![Introducing Enhanced Alert Actions and Triage Functionality](https://cdn.sanity.io/images/cgdhsj6q/production/fe71306d515f85de6139b46745ea7180362324f0-2530x946.png?w=800&fit=max&auto=format)
Product
Introducing Enhanced Alert Actions and Triage Functionality
Socket now supports four distinct alert actions instead of the previous two, and alert triaging allows users to override the actions taken for all individual alerts.
webpack-dev-middleware
Advanced tools
Package description
webpack-dev-middleware is a package that provides a simple way to serve and live reload webpack bundles for development purposes. It's designed to be used with a Node.js server, such as Express, and it allows developers to serve the webpack-generated files without writing them to disk, providing a faster development experience.
Serving Webpack Bundles
This code sample demonstrates how to set up webpack-dev-middleware with an Express server. It serves the files generated by webpack based on the provided configuration.
const express = require('express');
const webpack = require('webpack');
const webpackDevMiddleware = require('webpack-dev-middleware');
const config = require('./webpack.config.js');
const compiler = webpack(config);
const app = express();
app.use(webpackDevMiddleware(compiler, {
publicPath: config.output.publicPath
}));
app.listen(3000, function () {
console.log('Example app listening on port 3000!\n');
});
Enabling Hot Module Replacement (HMR)
This code sample shows how to enable Hot Module Replacement (HMR) in conjunction with webpack-dev-middleware. It requires an additional package, webpack-hot-middleware, to work.
const webpackHotMiddleware = require('webpack-hot-middleware');
app.use(webpackDevMiddleware(compiler, {
publicPath: config.output.publicPath
}));
app.use(webpackHotMiddleware(compiler));
BrowserSync is a package that allows for live reloading of web pages as files are edited and saved. It can be integrated with webpack using browser-sync-webpack-plugin. Unlike webpack-dev-middleware, BrowserSync is focused on synchronizing interactions across multiple devices/browsers during testing.
Serve is a static file serving and directory listing package that can be used for quick prototyping and local development. It does not have built-in webpack integration or HMR, but it's a simple alternative for serving static files.
webpack-hot-server-middleware is similar to webpack-dev-middleware but is specifically designed for use with server-side rendering in Node.js applications. It works in tandem with webpack-dev-middleware and webpack-hot-middleware to enable HMR for server-rendered apps.
webpack-serve is a now-deprecated package that was once an alternative to webpack-dev-middleware. It provided a development server that used webpack's watch mode to observe file changes and recompile automatically. It has since been replaced by webpack-dev-server, which offers similar functionality.
Changelog
4.0.0-rc.3 (2020-07-14)
Readme
An express-style development middleware for use with webpack bundles and allows for serving of the files emitted from webpack. This should be used for development only.
Some of the benefits of using this middleware include:
First thing's first, install the module:
npm install webpack-dev-middleware --save-dev
Note: We do not recommend installing this module globally.
const webpack = require('webpack');
const middleware = require('webpack-dev-middleware');
const compiler = webpack({
// webpack options
});
const express = require('express');
const app = express();
app.use(
middleware(compiler, {
// webpack-dev-middleware options
})
);
app.listen(3000, () => console.log('Example app listening on port 3000!'));
The middleware accepts an options
Object. The following is a property reference for the Object.
Type: Array
Default: [ 'GET', 'HEAD' ]
This property allows a user to pass the list of HTTP request methods accepted by the server.
Type: Object
Default: undefined
This property allows a user to pass custom HTTP headers on each request.
eg. { "X-Custom-Header": "yes" }
Type: Boolean|String
Default: index.html
If false
(but not undefined
), the server will not respond to requests to the root URL.
Type: Object
Default: undefined
This property allows a user to register custom mime types or extension mappings.
eg. mimeTypes: { phtml: 'text/html' }
.
Please see the documentation for mime-types
for more information.
Type: String
Default: output.publicPath
The public path that the middleware is bound to.
Best Practice: use the same publicPath
defined in your webpack config.
For more information about publicPath
, please see the webpack documentation.
Type: Boolean
Default: undefined
Instructs the module to enable or disable the server-side rendering mode. Please see Server-Side Rendering for more information.
Type: Boolean|Function
Default: false
If true
, the option will instruct the module to write files to the configured
location on disk as specified in your webpack
config file. Setting
writeToDisk: true
won't change the behavior of the webpack-dev-middleware
,
and bundle files accessed through the browser will still be served from memory.
This option provides the same capabilities as the
WriteFilePlugin
.
This option also accepts a Function
value, which can be used to filter which
files are written to disk. The function follows the same premise as
Array#filter
in which a return value of false
will not write the file, and a return value
of true
will write the file to disk. eg.
const webpack = require('webpack');
const configuration = {
/* Webpack configuration */
};
const compiler = webpack(configuration);
middleware(compiler, {
writeToDisk: (filePath) => {
return /superman\.css$/.test(filePath);
},
});
Type: Object
Default: memfs
Set the default file system which will be used by webpack as primary destination of generated files. This option isn't affected by the writeToDisk option.
You have to provide .join()
and mkdirp
method to the outputFileSystem
instance manually for compatibility with webpack@4
.
This can be done simply by using path.join
:
const webpack = require('webpack');
const path = require('path');
const myOutputFileSystem = require('my-fs');
const mkdirp = require('mkdirp');
myOutputFileSystem.join = path.join.bind(path); // no need to bind
myOutputFileSystem.mkdirp = mkdirp.bind(mkdirp); // no need to bind
const compiler = webpack({
/* Webpack configuration */
});
middleware(compiler, { outputFileSystem: myOutputFileSystem });
webpack-dev-middleware
also provides convenience methods that can be use to
interact with the middleware at runtime:
close(callback)
Instructs a webpack-dev-middleware instance to stop watching for file changes.
Type: Function
A function executed once the middleware has stopped watching.
invalidate()
Instructs a webpack-dev-middleware instance to recompile the bundle. e.g. after a change to the configuration.
const webpack = require('webpack');
const compiler = webpack({ ... });
const middleware = require('webpack-dev-middleware');
const instance = middleware(compiler);
app.use(instance);
setTimeout(() => {
// After a short delay the configuration is changed and a banner plugin is added
// to the config
compiler.apply(new webpack.BannerPlugin('A new banner'));
// Recompile the bundle with the banner plugin:
instance.invalidate();
}, 1000);
waitUntilValid(callback)
Executes a callback function when the compiler bundle is valid, typically after compilation.
Type: Function
A function executed when the bundle becomes valid. If the bundle is valid at the time of calling, the callback is executed immediately.
const webpack = require('webpack');
const compiler = webpack({ ... });
const middleware = require('webpack-dev-middleware');
const instance = middleware(compiler);
app.use(instance);
instance.waitUntilValid(() => {
console.log('Package is in a valid state');
});
Watching will frequently cause multiple compilations
as the bundle changes during compilation. This is due in part to cross-platform
differences in file watchers, so that webpack doesn't loose file changes when
watched files change rapidly. If you run into this situation, please make use of
the TimeFixPlugin
.
Note: this feature is experimental and may be removed or changed completely in the future.
In order to develop an app using server-side rendering, we need access to the
stats
, which is
generated with each build.
With server-side rendering enabled, webpack-dev-middleware
sets the stats
to res.locals.webpack.devMiddleware.stats
and the filesystem to res.locals.webpack.devMiddleware.outputFileSystem
before invoking the next middleware,
allowing a developer to render the page body and manage the response to clients.
Note: Requests for bundle files will still be handled by
webpack-dev-middleware
and all requests will be pending until the build
process is finished with server-side rendering enabled.
Example Implementation:
const webpack = require('webpack');
const compiler = webpack({
// webpack options
});
const isObject = require('is-object');
const middleware = require('webpack-dev-middleware');
// This function makes server rendering of asset references consistent with different webpack chunk/entry configurations
function normalizeAssets(assets) {
if (isObject(assets)) {
return Object.values(assets);
}
return Array.isArray(assets) ? assets : [assets];
}
app.use(middleware(compiler, { serverSideRender: true }));
// The following middleware would not be invoked until the latest build is finished.
app.use((req, res) => {
const { devMiddleware } = res.locals.webpack;
const outputFileSystem = devMiddleware.outputFileSystem;
const jsonWebpackStats = devMiddleware.stats.toJson();
const { assetsByChunkName, outputPath } = jsonWebpackStats;
// Then use `assetsByChunkName` for server-side rendering
// For example, if you have only one main chunk:
res.send(`
<html>
<head>
<title>My App</title>
<style>
${normalizeAssets(assetsByChunkName.main)
.filter((path) => path.endsWith('.css'))
.map((path) => outputFileSystem.readFileSync(path.join(outputPath, path)))
.join('\n')}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="root"></div>
${normalizeAssets(assetsByChunkName.main)
.filter((path) => path.endsWith('.js'))
.map((path) => `<script src="${path}"></script>`)
.join('\n')}
</body>
</html>
`);
});
We do our best to keep Issues in the repository focused on bugs, features, and needed modifications to the code for the module. Because of that, we ask users with general support, "how-to", or "why isn't this working" questions to try one of the other support channels that are available.
Your first-stop-shop for support for webpack-dev-server should by the excellent documentation for the module. If you see an opportunity for improvement of those docs, please head over to the webpack.js.org repo and open a pull request.
From there, we encourage users to visit the webpack Gitter chat and
talk to the fine folks there. If your quest for answers comes up dry in chat,
head over to StackOverflow and do a quick search or open a new
question. Remember; It's always much easier to answer questions that include your
webpack.config.js
and relevant files!
If you're twitter-savvy you can tweet #webpack with your question and someone should be able to reach out and lend a hand.
If you have discovered a :bug:, have a feature suggestion, or would like to see a modification, please feel free to create an issue on Github. Note: The issue template isn't optional, so please be sure not to remove it, and please fill it out completely.
Please take a moment to read our contributing guidelines if you haven't yet done so.
FAQs
A development middleware for webpack
The npm package webpack-dev-middleware receives a total of 17,811,487 weekly downloads. As such, webpack-dev-middleware popularity was classified as popular.
We found that webpack-dev-middleware demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Product
Socket now supports four distinct alert actions instead of the previous two, and alert triaging allows users to override the actions taken for all individual alerts.
Security News
Polyfill.io has been serving malware for months via its CDN, after the project's open source maintainer sold the service to a company based in China.
Security News
OpenSSF is warning open source maintainers to stay vigilant against reputation farming on GitHub, where users artificially inflate their status by manipulating interactions on closed issues and PRs.