React Refresh Webpack Plugin
An EXPERIMENTAL Webpack plugin to enable "Fast Refresh" (also previously known as Hot Reloading) for React components.
Installation
First - this plugin is not 100% stable.
It works pretty reliably, and we have been testing it for some time, but there are still edge cases yet to be discovered.
Please DO NOT use it if you cannot afford to face breaking changes in the future.
npm install -D @pmmmwh/react-refresh-webpack-plugin react-refresh
yarn add -D @pmmmwh/react-refresh-webpack-plugin react-refresh
Usage
First, apply the plugin in your Webpack configuration as follows:
webpack.config.js
const ReactRefreshWebpackPlugin = require('@pmmmwh/react-refresh-webpack-plugin');
const isDevelopment = process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production';
module.exports = {
mode: isDevelopment ? 'development' : 'production',
plugins: [
isDevelopment && new ReactRefreshWebpackPlugin(),
].filter(Boolean),
};
Then, update your Babel configuration.
This can either be done in your Webpack config (via options of babel-loader
), or in the form of a .babelrc
/babel.config.js
.
webpack.config.js (if you choose to inline the config)
const isDevelopment = process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production';
module.exports = {
mode: isDevelopment ? 'development' : 'production',
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.jsx?$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
use: [
{
loader: require.resolve('babel-loader'),
options: {
plugins: [isDevelopment && require.resolve('react-refresh/babel')].filter(Boolean),
},
},
],
},
],
},
};
.babelrc.js (if you choose to extract the config)
module.exports = (api) => {
api.cache.using(() => process.env.NODE_ENV);
return {
plugins: [
!api.env('production') && 'react-refresh/babel',
].filter(Boolean),
};
};
More sample projects for common Webpack development setups are available in the examples folder.
Note 1: If you use webpack.config.ts
, please also install type-fest
as a peer dependency.
Note 2: If you are using TypeScript (instead of Babel) as a transpiler, you will still need to use babel-loader
to process your source code.
Check out this sample project on how to set this up.
Polyfill for Older Browsers
If you need to develop on IE11, you will need to polyfill the DOM URL API.
This can be done by adding the following before any of your code in the main entry (either one is fine):
Using url-polyfill
import 'url-polyfill';
Using core-js
import 'core-js/features/url';
import 'core-js/features/url-search-params';
Using react-app-polyfill
import 'react-app-polyfill/ie11';
import 'react-app-polyfill/stable';
Options
This plugin accepts a few options that are specifically targeted for advanced users.
options.forceEnable
Type: boolean
Default: false
Enables the plugin forcefully.
Useful if you want to use the plugin in production, or if you are using Webpack's none
mode without NODE_ENV
, for example.
options.overlay
Type: boolean | ErrorOverlayOptions
Default: undefined
Modifies how the error overlay integration works in the plugin.
-
If options.overlay
is not provided or is true
, the plugin will use the bundled error overlay interation.
-
If options.overlay
is false
, it will disable the error overlay integration.
-
If an ErrorOverlayOptions
object is provided:
(NOTE: This is an advanced option that exists mostly for tools like create-react-app
or Next.js
)
-
An optional module
property could be defined.
If it is not defined, the bundled error overlay will be used.
If defined, it should reference a JS file that exports at least two functions with footprints as follows:
function handleRuntimeError(error: Error) {}
function clearRuntimeErrors() {}
-
An optional entry
property could be defined, which should also reference a JS file that contains code needed to set up your custom error overlay integration.
If it is not defined, the bundled error overlay entry will be used.
It expects the module
file to export two more functions:
function showCompileError(webpackErrorMessage: string) {}
function clearCompileErrors() {}
Note that webpackErrorMessage
is ANSI encoded, so you will need logic to parse it.
-
An example configuration:
const options = {
overlay: {
entry: 'some-webpack-entry-file',
module: 'some-error-overlay-module',
},
};
options.overlay.sockHost
Type: string
Default: window.location.hostname
Set this if you are running webpack on a host other than window.location.hostname
.
This will be used by the error overlay module, and is available for webpack-dev-server
only.
options.overlay.sockIntegration
Type: wds
, whm
, wps
or string
Default: wds
This controls how the error overlay connects to the sockets provided by several Webpack hot reload integrations.
- If you use
webpack-dev-server
, you don't need to set this as it defaults to wds
. - If you use
webpack-hot-middleware
, you should set this to whm
. - If you use
webpack-plugin-serve
, you should set this to wps
. - If you use anything else, or if you want to customize the socket handling yourself, you will have to provide a path to a module that will accept a message handler function and initializes the socket connection.
See the
runtime/sockets
folder for sample implementations.
options.overlay.sockPort
Type: number
Default: window.location.port
Set this if you are running webpack on a port other than window.location.port
.
This will be used by the error overlay module, and is available for webpack-dev-server
only.
options.overlay.sockPath
Type: string
Default: /sockjs-node
Set this if you are running webpack on a custom path.
This will be used by the error overlay module, and is available for webpack-dev-server
only.
options.useLegacyWDSSockets
Type: boolean
Default: false
Set this to true if you are using a webpack-dev-server
version prior to 3.8 as it requires a custom SockJS implementation.
If you use this feature, you will also need to install sockjs-client
as a peer dependency.
Related Work