
Product
Introducing Socket Fix for Safe, Automated Dependency Upgrades
Automatically fix and test dependency updates with socket fixโa new CLI tool that turns CVE alerts into safe, automated upgrades.
Packs CommonJs/AMD modules for the browser. Allows to split your codebase into multiple bundles, which can be loaded on demand. Support loaders to preprocess files, i.e. json, jade, coffee, css, less, ... and your custom stuff.
Webpack is a powerful module bundler for JavaScript applications. It processes applications by internally building a dependency graph which maps every module your project needs and generates one or more bundles. It is highly extensible via loaders and plugins, and it's designed to manage, transform, and bundle frontend assets like JavaScript, CSS, and images.
Module Bundling
Webpack bundles all the JavaScript files and other assets like CSS and images into a single output file. The code sample shows a basic webpack configuration defining an entry point and the output bundle.
module.exports = {
entry: './path/to/my/entry/file.js',
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
filename: 'my-first-webpack.bundle.js'
}
};
Loaders
Loaders allow webpack to process different types of files and convert them into modules that can be included in your bundle. The code sample demonstrates how to use loaders to handle .txt and .css files.
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{ test: /\.txt$/, use: 'raw-loader' },
{ test: /\.css$/, use: ['style-loader', 'css-loader'] }
]
}
};
Plugins
Plugins can be leveraged to perform a wider range of tasks like bundle optimization, asset management, and environment variable injection. The code sample shows how to use the HtmlWebpackPlugin to generate an index.html file with the bundled assets injected.
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
plugins: [new HtmlWebpackPlugin({ template: './src/index.html' })]
};
Development Server
Webpack provides a development server that can be used to serve your application during development. It supports live reloading. The code sample configures the webpack development server to serve files from the 'dist' directory.
module.exports = {
devServer: {
contentBase: './dist',
open: true
}
};
Code Splitting
Code splitting allows you to split your code into various bundles which can then be loaded on demand or in parallel. The code sample shows how to split the application and vendor code into separate bundles.
module.exports = {
entry: {
app: './src/app.js',
vendor: './src/vendor.js'
},
output: {
filename: '[name].bundle.js',
path: __dirname + '/dist'
}
};
Rollup is a module bundler for JavaScript which uses a flat bundle approach that's more efficient for libraries and applications with a complex module structure. It's known for its tree-shaking capabilities, which eliminate unused code.
Parcel is a web application bundler that offers a zero-configuration setup. It's known for its fast bundle times and out-of-the-box support for many file types without the need for additional plugins or loaders.
Browserify lets you require('modules') in the browser by bundling up all of your dependencies. It's been around longer than webpack and has a simpler approach, but it lacks some of the more advanced features and optimizations that webpack offers.
FuseBox is a bundler/module loader that combines the power of webpack, JSPM, and SystemJS. It introduces a streamlined workflow and has a powerful API. It's known for its speed and simplicity.
webpack is a bundler for modules. The main purpose is to bundle JavaScript files for usage in a browser, yet it is also capable of transforming, bundling, or packaging just about any resource or asset.
TL; DR
Check out webpack's documentation for quick Getting Started guide, in-depth usage, tutorials and resources.
project:
npm install webpack --save-dev
global:
npm install webpack -g
Usage
https://webpack.github.io/docs/tutorials/getting-started/
Take a look at the examples
folder.
webpack has a rich plugin interface. Most of the features within webpack itself use this plugin interface. This makes webpack very flexible.
webpack uses async I/O and has multiple caching levels. This makes webpack fast and incredibly fast on incremental compilations.
webpack enables use of loaders to preprocess files. This allows you to bundle any static resource way beyond JavaScript. You can easily write your own loaders using node.js.
Loaders are activated by using loadername!
prefixes in require()
statements,
or are automatically applied via regex from your webpack configuration.
Please see Using Loaders for more information.
basic
json
: Loads file as JSONraw
: Loads raw content of a file (as utf-8)val
: Executes code as module and consider exports as JavaScript codescript
: Executes a JavaScript file once in global context (like in script tag), requires are not parsed.packaging
file
: Emits the file into the output folder and returns the (relative) url.url
: The url loader works like the file loader, but can return a Data Url if the file is smaller than a limit.image
: Compresses your images. Ideal to use together with file
or url
.svgo-loader
: Compresses SVG images using svgo librarybaggage
: Automatically require any resources related to the required onepolymer-loader
: Process HTML & CSS with preprocessor of choice and require()
Web Components like first-class modules.dialects
coffee
: Loads coffee-script like JavaScriptbabel
: Turn ES6 code into vanilla ES5 using Babel.livescript
: Loads LiveScript like JavaScriptsweetjs
: Use sweetjs macros.traceur
: Use future JavaScript features with Traceur.typescript
: Loads TypeScript like JavaScript.templating
html
: Exports HTML as string, require references to static resources.jade
: Loads jade template and returns a functionhandlebars
: Loads handlebars template and returns a functionractive
: Pre-compiles Ractive templates for interactive DOM manipulationmarkdown
: Compiles Markdown to HTMLng-cache
: Puts HTML partials in the Angular's $templateCachestyling
style
: Add exports of a module as style to DOMcss
: Loads css file with resolved imports and returns css codecssnext
: Loads and compiles a css file using cssnextless
: Loads and compiles a less filesass
: Loads and compiles a scss filestylus
: Loads and compiles a stylus filemisc
po
: Loads a PO gettext file and returns JSONmocha
: Do tests with mocha in browser or node.jseslint
: PreLoader for linting code using ESLint.jshint
: PreLoader for linting code.jscs
: PreLoader for style checking.injectable
: Allow to inject dependencies into modulestransform
: Use browserify transforms as loader.For the full list of loaders, see list of loaders.
webpack supports both AMD and CommonJS module styles. It performs clever static analysis on the AST of your code. It even has an evaluation engine to evaluate simple expressions. This allows you to support most existing libraries out of the box.
webpack allows you to split your codebase into multiple chunks. Chunks are loaded asynchronously at runtime. This reduces the initial loading time.
webpack can do many optimizations to reduce the output size of your JavaScript by deduplicating frequently used modules, minifying, and giving you full control of what is loaded initially and what is loaded at runtime through code splitting. It can also can make your code chunks cache friendly by using hashes.
webpack optimizes in several ways. It also makes your chunks cache-friendly by using hashes.
// webpack is a module bundler.
// This means webpack takes modules with dependencies
// and emits static assets representing those modules.
// Dependencies can be written in CommonJs
var commonjs = require("./commonjs");
// or in AMD
define(["amd-module", "../file"], function (amdModule, file) {
// while previous constructs are sync,
// this is async
require(["big-module/big/file"], function (big) {
// For async dependencies, webpack splits
// your application into multiple "chunks".
// This part of your application is
// loaded on demand (code-splitting).
var stuff = require("../my/stuff");
// "../my/stuff" is also loaded on-demand
// because it's in the callback function
// of the AMD require.
});
});
require("coffee!./cup.coffee");
// "Loaders" are used to preprocess files.
// They can be prefixed in the require call
// or configured in the configuration.
require("./cup");
// This does the same when you add ".coffee" to the extensions
// and configure the "coffee" loader for /\.coffee$/
function loadTemplate (name) {
return require("./templates/" + name + ".jade");
// Many expressions are supported in require calls.
// A clever parser extracts information and concludes
// that everything in "./templates" that matches
// /\.jade$/ should be included in the bundle, as it
// can be required.
}
// ...and you can combine everything.
function loadTemplateAsync (name, callback) {
require(["bundle?lazy!./templates/" + name + ".jade"],
function (templateBundle) {
templateBundle(callback);
});
}
You can run the Node tests with npm test
.
You can run the browser tests:
cd test/browsertests
node build
and open tests.html
in the browser.
Most of the time, if webpack is not working correctly for you it is a simple configuration issue.
If you are still having difficulty after looking over your configuration carefully, please post a question to StackOverflow with the webpack tag. Questions that include your webpack.config.js and relevant files are more likely to receive responses.
If you have discovered a bug or have a feature suggestion, feel free to create an issue on Github.
If you create a loader or plugin, please consider open sourcing it, putting it
on NPM and following the x-loader
, x-plugin
convention.
You are also welcome to correct any spelling mistakes or any language issues.
If you want to discuss something or just need help, here is our gitter.im room.
Copyright (c) 2012-2015 Tobias Koppers
MIT (http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php)
(In chronological order)
This is a free-time project. The time I invest in it fluctuates. If you use webpack for a serious task, and you'd like me to invest more time on it, please donate. This project increases your income/productivity too. It makes development and applications faster and it reduces the required bandwidth.
I'm very thankful for every dollar. If you leave your username or email, I may show my thanks by giving you extra support.
FAQs
Packs ECMAScript/CommonJs/AMD modules for the browser. Allows you to split your codebase into multiple bundles, which can be loaded on demand. Supports loaders to preprocess files, i.e. json, jsx, es7, css, less, ... and your custom stuff.
The npm package webpack receives a total of 20,887,404 weekly downloads. As such, webpack popularity was classified as popular.
We found that webpack demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago.ย 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
Automatically fix and test dependency updates with socket fixโa new CLI tool that turns CVE alerts into safe, automated upgrades.
Security News
CISA denies CVE funding issues amid backlash over a new CVE foundation formed by board members, raising concerns about transparency and program governance.
Product
Weโre excited to announce a powerful new capability in Socket: historical data and enhanced analytics.