Important
This is a cloned copy of https://github.com/siddharthkp/bundlesize.
Reason for cloning:
- The brotli-size dependency present in the original repo is outdated which doesn't support node v12.x.
Raised an issue and PR for the same. We can delete this repository once that is addressed by the author.
https://github.com/siddharthkp/bundlesize/issues/374
https://github.com/siddharthkp/bundlesize/pull/375
Changes made in this repo:
- brotli-size dependency version bump from v0.1.0 to v4.0.0
Keep your bundle size in check
Setup
npm install bundlesize --save-dev
yarn add bundlesize --dev
Usage
Add it to your scripts in package.json
"scripts": {
"test": "bundlesize"
}
Or you can use it with npx
from NPM 5.2+.
npx bundlesize
Configuration
bundlesize
accepts an array of files to check.
[
{
"path": "./build/vendor.js",
"maxSize": "30 kB"
},
{
"path": "./build/chunk-*.js",
"maxSize": "10 kB"
}
]
You can keep this array either in
-
package.json
{
"name": "your cool library",
"version": "1.1.2",
"bundlesize": [
{
"path": "./build/vendor.js",
"maxSize": "3 kB"
}
]
}
or in a separate file
-
bundlesize.config.json
Format:
{
"files": [
{
"path": "./dist.js",
"maxSize": "3 kB"
}
]
}
You can give a different file by using the --config
flag:
bundlesize --config configs/bundlesize.json
Customisation
-
Fuzzy matching
If the names of your build files are not predictable, you can use the glob pattern to specify files.
This is common if you append a hash to the name or use a tool like create-react-app/nextjs.
{
"files": [
{
"path": "build/**/main-*.js",
"maxSize": "5 kB"
},
{
"path": "build/**/*.chunk.js",
"maxSize": "50 kB"
}
]
}
It will match multiple files if necessary and create a new row for each file.
-
Compression options
By default, bundlesize gzips
your build files before comparing.
If you are using brotli
instead of gzip, you can specify that with each file:
{
"files": [
{
"path": "./build/vendor.js",
"maxSize": "5 kB",
"compression": "brotli"
}
]
}
If you do not use any compression before sending your files to the client, you can switch compression off:
{
"files": [
{
"path": "./build/vendor.js",
"maxSize": "5 kB",
"compression": "none"
}
]
}
Build status for GitHub
If your repository is hosted on GitHub, you can set bundlesize up to create a "check" on every pull request.
Currently works with Travis CI, CircleCI, Wercker, and Drone.
Using a different CI?
You will need to supply an additional 5 environment variables.
CI_REPO_OWNER
given the repo https://github.com/myusername/myrepo
would be myusername
CI_REPO_NAME
given the repo https://github.com/myusername/myrepo
would be myrepo
CI_COMMIT_MESSAGE
the commit messageCI_COMMIT_SHA
the SHA of the CI commit, in Jenkins you would use ${env.GIT_COMMIT}
CI=true
usually set automatically in CI environments
(Ask me for help if you're stuck)
Usage with CLI
bundlesize can also be used without creating a configuration file. We do not recommend this approach and it might be deprecated in a future version.
bundlesize -f "dist/*.js" -s 20kB
For more granular configuration, we recommend configuring it in the package.json
(documented above).
Like it?
:star: this repo
How to contribute?
who uses bundlesize?
TODO
- Work with other CI tools
- Automate setup (setting env_var)
similar projects
Contributors
This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute. [Contribute].
license
MIT © siddharthkp