Workspace Configuration
The compiler is configured inside an environment and not directly on the component level.
As a task
A task is running with bit build
or during the tag process on the capsules or the workspace (depends on the specific compiler implementation).
The env extension should have this compiler extension as a dependency first, then add to the getBuildPipe()
array the following: this.compiler.createTask()
.
As a command
A command is running on the workspace.
To run: bit compile
.
An example of configuring a compiler in the React env.
/**
* returns a component compiler.
*/
getCompiler(): Compiler {
// eslint-disable-next-line global-require
const tsConfig = require('./typescript/tsconfig.json');
return this.ts.createCompiler(tsConfig);
}
Compiler Implementation
The compiler is responsible for two processes:
- compile during development
This compilation takes place on the workspace and the dists are saved inside the component dir.
The provider should implement
transpileFile
function as follows:
transpileFile: (fileContent: string, options: { componentDir: string, filePath: string }) => Array<{ outputText: string, outputPath: string }> | null;
In case the compiler receives an unsupported file, it should return null.
- compile for build (during the tag command)
This compilation takes place on the isolated capsule.
The provider should implement
build
function which returns the exit-code and the dist dir.
From Compiler interface:
build(context: BuildContext): Promise<BuildResults>;
FYI, this api is going to be changed very soon. It should get components and capsules graph.
Points to consider when writing a compiler
Debugging experience on the workspace
Since the dists are written into the node_modules/component-name/dist-dir, the debugger needs to know where to find the source files. This can be easily achieved by setting the sourceRoot
of the source-map file to the component-dir. As a reminder, this directory is passed to the transpile()
method.
Error handling during build process
Without proper error handling, the build()
will exit an the first error found. Catch the errors and add them to the ComponentResult.errors[]
you return per component.