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fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin
Advanced tools
Runs typescript type checker and linter on separate process.
The fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin is a plugin for webpack that runs TypeScript type checking on a separate process. This allows you to get type checking results while webpack compiles your code, improving build speed by utilizing multiple CPU cores. It also integrates with ESLint to provide linting for both TypeScript and JavaScript files.
TypeScript Type Checking
This feature runs TypeScript type checking in a separate process to speed up the webpack build.
const ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin = require('fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
plugins: [new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin()],
};
ESLint Integration
This feature allows the plugin to run ESLint on your code in parallel with the TypeScript type checker.
const ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin = require('fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
plugins: [
new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin({
eslint: {
files: './src/**/*.{ts,tsx,js,jsx}'
}
})
],
};
Asynchronous Reporting
This feature provides asynchronous reporting of type checking and linting results, so they do not block webpack's compilation process.
const ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin = require('fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin');
const webpack = require('webpack');
const compiler = webpack({
// ...webpack configuration
plugins: [new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin()],
});
compiler.run((error, stats) => {
// ...handle webpack build result
});
ts-loader is a TypeScript loader for webpack. It is responsible for compiling TypeScript files to JavaScript. Unlike fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin, ts-loader does the type checking in the main compilation process, which can be slower for large projects.
awesome-typescript-loader is another TypeScript loader for webpack. Similar to ts-loader, it provides compilation of TypeScript files. It also offers features like Babel integration and can use a separate process for type checking, but it is not as actively maintained as fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin.
eslint-webpack-plugin is a plugin for webpack that provides linting functionality. It integrates ESLint into the webpack build process. While it does not offer TypeScript type checking, it serves a similar purpose for linting as fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin does when the ESLint integration is enabled.
Webpack plugin that runs TypeScript type checker on a separate process.
This plugin requires minimum Node.js 10, Webpack 4, TypeScript 2.7 and optionally ESLint 6
# with npm
npm install --save-dev fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin
# with yarn
yarn add --dev fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin
The minimal webpack config (with ts-loader)
// webpack.config.js
const ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin = require('fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
context: __dirname, // to automatically find tsconfig.json
entry: './src/index.ts',
resolve: {
extensions: [".ts", ".tsx", ".js"],
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.tsx?$/,
loader: 'ts-loader',
exclude: /node_modules/,
options: {
// disable type checker - we will use it in fork plugin
transpileOnly: true
}
}
]
},
plugins: [new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin()]
};
Examples how to configure it with babel-loader, ts-loader, eslint and Visual Studio Code are in the examples directory.
It's very important to be aware that this plugin uses TypeScript's, not
webpack's modules resolution. It means that you have to setup tsconfig.json
correctly.
It's because of the performance - with TypeScript's module resolution we don't have to wait for webpack to compile files.
To debug TypeScript's modules resolution, you can use
tsc --traceResolution
command.
If you'd like to use ESLint with the plugin, ensure you have the relevant dependencies installed:
# with npm
npm install --save-dev eslint @typescript-eslint/parser @typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin
# with yarn
yarn add --dev eslint @typescript-eslint/parser @typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin
Then set up ESLint in the plugin. This is the minimal configuration:
// webpack.config.js
const ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin = require('fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
// ...the webpack configuration
plugins: [
new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin({
eslint: {
files: './src/**/*.{ts,tsx,js,jsx}' // required - same as command `eslint ./src/**/*.{ts,tsx,js,jsx} --ext .ts,.tsx,.js,.jsx`
}
})
]
};
You should also have an ESLint configuration file in your root project directory.
Here is a sample .eslintrc.js
configuration for a TypeScript project:
module.exports = {
parser: '@typescript-eslint/parser',
parserOptions: {
ecmaVersion: 2018,
sourceType: 'module',
},
extends: [
'plugin:@typescript-eslint/recommended'
],
rules: {
// place to specify ESLint rules - can be used to overwrite rules specified from the extended configs
// e.g. "@typescript-eslint/explicit-function-return-type": "off",
}
};
There's a good explanation on setting up TypeScript ESLint support by Robert Cooper.
This plugin uses cosmiconfig
. This means that besides the plugin constructor,
you can place your configuration in the:
"fork-ts-checker"
field in the package.json
.fork-ts-checkerrc
file in JSON or YAML formatfork-ts-checker.config.js
file exporting a JS objectOptions passed to the plugin constructor will overwrite options from the cosmiconfig (using deepmerge).
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
async | boolean | compiler.options.mode === 'development' | If true , reports issues after webpack's compilation is done. Thanks to that it doesn't block the compilation. Used only in the watch mode. |
typescript | object or boolean | true | If a boolean , it enables/disables TypeScript checker. If an object , see TypeScript options. |
eslint | object | undefined | If undefined , it disables ESLint linter. If an object , see ESLint options. |
issue | object | {} | See Issues options. |
formatter | string or object or function | codeframe | Available formatters are basic , codeframe and a custom function . To configure codeframe formatter, pass object: { type: 'codeframe', options: { <coderame options> } } . |
logger | object | { infrastructure: 'silent', issues: 'console', devServer: true } | Available loggers are silent , console , and webpack-infrastructure . Infrastructure logger prints additional information, issue logger prints issues in the async mode. If devServer is set to false , errors will not be reported to Webpack Dev Server. |
Options for the TypeScript checker (typescript
option object).
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
enabled | boolean | true | If true , it enables TypeScript checker. |
memoryLimit | number | 2048 | Memory limit for the checker process in MB. If the process exits with the allocation failed error, try to increase this number. |
configFile | string | 'tsconfig.json' | Path to the tsconfig.json file (path relative to the compiler.options.context or absolute path) |
configOverwrite | object | { compilerOptions: { skipLibCheck: true, sourceMap: false, inlineSourceMap: false, declarationMap: false } } | This configuration will overwrite configuration from the tsconfig.json file. Supported fields are: extends , compilerOptions , include , exclude , files , and references . |
context | string | dirname(configuration.configFile) | The base path for finding files specified in the tsconfig.json . Same as the context option from the ts-loader. Useful if you want to keep your tsconfig.json in an external package. Keep in mind that not having a tsconfig.json in your project root can cause different behaviour between fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin and tsc . When using editors like VS Code it is advised to add a tsconfig.json file to the root of the project and extend the config file referenced in option configFile . |
build | boolean | false | The equivalent of the --build flag for the tsc command. |
mode | 'readonly' or 'write-tsbuildinfo' or 'write-references' | 'write-tsbuildinfo' | If you use the babel-loader , it's recommended to use write-references mode to improve initial compilation time. If you use ts-loader , it's recommended to use write-tsbuildinfo mode to not overwrite files emitted by the ts-loader . |
diagnosticOptions | object | { syntactic: false, semantic: true, declaration: false, global: false } | Settings to select which diagnostics do we want to perform. |
extensions | object | {} | See TypeScript extensions options. |
profile | boolean | false | Measures and prints timings related to the TypeScript performance. |
typescriptPath | string | require.resolve('typescript') | If supplied this is a custom path where TypeScript can be found. |
Options for the TypeScript checker extensions (typescript.extensions
option object).
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
vue | object or boolean | false | If true , it enables Vue Single File Component support. |
vue.enabled | boolean | false | Same as the vue option |
vue.compiler | string | 'vue-template-compiler' | The package name of the compiler that will be used to parse .vue files. You can use 'nativescript-vue-template-compiler' if you use nativescript-vue |
Options for the ESLint linter (eslint
option object).
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
enabled | boolean | false | If true , it enables ESLint linter. If you set the files option, it will be true by default. |
files | string or string[] | This value is required | One or more glob patterns to the files that should be linted. Works the same as the eslint command. |
memoryLimit | number | 2048 | Memory limit for the linter process in MB. If the process exits with the allocation failed error, try to increase this number. |
options | object | {} | Options that can be used to initialize ESLint. |
Options for the issues filtering (issue
option object).
I could write some plain text explanation of these options but I think code will explain it better:
interface Issue {
origin: 'typescript' | 'eslint';
severity: 'error' | 'warning';
code: string;
file?: string;
}
type IssueMatch = Partial<Issue>; // file field supports glob matching
type IssuePredicate = (issue: Issue) => boolean;
type IssueFilter = IssueMatch | IssuePredicate | (IssueMatch | IssuePredicate)[];
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
include | IssueFilter | undefined | If object , defines issue properties that should be matched. If function , acts as a predicate where issue is an argument. |
exclude | IssueFilter | undefined | Same as include but issues that match this predicate will be excluded. |
Include issues from the src
directory, exclude eslint issues from .spec.ts
files:
module.exports = {
// ...the webpack configuration
plugins: [
new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin({
issue: {
include: [
{ file: '**/src/**/*' }
],
exclude: [
{ origin: 'eslint', file: '**/*.spec.ts' }
]
}
})
]
};
⚠️ There are additional constraints regarding Vue.js Single File Component support: ⚠️
transpileOnly
mode from ts-loader
)build
mode (project references)To enable Vue.js support, follow these steps:
# with npm
npm install --save vue vue-class-component
npm install --save-dev vue-loader ts-loader css-loader vue-template-compiler
# with yarn
yarn add vue vue-class-component
yarn add --dev vue-loader ts-loader css-loader vue-template-compiler
tsconfig.json
configuration:{
"compilerOptions": {
"experimentalDecorators": true,
"jsx": "preserve",
"target": "ES5",
"lib": ["ES6", "DOM"],
"baseUrl": ".",
"paths": {
"@/*": ["src/*"],
"~/*": ["src/*"]
},
"sourceMap": true,
"importsNotUsedAsValues": "preserve"
},
"include": [
"src/**/*.ts",
"src/**/*.vue"
],
"exclude": [
"node_modules"
]
}
webpack.config.js
configuration:const path = require('path');
const VueLoaderPlugin = require('vue-loader/lib/plugin');
const ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin = require('fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
entry: './src/index.ts',
output: {
filename: 'index.js',
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.vue$/,
loader: 'vue-loader'
},
{
test: /\.ts$/,
loader: 'ts-loader',
exclude: /node_modules/,
options: {
appendTsSuffixTo: [/\.vue$/],
transpileOnly: true
}
},
{
test: /\.css$/,
loader: 'css-loader'
},
],
},
resolve: {
extensions: ['.ts', '.js', '.vue', '.json'],
alias: {
'@': path.resolve(__dirname, './src'),
'~': path.resolve(__dirname, './src'),
}
},
plugins: [
new VueLoaderPlugin(),
new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin({
typescript: {
extensions: {
vue: true
}
}
})
]
};
src/types/vue.d.ts
file to shim .vue
modules:declare module "*.vue" {
import Vue from "vue";
export default Vue;
}
This plugin provides some custom webpack hooks:
Hook key | Type | Params | Description |
---|---|---|---|
start | AsyncSeriesWaterfallHook | change, compilation | Starts issues checking for a compilation. It's an async waterfall hook, so you can modify the list of changed and removed files or delay the start of the service. |
waiting | SyncHook | compilation | Waiting for the issues checking. |
canceled | SyncHook | compilation | Issues checking for the compilation has been canceled. |
error | SyncHook | compilation | An error occurred during issues checking. |
issues | SyncWaterfallHook | issues, compilation | Issues have been received and will be reported. It's a waterfall hook, so you can modify the list of received issues. |
To access plugin hooks and tap into the event, we need to use the getCompilerHooks
static method.
When we call this method with a webpack compiler instance, it returns the object with
tapable hooks where you can pass in your callbacks.
const webpack = require('webpack');
const ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin = require('fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin');
const compiler = webpack({
// ... webpack config
});
// optionally add the plugin to the compiler
// **don't do this if already added through configuration**
new ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin().apply(compiler);
// now get the plugin hooks from compiler
const hooks = ForkTsCheckerWebpackPlugin.getCompilerHooks(compiler);
// say we want to show some message when plugin is waiting for issues results
hooks.waiting.tap('yourListenerName', () => {
console.log('waiting for issues');
});
To use the plugin typings, you have to install @types/webpack
. It's not included by default to not collide with your
existing typings (@types/webpack
imports @types/node
). It's an old TypeScript issue,
the alternative is to set skipLibCheck: true
in the compilerOptions
😉
# with npm
npm install --save-dev @types/webpack
# with yarn
yarn add --dev @types/webpack
Starting from TypeScript 4.1.0 (currently in beta), you can profile long type checks by setting "generateTrace" compiler option. This is an instruction from microsoft/TypeScript#40063:
tsconfig.json
legend.json
telling you what went where.
Otherwise, there will be trace.json
file and types.json
files.trace.json
types.json
in an editorts-loader
- TypeScript loader for webpack.babel-loader
- Alternative TypeScript loader for webpack.fork-ts-checker-notifier-webpack-plugin
- Notifies about build status using system notifications (similar to the webpack-notifier).This plugin was created in Realytics in 2017. Thank you for supporting Open Source.
MIT License
FAQs
Runs typescript type checker and linter on separate process.
We found that fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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