What is file-loader?
The file-loader npm package is used to process files such as images, fonts, and other binary assets within a webpack build process. It can copy files to the output directory and resolve import/require() on a file into a url.
What are file-loader's main functionalities?
Importing Images
Allows importing image files directly in JavaScript or TypeScript files. The file-loader processes the import and replaces it with the final path to the output file.
import img from './file.png';
Configuring Output Path and Filenames
Configures webpack to output files with a specific naming pattern and to a specific directory. It also allows setting a public path for the files when they are referenced in the browser.
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.(png|jpe?g|gif)$/i,
use: [
{
loader: 'file-loader',
options: {
name: '[path][name].[ext]',
outputPath: 'images/',
publicPath: 'assets/',
},
},
],
},
],
},
};
Handling Fonts
Enables the inclusion and processing of font files in various formats. The file-loader will handle these assets and output them to a specified directory.
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.(woff|woff2|eot|ttf|otf)$/i,
use: [
{
loader: 'file-loader',
options: {
name: '[name].[ext]',
outputPath: 'fonts/',
},
},
],
},
],
},
};
Other packages similar to file-loader
url-loader
The url-loader works like the file-loader, but can return a Data URL if the file is smaller than a byte limit. This can reduce the number of HTTP requests for small files.
raw-loader
The raw-loader allows importing files as a string. This is useful for importing things like HTML or SVG directly into your JavaScript code, which is different from file-loader's typical binary asset handling.
copy-webpack-plugin
This plugin allows copying individual files or entire directories to the build directory. It is more flexible than file-loader for simply copying files without processing them through webpack's module system.
File Loader
Install
npm install --save-dev file-loader
Usage
By default the filename of the resulting file is the MD5 hash of the file's contents
with the original extension of the required resource.
var url = require("file-loader!./file.png");
By default a file is emitted, however this can be disabled if required (e.g. for server
side packages).
var url = require("file-loader?emitFile=false!./file.png");
Filename templates
You can configure a custom filename template for your file using the query parameter name
. For instance, to copy a file from your context
directory into the output directory retaining the full directory structure, you might use ?name=[path][name].[ext]
.
By default, the path and name you specify will output the file in that same directory and will also use that same URL path to access the file.
You can specify custom output and public paths by using the outputPath
and publicPath
query name parameters:
use: "file-loader?name=[name].[ext]&publicPath=assets/foo/&outputPath=app/images/"
Filename template placeholders
[ext]
the extension of the resource[name]
the basename of the resource[path]
the path of the resource relative to the context
query parameter or option.[hash]
the hash of the content, hex
-encoded md5
by default[<hashType>:hash:<digestType>:<length>]
optionally you can configure
- other
hashType
s, i. e. sha1
, md5
, sha256
, sha512
- other
digestType
s, i. e. hex
, base26
, base32
, base36
, base49
, base52
, base58
, base62
, base64
- and
length
the length in chars
[N]
the N-th match obtained from matching the current file name against the query param regExp
Examples
require("file-loader?name=js/[hash].script.[ext]!./javascript.js");
require("file-loader?name=html-[hash:6].html!./page.html");
require("file-loader?name=[hash]!./flash.txt");
require("file-loader?name=[sha512:hash:base64:7].[ext]!./image.png");
require("file-loader?name=img-[sha512:hash:base64:7].[ext]!./image.jpg");
require("file-loader?name=picture.png!./myself.png");
require("file-loader?name=[path][name].[ext]?[hash]!./dir/file.png")
Contributing
Don't hesitate to create a pull request. Every contribution is appreciated. In development you can start the tests by calling npm test
.
Maintainers
LICENSE