What is esbuild?
esbuild is a fast JavaScript bundler and minifier. It compiles TypeScript and JavaScript into a single file, minifies it, and can also handle CSS and image assets. It's designed for speed and efficiency, utilizing parallelism and native Go code to achieve its performance.
What are esbuild's main functionalities?
Bundling JavaScript
This code bundles 'app.js' and its dependencies into a single file 'out.js'.
require('esbuild').build({
entryPoints: ['app.js'],
bundle: true,
outfile: 'out.js'
}).catch(() => process.exit(1))
Minifying JavaScript
This code minifies 'app.js' to reduce file size and improve load times.
require('esbuild').build({
entryPoints: ['app.js'],
minify: true,
outfile: 'out.js'
}).catch(() => process.exit(1))
Transpiling TypeScript
This code compiles a TypeScript file 'app.ts' into JavaScript and bundles it into 'out.js'.
require('esbuild').build({
entryPoints: ['app.ts'],
bundle: true,
outfile: 'out.js'
}).catch(() => process.exit(1))
Serving files for development
This code starts a local server to serve files from the 'public' directory and bundles 'app.js' into 'public/out.js'.
require('esbuild').serve({
servedir: 'public',
port: 8000
}, {
entryPoints: ['app.js'],
bundle: true,
outfile: 'public/out.js'
}).then(server => {
// Server started
})
Other packages similar to esbuild
webpack
Webpack is a powerful and widely-used module bundler. It offers a rich plugin ecosystem and a highly configurable build process. Compared to esbuild, webpack is more mature with more features but is generally slower due to its JavaScript-based architecture.
rollup
Rollup is another JavaScript module bundler that focuses on producing efficient bundles for modern module formats like ES modules. It's known for its tree-shaking capabilities. Rollup is typically faster than webpack but slower than esbuild.
parcel
Parcel is a web application bundler that offers zero configuration out-of-the-box. It's faster than webpack and rollup but generally not as fast as esbuild. Parcel has a simpler user experience but may not be as flexible for complex configurations.
terser
Terser is a JavaScript parser, mangler, and compressor toolkit for ES6+. It's often used for minifying JavaScript code. While esbuild also minifies code, terser is a dedicated tool for this purpose and can be used alongside other bundlers.
0.19.12
-
The "preserve" JSX mode now preserves JSX text verbatim (#3605)
The JSX specification deliberately doesn't specify how JSX text is supposed to be interpreted and there is no canonical way to interpret JSX text. Two most popular interpretations are Babel and TypeScript. Yes they are different (esbuild deliberately follows TypeScript by the way).
Previously esbuild normalized text to the TypeScript interpretation when the "preserve" JSX mode is active. However, "preserve" should arguably reproduce the original JSX text verbatim so that whatever JSX transform runs after esbuild is free to interpret it however it wants. So with this release, esbuild will now pass JSX text through unmodified:
// Original code
let el =
<a href={'/'} title=''"'> some text
{foo}
more text </a>
// Old output (with --loader=jsx --jsx=preserve)
let el = <a href="/" title={`'"`}>
{" some text"}
{foo}
{"more text "}
</a>;
// New output (with --loader=jsx --jsx=preserve)
let el = <a href={"/"} title=''"'> some text
{foo}
more text </a>;
-
Allow JSX elements as JSX attribute values
JSX has an obscure feature where you can use JSX elements in attribute position without surrounding them with {...}
. It looks like this:
let el = <div data-ab=<><a/><b/></>/>;
I think I originally didn't implement it even though it's part of the JSX specification because it previously didn't work in TypeScript (and potentially also in Babel?). However, support for it was silently added in TypeScript 4.8 without me noticing and Babel has also since fixed their bugs regarding this feature. So I'm adding it to esbuild too now that I know it's widely supported.
Keep in mind that there is some ongoing discussion about removing this feature from JSX. I agree that the syntax seems out of place (it does away with the elegance of "JSX is basically just XML with {...}
escapes" for something arguably harder to read, which doesn't seem like a good trade-off), but it's in the specification and TypeScript and Babel both implement it so I'm going to have esbuild implement it too. However, I reserve the right to remove it from esbuild if it's ever removed from the specification in the future. So use it with caution.
-
Fix a bug with TypeScript type parsing (#3574)
This release fixes a bug with esbuild's TypeScript parser where a conditional type containing a union type that ends with an infer type that ends with a constraint could fail to parse. This was caused by the "don't parse a conditional type" flag not getting passed through the union type parser. Here's an example of valid TypeScript code that previously failed to parse correctly:
type InferUnion<T> = T extends { a: infer U extends number } | infer U extends number ? U : never
2023
All esbuild versions published in the year 2022 (versions 0.16.13 through 0.19.11) can be found in CHANGELOG-2023.md.
2022
All esbuild versions published in the year 2022 (versions 0.14.11 through 0.16.12) can be found in CHANGELOG-2022.md.
2021
All esbuild versions published in the year 2021 (versions 0.8.29 through 0.14.10) can be found in CHANGELOG-2021.md.
2020
All esbuild versions published in the year 2020 (versions 0.3.0 through 0.8.28) can be found in CHANGELOG-2020.md.