@rollup/plugin-node-resolve
🍣 A Rollup plugin which locates modules using the Node resolution algorithm, for using third party modules in node_modules
Requirements
This plugin requires an LTS Node version (v8.0.0+) and Rollup v1.20.0+.
Install
Using npm:
npm install @rollup/plugin-node-resolve --save-dev
Usage
Create a rollup.config.js
configuration file and import the plugin:
import resolve from '@rollup/plugin-node-resolve';
export default {
input: 'src/index.js',
output: {
dir: 'output',
format: 'cjs'
},
plugins: [resolve()]
};
Then call rollup
either via the CLI or the API.
Options
browser
Type: Boolean
Default: false
If true
, instructs the plugin to use the "browser"
property in package.json
files to specify alternative files to load for bundling. This is useful when bundling for a browser environment. Alternatively, a value of 'browser'
can be added to the mainFields
option. If false
, any "browser"
properties in package files will be ignored. This option takes precedence over mainFields
.
customResolveOptions
Type: Object
Default: null
An Object
that specifies additional options that should be passed through to resolve
.
customResolveOptions: {
moduleDirectory: 'js_modules'
}
dedupe
Type: Array[...String]
Default: []
An Array
of modules names, which instructs the plugin to force resolving for the specified modules to the root node_modules
. Helps to prevent bundling the same package multiple times if package is imported from dependencies.
dedupe: ['my-package', '@namespace/my-package'];
This will deduplicate bare imports such as:
import 'my-package';
import '@namespace/my-package';
And it will deduplicate deep imports such as:
import 'my-package/foo.js';
import '@namespace/my-package/bar.js';
extensions
Type: Array[...String]
Default: ['.mjs', '.js', '.json', '.node']
Specifies the extensions of files that the plugin will operate on.
jail
Type: String
Default: '/'
Locks the module search within specified path (e.g. chroot). Modules defined outside this path will be marked as external.
mainFields
Type: Array[...String]
Default: ['module', 'main']
Valid values: ['browser', 'jsnext', 'module', 'main']
Specifies the properties to scan within a package.json
, used to determine the bundle entry point. The order of property names is significant, as the first-found property is used as the resolved entry point. If the array contains 'browser'
, key/values specified in the package.json
browser
property will be used.
only
DEPRECATED: use "resolveOnly" instead
preferBuiltins
Type: Boolean
Default: true
If true
, the plugin will prefer built-in modules (e.g. fs
, path
). If false
, the plugin will look for locally installed modules of the same name.
modulesOnly
Type: Boolean
Default: false
If true
, inspect resolved files to assert that they are ES2015 modules.
resolveOnly
Type: Array[...String|RegExp]
Default: null
An Array
which instructs the plugin to limit module resolution to those whose names match patterns in the array. Note: Modules not matching any patterns will be marked as external.
Example: resolveOnly: ['batman', /^@batcave\/.*$/]
rootDir
Type: String
Default: process.cwd()
Specifies the root directory from which to resolve modules. Typically used when resolving entry-point imports, and when resolving deduplicated modules. Useful when executing rollup in a package of a mono-repository.
// Set the root directory to be the parent folder
rootDir: path.join(process.cwd(), '..')
Using with @rollup/plugin-commonjs
Since most packages in your node_modules folder are probably legacy CommonJS rather than JavaScript modules, you may need to use @rollup/plugin-commonjs:
import resolve from '@rollup/plugin-node-resolve';
import commonjs from '@rollup/plugin-commonjs';
export default {
input: 'main.js',
output: {
file: 'bundle.js',
format: 'iife',
name: 'MyModule'
},
plugins: [resolve(), commonjs()]
};
Resolving Built-Ins (like fs
)
This plugin won't resolve any builtins (e.g. fs
). If you need to resolve builtins you can install local modules and set preferBuiltins
to false
, or install a plugin like rollup-plugin-node-polyfills which provides stubbed versions of these methods.
If you want to silence warnings about builtins, you can add the list of builtins to the externals
option; like so:
import resolve from '@rollup/plugin-node-resolve';
import builtins from 'builtin-modules'
export default ({
input: ...,
plugins: [resolve()],
external: builtins,
output: ...
})
Meta
CONTRIBUTING
LICENSE (MIT)