webpack-plugin');
const InterpolateHtmlPlugin = require('react-dev-utils/InterpolateHtmlPlugin');
const WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin = require('react-dev-utils/WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin');
const ModuleScopePlugin = require('react-dev-utils/ModuleScopePlugin');
const getCSSModuleLocalIdent = require('react-dev-utils/getCSSModuleLocalIdent');
const getClientEnvironment = require('./env');
const paths = require('./paths');
const ManifestPlugin = require('webpack-manifest-plugin');
const getCacheIdentifier = require('react-dev-utils/getCacheIdentifier');
const ModuleNotFoundPlugin = require('react-dev-utils/ModuleNotFoundPlugin');
// Webpack uses `publicPath` to determine where the app is being served from.
// In development, we always serve from the root. This makes config easier.
const publicPath = '/';
// `publicUrl` is just like `publicPath`, but we will provide it to our app
// as %PUBLIC_URL% in `index.html` and `process.env.PUBLIC_URL` in JavaScript.
// Omit trailing slash as %PUBLIC_PATH%/xyz looks better than %PUBLIC_PATH%xyz.
const publicUrl = '';
// Get environment variables to inject into our app.
const env = getClientEnvironment(publicUrl);
// style files regexes
const cssRegex = /\.css$/;
const cssModuleRegex = /\.module\.css$/;
const sassRegex = /\.(scss|sass)$/;
const sassModuleRegex = /\.module\.(scss|sass)$/;
// common function to get style loaders
const getStyleLoaders = (cssOptions, preProcessor) => {
const loaders = [
require.resolve('style-loader'),
{
loader: require.resolve('css-loader'),
options: cssOptions,
},
{
// Options for PostCSS as we reference these options twice
// Adds vendor prefixing based on your specified browser support in
// package.json
loader: require.resolve('postcss-loader'),
options: {
// Necessary for external CSS imports to work
// https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/2677
ident: 'postcss',
plugins: () => [
require('postcss-flexbugs-fixes'),
require('postcss-preset-env')({
autoprefixer: {
flexbox: 'no-2009',
},
stage: 3,
}),
],
},
},
];
if (preProcessor) {
loaders.push(require.resolve(preProcessor));
}
return loaders;
};
// This is the development configuration.
// It is focused on developer experience and fast rebuilds.
// The production configuration is different and lives in a separate file.
module.exports = {
mode: 'development',
// You may want 'eval' instead if you prefer to see the compiled output in DevTools.
// See the discussion in https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/343
devtool: 'cheap-module-source-map',
// These are the "entry points" to our application.
// This means they will be the "root" imports that are included in JS bundle.
entry: [
// Include an alternative client for WebpackDevServer. A client's job is to
// connect to WebpackDevServer by a socket and get notified about changes.
// When you save a file, the client will either apply hot updates (in case
// of CSS changes), or refresh the page (in case of JS changes). When you
// make a syntax error, this client will display a syntax error overlay.
// Note: instead of the default WebpackDevServer client, we use a custom one
// to bring better experience for Create React App users. You can replace
// the line below with these two lines if you prefer the stock client:
// require.resolve('webpack-dev-server/client') + '?/',
// require.resolve('webpack/hot/dev-server'),
require.resolve('react-dev-utils/webpackHotDevClient'),
// Finally, this is your app's code:
paths.appIndexJs,
// We include the app code last so that if there is a runtime error during
// initialization, it doesn't blow up the WebpackDevServer client, and
// changing JS code would still trigger a refresh.
],
output: {
// Add /* filename */ comments to generated require()s in the output.
pathinfo: true,
// This does not produce a real file. It's just the virtual path that is
// served by WebpackDevServer in development. This is the JS bundle
// containing code from all our entry points, and the Webpack runtime.
filename: 'static/js/bundle.js',
// There are also additional JS chunk files if you use code splitting.
chunkFilename: 'static/js/[name].chunk.js',
// This is the URL that app is served from. We use "/" in development.
publicPath: publicPath,
// Point sourcemap entries to original disk location (format as URL on Windows)
devtoolModuleFilenameTemplate: info =>
path.resolve(info.absoluteResourcePath).replace(/\\/g, '/'),
},
optimization: {
// Automatically split vendor and commons
// https://twitter.com/wSokra/status/969633336732905474
// https://medium.com/webpack/webpack-4-code-splitting-chunk-graph-and-the-splitchunks-optimization-be739a861366
splitChunks: {
chunks: 'all',
name: false,
},
// Keep the runtime chunk seperated to enable long term caching
// https://twitter.com/wSokra/status/969679223278505985
runtimeChunk: true,
},
resolve: {
// This allows you to set a fallback for where Webpack should look for modules.
// We placed these paths second because we want `node_modules` to "win"
// if there are any conflicts. This matches Node resolution mechanism.
// https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/253
modules: ['node_modules'].concat(
// It is guaranteed to exist because we tweak it in `env.js`
process.env.NODE_PATH.split(path.delimiter).filter(Boolean)
),
// These are the reasonable defaults supported by the Node ecosystem.
// We also include JSX as a common component filename extension to support
// some tools, although we do not recommend using it, see:
// https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/290
// `web` extension prefixes have been added for better support
// for React Native Web.
extensions: ['.mjs', '.web.js', '.js', '.json', '.web.jsx', '.jsx'],
alias: {
// Support React Native Web
// https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2016/08/a-glimpse-into-the-future-with-react-native-for-web/
'react-native': 'react-native-web',
components: path.resolve(paths.appSrc, 'components'),
assets: path.resolve(paths.appSrc, 'assets'),
utils: path.resolve(paths.appSrc, 'utils'),
},
plugins: [
// Adds support for installing with Plug'n'Play, leading to faster installs and adding
// guards against forgotten dependencies and such.
PnpWebpackPlugin,
// Prevents users from importing files from outside of src/ (or node_modules/).
// This often causes confusion because we only process files within src/ with babel.
// To fix this, we prevent you from importing files out of src/ -- if you'd like to,
// please link the files into your node_modules/ and let module-resolution kick in.
// Make sure your source files are compiled, as they will not be processed in any way.
new ModuleScopePlugin(paths.appSrc, [paths.appPackageJson]),
],
},
resolveLoader: {
plugins: [
// Also related to Plug'n'Play, but this time it tells Webpack to load its loaders
// from the current package.
PnpWebpackPlugin.moduleLoader(module),
],
},
module: {
strictExportPresence: true,
rules: [
// Disable require.ensure as it's not a standard language feature.
{ parser: { requireEnsure: false } },
// First, run the linter.
// It's important to do this before Babel processes the JS.
{
test: /\.(js|mjs|jsx)$/,
enforce: 'pre',
use: [
{
options: {
formatter: require.resolve('react-dev-utils/eslintFormatter'),
eslintPath: require.resolve('eslint'),
},
loader: require.resolve('eslint-loader'),
},
],
include: paths.appSrc,
},
{
// "oneOf" will traverse all following loaders until one will
// match the requirements. When no loader matches it will fall
// back to the "file" loader at the end of the loader list.
oneOf: [
// "url" loader works like "file" loader except that it embeds assets
// smaller than specified limit in bytes as data URLs to avoid requests.
// A missing `test` is equivalent to a match.
{
test: [/\.bmp$/, /\.gif$/, /\.jpe?g$/, /\.png$/],
loader: require.resolve('url-loader'),
options: {
limit: 10000,
name: 'static/media/[name].[hash:8].[ext]',
},
},
// Process application JS with Babel.
// The preset includes JSX, Flow, and some ESnext features.
{
test: /\.(js|mjs|jsx)$/,
include: [
paths.appSrc,
paths.privateLib,
],
loader: require.resolve('babel-loader'),
options: {
customize: require.resolve(
'babel-preset-react-app/webpack-overrides'
),
plugins: [
[
require.resolve('babel-plugin-named-asset-import'),
{
loaderMap: {
svg: {
ReactComponent: '#svgr/webpack?-prettier,-svgo![path]',
},
},
},
],
],
// This is a feature of `babel-loader` for webpack (not Babel itself).
// It enables caching results in ./node_modules/.cache/babel-loader/
// directory for faster rebuilds.
cacheDirectory: true,
// Don't waste time on Gzipping the cache
cacheCompression: false,
},
},
// Process any JS outside of the app with Babel.
// Unlike the application JS, we only compile the standard ES features.
{
test: /\.(js|mjs)$/,
exclude: /#babel(?:\/|\\{1,2})runtime/,
loader: require.resolve('babel-loader'),
options: {
babelrc: false,
configFile: false,
compact: false,
presets: [
[
require.resolve('babel-preset-react-app/dependencies'),
{ helpers: true },
],
],
cacheDirectory: true,
// Don't waste time on Gzipping the cache
cacheCompression: false,
// If an error happens in a package, it's possible to be
// because it was compiled. Thus, we don't want the browser
// debugger to show the original code. Instead, the code
// being evaluated would be much more helpful.
sourceMaps: false,
},
},
// "postcss" loader applies autoprefixer to our CSS.
// "css" loader resolves paths in CSS and adds assets as dependencies.
// "style" loader turns CSS into JS modules that inject <style> tags.
// In production, we use a plugin to extract that CSS to a file, but
// in development "style" loader enables hot editing of CSS.
// By default we support CSS Modules with the extension .module.css
{
test: cssRegex,
exclude: cssModuleRegex,
use: getStyleLoaders({
importLoaders: 1,
}),
},
// Adds support for CSS Modules (https://github.com/css-modules/css-modules)
// using the extension .module.css
{
test: cssModuleRegex,
use: getStyleLoaders({
importLoaders: 1,
modules: true,
getLocalIdent: getCSSModuleLocalIdent,
}),
},
// Opt-in support for SASS (using .scss or .sass extensions).
// Chains the sass-loader with the css-loader and the style-loader
// to immediately apply all styles to the DOM.
// By default we support SASS Modules with the
// extensions .module.scss or .module.sass
{
test: sassRegex,
exclude: sassModuleRegex,
use: getStyleLoaders({ importLoaders: 2 }, 'sass-loader'),
},
// Adds support for CSS Modules, but using SASS
// using the extension .module.scss or .module.sass
{
test: sassModuleRegex,
use: getStyleLoaders(
{
importLoaders: 2,
modules: true,
getLocalIdent: getCSSModuleLocalIdent,
},
'sass-loader'
),
},
// "file" loader makes sure those assets get served by WebpackDevServer.
// When you `import` an asset, you get its (virtual) filename.
// In production, they would get copied to the `build` folder.
// This loader doesn't use a "test" so it will catch all modules
// that fall through the other loaders.
{
// Exclude `js` files to keep "css" loader working as it injects
// its runtime that would otherwise be processed through "file" loader.
// Also exclude `html` and `json` extensions so they get processed
// by webpacks internal loaders.
exclude: [/\.(js|mjs|jsx)$/, /\.html$/, /\.json$/],
loader: require.resolve('file-loader'),
options: {
name: 'static/media/[name].[hash:8].[ext]',
},
},
],
},
// ** STOP ** Are you adding a new loader?
// Make sure to add the new loader(s) before the "file" loader.
],
},
plugins: [
// Generates an `index.html` file with the <script> injected.
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
inject: true,
template: paths.appHtml,
}),
// Makes some environment variables available in index.html.
// The public URL is available as %PUBLIC_URL% in index.html, e.g.:
// <link rel="shortcut icon" href="%PUBLIC_URL%/favicon.ico">
// In development, this will be an empty string.
new InterpolateHtmlPlugin(HtmlWebpackPlugin, env.raw),
// This gives some necessary context to module not found errors, such as
// the requesting resource.
new ModuleNotFoundPlugin(paths.appPath),
// Makes some environment variables available to the JS code, for example:
// if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development') { ... }. See `./env.js`.
new webpack.DefinePlugin(env.stringified),
// This is necessary to emit hot updates (currently CSS only):
new webpack.HotModuleReplacementPlugin(),
// Watcher doesn't work well if you mistype casing in a path so we use
// a plugin that prints an error when you attempt to do this.
// See https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/240
new CaseSensitivePathsPlugin(),
// If you require a missing module and then `npm install` it, you still have
// to restart the development server for Webpack to discover it. This plugin
// makes the discovery automatic so you don't have to restart.
// See https://github.com/facebook/create-react-app/issues/186
new WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin(paths.appNodeModules),
// Moment.js is an extremely popular library that bundles large locale files
// by default due to how Webpack interprets its code. This is a practical
// solution that requires the user to opt into importing specific locales.
// https://github.com/jmblog/how-to-optimize-momentjs-with-webpack
// You can remove this if you don't use Moment.js:
new webpack.IgnorePlugin(/^\.\/locale$/, /moment$/),
// Generate a manifest file which contains a mapping of all asset filenames
// to their corresponding output file so that tools can pick it up without
// having to parse `index.html`.
new ManifestPlugin({
fileName: 'asset-manifest.json',
publicPath: publicPath,
}),
],
// Some libraries import Node modules but don't use them in the browser.
// Tell Webpack to provide empty mocks for them so importing them works.
node: {
dgram: 'empty',
fs: 'empty',
net: 'empty',
tls: 'empty',
child_process: 'empty',
},
// Turn off performance processing because we utilize
// our own hints via the FileSizeReporter
performance: false,
};
Where paths.privateLib contains privateLib: resolveApp('node_modules/PRIVATE-LIBRARY'),
I’m using this library in three other apps with webpack 3 without problems
The problem was that the default behaviour of .babelrc and of "babel" at package.json changed.
For babel versions before v 7, the default behaviour was that babel-loader also included node-modules files. This changed because of some hard to track bugs that raised as a consequence of this behaviour.
Now, if you want configs to also affect your node_modules, you should define a babel.config.js file instead of .babelrc or "babel" at package.json configs.
This babel.config.js affects node_modules by default. It should be placed at the same level of your package.json file
Here is an example of my configs:
module.exports = function (api) {
const presets = ['react-app'];
api.cache.never();
return { presets };
};
Babel docs for further information about babel.config.js
I am migrating from gulp to webpack setup. I want webpack process my js and css assets and pack them into bundles. I have set up 2 webpack config files: one for js and one for css.
The total sizes of css and js assets in my project are similar: rougly 70 files (400kb minified) in each section.
My question is related to poor webpack performance when processing css assets compared to js.
To compare:
JS build (first run): 15-30 seconds
JS build (with cache): 2 seconds
CSS build (first run): 15 seconds
CSS build (with cache): 10 seconds
Obviously the CSS builder doesn't use cache as efficiently as the CSS part. To be honest I don't think it uses caching at all (node_modules/.cache doesn't have anything related) and the only reason for the 2nd run to be faster is filesystem warmup.
The problem in watch mode is even bigger. I did a test where I run webpack in watch mode and modify one small file (just a few lines), which has to be included in a bigger bundle:
JS update: 150ms
CSS update: 1200-2000ms
CSS builder doesn't perform very well here. Also, the larger the bundles, the longer it takes to update them, even though a change is done in a small file which should be compiled instantly.
Furthermore, it seems that increasing the number of entry points also negatively affects update times. More entries = slower updates, even though the update only affects one tiny file.
I've tried playing with cache-loader and placing it before and after extract plugin. Honestly it doesn't help much. When cache loader is placed in front of extract plugin, no css is being emitted in watch mode (only the js files). Placing cache loader after the extractor improves production build a bit, but slows down watch mode updates.
My current guess is that sass loader doesn't use caching and that on every module update, the entire bundle has to be compiled from scratch and go through sass > postcss > css > extract pipe all over again. I wonder if delegating import management to postcss-import and running sass after postcss would do a better job. I have tried to write a sass-compatible import resolver for postcss-import. It seems to work a bit faster in a small test environment, but using it in our real project causes webpack to crash :( Didn't have enough time to find out why that happens yet.
How can I improve CSS build times of my current setup?
My JS and CSS configs are below.
JS:
const path = require('path');
const merge = require('webpack-merge');
const EntryPlugin = require('webpack-watched-glob-entries-plugin');
const dir = require('./node/dirconfig');
// use NODE_ENV var to switch between production and development
const devel = (process.env.NODE_ENV == 'development');
// base config for both prod and devel modes
let config =
{
name: 'scripts',
// webpack preset
// this should take care of production optimizations automatically
mode: devel ? 'development' : 'production',
// use all js files inside bundle dir as entries
entry: EntryPlugin.getEntries(
dir.assets + '/js/bundle/*.js'
),
output: {
path: dir.static + '/js',
filename: "[name].js"
},
externals: {
jquery: 'jQuery'
},
resolve: {
modules: [dir.assets + '/js', 'node_modules']
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.js$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
use: {
loader: 'babel-loader',
options: {
cacheDirectory: true,
},
},
},
]
},
plugins: [
new EntryPlugin(),
],
};
// additional config for development mode
const development =
{
// add eslint loader
module: {
rules: [
{
enforce: "pre", // make sure this rule gets executed first
test: /\.js$/,
exclude: /(node_modules)/,
use: {
loader: 'eslint-loader',
options: {
cache: true,
},
},
},
]
}
};
module.exports = merge(config, devel ? development : {});
CSS:
const path = require('path');
const MiniCssExtractPlugin = require("mini-css-extract-plugin");
const EntryPlugin = require('webpack-watched-glob-entries-plugin');
const dir = require('./node/dirconfig');
// use NODE_ENV var to switch between production and development
const devel = (process.env.NODE_ENV == 'development');
// base config for both prod and devel modes
let config =
{
name: 'styles',
// webpack preset
mode: devel ? 'development' : 'production',
// use all .scss files which don't start with _ as entries
entry: EntryPlugin.getEntries(
dir.assets + '/sass/**/!(_*).scss'
),
output: {
path: dir.static + '/css',
filename: "[name].js"
},
// enable sourcemaps in devel mode
devtool: devel ? 'inline-source-map' : false,
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.scss$/,
use: [
MiniCssExtractPlugin.loader,
// 'cache-loader',
{
loader: 'css-loader',
options: {
sourceMap: devel,
}
},
{
loader: 'postcss-loader',
options: {
sourceMap: devel,
},
},
{
loader: 'sass-loader',
options: {
sourceMap: devel,
}
},
]
},
]
},
plugins: [
new MiniCssExtractPlugin({
filename: "[name].css", // relative to path setting in the output section
}),
new EntryPlugin()
],
};
module.exports = config;
Add thread-loader to js handling loaders.
Replace css-loader with fast-css-loader and sass-loader with fast-sass-loader.
Place cache-loader as the first loader of js files and after extract plugin in the css loaders.
I installed the componet with npm
$npm install avataaars --save
In my react Component I import with
import Avatar from 'avataaars'
But in my Chrome js console I get an error
Uncaught SyntaxError: Unexpected token * bundle.js:96525
if I remove the Avatar import my react app works as before. What can be wrong? Something messed up in my wepack.config. I have no clue how to solve this :) Where should I start looking?
My webpack.config.dev.js
var autoprefixer = require('autoprefixer');
var webpack = require('webpack');
var HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
var CaseSensitivePathsPlugin = require('case-sensitive-paths-webpack-plugin');
var InterpolateHtmlPlugin = require('react-dev-utils/InterpolateHtmlPlugin');
var WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin = require('react-dev-utils/WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin');
var getClientEnvironment = require('./env');
var paths = require('./paths');
// Webpack uses `publicPath` to determine where the app is being served from.
// In development, we always serve from the root. This makes config easier.
var publicPath = '/';
// `publicUrl` is just like `publicPath`, but we will provide it to our app
// as %PUBLIC_URL% in `index.html` and `process.env.PUBLIC_URL` in JavaScript.
// Omit trailing slash as %PUBLIC_PATH%/xyz looks better than %PUBLIC_PATH%xyz.
var publicUrl = '';
// Get environment variables to inject into our app.
var env = getClientEnvironment(publicUrl);
// This is the development configuration.
// It is focused on developer experience and fast rebuilds.
// The production configuration is different and lives in a separate file.
module.exports = {
// You may want 'eval' instead if you prefer to see the compiled output in DevTools.
// See the discussion in https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/343.
devtool: 'cheap-module-source-map',
// These are the "entry points" to our application.
// This means they will be the "root" imports that are included in JS bundle.
// The first two entry points enable "hot" CSS and auto-refreshes for JS.
entry: [
// Include an alternative client for WebpackDevServer. A client's job is to
// connect to WebpackDevServer by a socket and get notified about changes.
// When you save a file, the client will either apply hot updates (in case
// of CSS changes), or refresh the page (in case of JS changes). When you
// make a syntax error, this client will display a syntax error overlay.
// Note: instead of the default WebpackDevServer client, we use a custom one
// to bring better experience for Create React App users. You can replace
// the line below with these two lines if you prefer the stock client:
// require.resolve('webpack-dev-server/client') + '?/',
// require.resolve('webpack/hot/dev-server'),
require.resolve('react-dev-utils/webpackHotDevClient'),
// We ship a few polyfills by default:
require.resolve('./polyfills'),
// Finally, this is your app's code:
paths.appIndexJs
// We include the app code last so that if there is a runtime error during
// initialization, it doesn't blow up the WebpackDevServer client, and
// changing JS code would still trigger a refresh.
],
output: {
// Next line is not used in dev but WebpackDevServer crashes without it:
path: paths.appBuild,
// Add /* filename */ comments to generated require()s in the output.
pathinfo: true,
// This does not produce a real file. It's just the virtual path that is
// served by WebpackDevServer in development. This is the JS bundle
// containing code from all our entry points, and the Webpack runtime.
filename: 'static/js/bundle.js',
// This is the URL that app is served from. We use "/" in development.
publicPath: publicPath
},
resolve: {
// This allows you to set a fallback for where Webpack should look for modules.
// We read `NODE_PATH` environment variable in `paths.js` and pass paths here.
// We use `fallback` instead of `root` because we want `node_modules` to "win"
// if there any conflicts. This matches Node resolution mechanism.
// https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/253
fallback: paths.nodePaths,
// These are the reasonable defaults supported by the Node ecosystem.
// We also include JSX as a common component filename extension to support
// some tools, although we do not recommend using it, see:
// https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/290
extensions: ['.js', '.json', '.jsx', ''],
alias: {
// Support React Native Web
// https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2016/08/a-glimpse-into-the-future-with-react-native-for-web/
'react-native': 'react-native-web'
}
},
module: {
// First, run the linter.
// It's important to do this before Babel processes the JS.
preLoaders: [
{
test: /\.(js|jsx)$/,
loader: 'eslint',
include: paths.appSrc,
}
],
loaders: [
// Default loader: load all assets that are not handled
// by other loaders with the url loader.
// Note: This list needs to be updated with every change of extensions
// the other loaders match.
// E.g., when adding a loader for a new supported file extension,
// we need to add the supported extension to this loader too.
// Add one new line in `exclude` for each loader.
//
// "file" loader makes sure those assets get served by WebpackDevServer.
// When you `import` an asset, you get its (virtual) filename.
// In production, they would get copied to the `build` folder.
// "url" loader works like "file" loader except that it embeds assets
// smaller than specified limit in bytes as data URLs to avoid requests.
// A missing `test` is equivalent to a match.
{
exclude: [
/\.html$/,
/\.(js|jsx)$/,
/\.css$/,
/\.json$/,
/\.woff$/,
/\.woff2$/,
/\.(ttf|svg|eot)$/
],
loader: 'url',
query: {
limit: 10000,
name: 'static/media/[name].[hash:8].[ext]'
}
},
// Process JS with Babel.
{
test: /\.(js|jsx)$/,
include: paths.appSrc,
loader: 'babel',
query: {
// This is a feature of `babel-loader` for webpack (not Babel itself).
// It enables caching results in ./node_modules/.cache/babel-loader/
// directory for faster rebuilds.
cacheDirectory: true
}
},
// "postcss" loader applies autoprefixer to our CSS.
// "css" loader resolves paths in CSS and adds assets as dependencies.
// "style" loader turns CSS into JS modules that inject <style> tags.
// In production, we use a plugin to extract that CSS to a file, but
// in development "style" loader enables hot editing of CSS.
{
test: /\.css$/,
loader: 'style!css?importLoaders=1!postcss'
},
// JSON is not enabled by default in Webpack but both Node and Browserify
// allow it implicitly so we also enable it.
{
test: /\.json$/,
loader: 'json'
},
// "file" loader for svg
{
test: /\.svg$/,
loader: 'file',
query: {
name: 'static/media/[name].[hash:8].[ext]'
}
},
// "file" loader for fonts
{
test: /\.woff$/,
loader: 'file',
query: {
name: 'fonts/[name].[hash].[ext]'
}
},
{
test: /\.woff2$/,
loader: 'file',
query: {
name: 'fonts/[name].[hash].[ext]'
}
},
{
test: /\.(ttf|eot)$/,
loader: 'file',
query: {
name: 'fonts/[name].[hash].[ext]'
}
},
// Truffle solidity loader to watch for changes in Solitiy files and hot
// reload contracts with webpack.
//
// CURRENTLY REMOVED DUE TO INCOMPATIBILITY WITH TRUFFLE 3
// Compile and migrate contracts manually.
//
/*{
test: /\.sol$/,
loader: 'truffle-solidity?network_id=123'
}*/
]
},
// We use PostCSS for autoprefixing only.
postcss: function() {
return [
autoprefixer({
browsers: [
'>1%',
'last 4 versions',
'Firefox ESR',
'not ie < 9', // React doesn't support IE8 anyway
]
}),
];
},
plugins: [
// Makes the public URL available as %PUBLIC_URL% in index.html, e.g.:
// <link rel="shortcut icon" href="%PUBLIC_URL%/favicon.ico">
// In development, this will be an empty string.
new InterpolateHtmlPlugin({
PUBLIC_URL: publicUrl
}),
// Generates an `index.html` file with the <script> injected.
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
inject: true,
template: paths.appHtml,
}),
// Makes some environment variables available to the JS code, for example:
// if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development') { ... }. See `./env.js`.
new webpack.DefinePlugin(env),
// This is necessary to emit hot updates (currently CSS only):
new webpack.HotModuleReplacementPlugin(),
// Watcher doesn't work well if you mistype casing in a path so we use
// a plugin that prints an error when you attempt to do this.
// See https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/240
new CaseSensitivePathsPlugin(),
// If you require a missing module and then `npm install` it, you still have
// to restart the development server for Webpack to discover it. This plugin
// makes the discovery automatic so you don't have to restart.
// See https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/186
new WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin(paths.appNodeModules)
],
// Some libraries import Node modules but don't use them in the browser.
// Tell Webpack to provide empty mocks for them so importing them works.
node: {
fs: 'empty',
net: 'empty',
tls: 'empty'
}
};