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react-dev-utils
Advanced tools
This package includes some utilities used by Create React App.
Please refer to its documentation:
These utilities come by default with Create React App, which includes it by default. You don’t need to install it separately in Create React App projects.
If you don’t use Create React App, or if you ejected, you may keep using these utilities. Their development will be aligned with Create React App, so major versions of these utilities may come out relatively often. Feel free to fork or copy and paste them into your projects if you’d like to have more control over them, or feel free to use the old versions. Not all of them are React-specific, but we might make some of them more React-specific in the future.
There is no single entry point. You can only import individual top-level modules.
new InterpolateHtmlPlugin(replacements: {[key:string]: string})This Webpack plugin lets us interpolate custom variables into index.html.
It works in tandem with HtmlWebpackPlugin 2.x via its events.
var path = require('path');
var HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-dev-plugin');
var InterpolateHtmlPlugin = require('react-dev-utils/InterpolateHtmlPlugin');
// Webpack config
var publicUrl = '/my-custom-url';
module.exports = {
output: {
// ...
publicPath: publicUrl + '/'
},
// ...
plugins: [
// Makes the public URL available as %PUBLIC_URL% in index.html, e.g.:
// <link rel="shortcut icon" href="%PUBLIC_URL%/favicon.ico">
new InterpolateHtmlPlugin({
PUBLIC_URL: publicUrl
// You can pass any key-value pairs, this was just an example.
// WHATEVER: 42 will replace %WHATEVER% with 42 in index.html.
}),
// Generates an `index.html` file with the <script> injected.
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
inject: true,
template: path.resolve('public/index.html'),
}),
// ...
],
// ...
}
new ModuleScopePlugin(appSrc: string, allowedFiles?: string[])This Webpack plugin ensures that relative imports from app's source directory don't reach outside of it.
var path = require('path');
var ModuleScopePlugin = require('react-dev-utils/ModuleScopePlugin');
module.exports = {
// ...
resolve: {
// ...
plugins: [
new ModuleScopePlugin(paths.appSrc, [paths.appPackageJson]),
// ...
],
// ...
},
// ...
}
new WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin(nodeModulesPath: string)This Webpack plugin ensures npm install <library> forces a project rebuild.
We’re not sure why this isn't Webpack's default behavior.
See #186 for details.
var path = require('path');
var WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin = require('react-dev-utils/WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin');
// Webpack config
module.exports = {
// ...
plugins: [
// ...
// If you require a missing module and then `npm install` it, you still have
// to restart the development server for Webpack to discover it. This plugin
// makes the discovery automatic so you don't have to restart.
// See https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app/issues/186
new WatchMissingNodeModulesPlugin(path.resolve('node_modules'))
],
// ...
}
checkRequiredFiles(files: Array<string>): booleanMakes sure that all passed files exist.
Filenames are expected to be absolute.
If a file is not found, prints a warning message and returns false.
var path = require('path');
var checkRequiredFiles = require('react-dev-utils/checkRequiredFiles');
if (!checkRequiredFiles([
path.resolve('public/index.html'),
path.resolve('src/index.js')
])) {
process.exit(1);
}
clearConsole(): voidClears the console, hopefully in a cross-platform way.
var clearConsole = require('react-dev-utils/clearConsole');
clearConsole();
console.log('Just cleared the screen!');
eslintFormatter(results: Object): stringThis is our custom ESLint formatter that integrates well with Create React App console output.
You can use the default one instead if you prefer so.
const eslintFormatter = require('react-dev-utils/eslintFormatter');
// In your webpack config:
// ...
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.(js|jsx)$/,
include: paths.appSrc,
enforce: 'pre',
use: [
{
loader: 'eslint-loader',
options: {
// Pass the formatter:
formatter: eslintFormatter,
},
},
],
}
]
}
FileSizeReportermeasureFileSizesBeforeBuild(buildFolder: string): Promise<OpaqueFileSizes>Captures JS and CSS asset sizes inside the passed buildFolder. Save the result value to compare it after the build.
printFileSizesAfterBuild(webpackStats: WebpackStats, previousFileSizes: OpaqueFileSizes, buildFolder: string, maxBundleGzipSize?: number, maxChunkGzipSize?: number)Prints the JS and CSS asset sizes after the build, and includes a size comparison with previousFileSizes that were captured earlier using measureFileSizesBeforeBuild(). maxBundleGzipSize and maxChunkGzipSizemay may optionally be specified to display a warning when the main bundle or a chunk exceeds the specified size (in bytes).
var {
measureFileSizesBeforeBuild,
printFileSizesAfterBuild,
} = require('react-dev-utils/FileSizeReporter');
measureFileSizesBeforeBuild(buildFolder).then(previousFileSizes => {
return cleanAndRebuild().then(webpackStats => {
printFileSizesAfterBuild(webpackStats, previousFileSizes, buildFolder);
});
});
formatWebpackMessages({errors: Array<string>, warnings: Array<string>}): {errors: Array<string>, warnings: Array<string>}Extracts and prettifies warning and error messages from webpack stats object.
var webpack = require('webpack');
var config = require('../config/webpack.config.dev');
var formatWebpackMessages = require('react-dev-utils/formatWebpackMessages');
var compiler = webpack(config);
compiler.plugin('invalid', function() {
console.log('Compiling...');
});
compiler.plugin('done', function(stats) {
var rawMessages = stats.toJson({}, true);
var messages = formatWebpackMessages(rawMessages);
if (!messages.errors.length && !messages.warnings.length) {
console.log('Compiled successfully!');
}
if (messages.errors.length) {
console.log('Failed to compile.');
messages.errors.forEach(e => console.log(e));
return;
}
if (messages.warnings.length) {
console.log('Compiled with warnings.');
messages.warnings.forEach(w => console.log(w));
}
});
printBuildError(error: Object): voidPrettify some known build errors. Pass an Error object to log a prettified error message in the console.
const printBuildError = require('react-dev-utils/printBuildError')
try {
build()
} catch(e) {
printBuildError(e) // logs prettified message
}
getProcessForPort(port: number): stringFinds the currently running process on port.
Returns a string containing the name and directory, e.g.,
create-react-app
in /Users/developer/create-react-app
var getProcessForPort = require('react-dev-utils/getProcessForPort');
getProcessForPort(3000);
launchEditor(fileName: string, lineNumber: number): voidOn macOS, tries to find a known running editor process and opens the file in it. It can also be explicitly configured by REACT_EDITOR, VISUAL, or EDITOR environment variables. For example, you can put REACT_EDITOR=atom in your .env.local file, and Create React App will respect that.
noopServiceWorkerMiddleware(): ExpressMiddlewareReturns Express middleware that serves a /service-worker.js that resets any previously set service worker configuration. Useful for development.
openBrowser(url: string): booleanAttempts to open the browser with a given URL.
On Mac OS X, attempts to reuse an existing Chrome tab via AppleScript.
Otherwise, falls back to opn behavior.
var path = require('path');
var openBrowser = require('react-dev-utils/openBrowser');
if (openBrowser('http://localhost:3000')) {
console.log('The browser tab has been opened!');
}
printHostingInstructions(appPackage: Object, publicUrl: string, publicPath: string, buildFolder: string, useYarn: boolean): voidPrints hosting instructions after the project is built.
Pass your parsed package.json object as appPackage, your the URL where you plan to host the app as publicUrl, output.publicPath from your Webpack configuration as publicPath, the buildFolder name, and whether to useYarn in instructions.
const appPackage = require(paths.appPackageJson);
const publicUrl = paths.publicUrl;
const publicPath = config.output.publicPath;
printHostingInstructions(appPackage, publicUrl, publicPath, 'build', true);
WebpackDevServerUtilschoosePort(host: string, defaultPort: number): Promise<number | null>Returns a Promise resolving to either defaultPort or next available port if the user confirms it is okay to do. If the port is taken and the user has refused to use another port, or if the terminal is not interactive and can’t present user with the choice, resolves to null.
createCompiler(webpack: Function, config: Object, appName: string, urls: Object, useYarn: boolean): WebpackCompilerCreates a Webpack compiler instance for WebpackDevServer with built-in helpful messages. Takes the require('webpack') entry point as the first argument. To provide the urls argument, use prepareUrls() described below.
prepareProxy(proxySetting: string, appPublicFolder: string): ObjectCreates a WebpackDevServer proxy configuration object from the proxy setting in package.json.
prepareUrls(protocol: string, host: string, port: number): ObjectReturns an object with local and remote URLs for the development server. Pass this object to createCompiler() described above.
webpackHotDevClientThis is an alternative client for WebpackDevServer that shows a syntax error overlay.
It currently supports only Webpack 3.x.
// Webpack development config
module.exports = {
// ...
entry: [
// You can replace the line below with these two lines if you prefer the
// stock client:
// require.resolve('webpack-dev-server/client') + '?/',
// require.resolve('webpack/hot/dev-server'),
'react-dev-utils/webpackHotDevClient',
'src/index'
],
// ...
}
Similar to some functionalities provided by react-dev-utils, webpack-dev-server offers a development server that provides live reloading. It is more focused on being a standalone server for webpack projects, whereas react-dev-utils offers utilities that are more specifically tailored to React applications and can be used in conjunction with webpack-dev-server.
This package allows you to specify and manage environment variables for your development environment, similar to how react-dev-utils allows for environment variable manipulation and other configuration tweaks. However, env-cmd is more focused on environment variables and does not offer the wide range of utilities related to webpack and development server management.
Cross-env provides a cross-platform way to set and use environment variables in npm scripts, which is a narrower scope compared to react-dev-utils. While react-dev-utils includes utilities for working with environment variables among its features, cross-env is specifically designed for this purpose and does not include the broader set of development utilities.
FAQs
webpack utilities used by Create React App
The npm package react-dev-utils receives a total of 3,680,635 weekly downloads. As such, react-dev-utils popularity was classified as popular.
We found that react-dev-utils demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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