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configuration

Klaus Trainer edited this page Nov 29, 2016 · 143 revisions

webpack is fed a configuration object. Depending on your usage of webpack there are two ways to pass this configuration object:

CLI

If you use the CLI it will read a file webpack.config.js (or the file passed by the --config option). This file should export the configuration object:

module.exports = {
	// configuration
};

node.js API

If you use the node.js API you need to pass the configuration object as parameter:

webpack({
	// configuration
}, callback);

multiple configurations

In both cases you can also use an array of configurations, which are processed in parallel. They share filesystem cache and watchers so this is more efficient than calling webpack multiple times.

configuration object content

Hint: Keep in mind that you don't need to write pure JSON into the configuration. Use any JavaScript you want. It's just a node.js module...

Very simple configuration object example:

{
	context: __dirname + "/app",
	entry: "./entry",
	output: {
		path: __dirname + "/dist",
		filename: "bundle.js"
	}
}

context

The base directory (absolute path!) for resolving the entry option. If output.pathinfo is set, the included pathinfo is shortened to this directory.

Default: process.cwd()

entry

The entry point for the bundle.

If you pass a string: The string is resolved to a module which is loaded upon startup.

If you pass an array: All modules are loaded upon startup. The last one is exported.

entry: ["./entry1", "./entry2"]

If you pass an object: Multiple entry bundles are created. The key is the chunk name. The value can be a string or an array.

{
	entry: {
		page1: "./page1",
		page2: ["./entry1", "./entry2"]
	},
	output: {
		// Make sure to use [name] or [id] in output.filename
		//  when using multiple entry points
		filename: "[name].bundle.js",
		chunkFilename: "[id].bundle.js"
	}
}

NOTE: It is not possible to configure other options specific to entry points. If you need entry point specific configuration you need to use multiple configurations.

output

Options affecting the output of the compilation. output options tell Webpack how to write the compiled files to disk. Note, that while there can be multiple entry points, only one output configuration is specified.

If you use any hashing ([hash] or [chunkhash]), make sure to have a consistent ordering of modules. Use the OccurrenceOrderPlugin or recordsPath.

output.filename

Specifies the name of each output file on disk. You must not specify an absolute path here! The output.path option determines the location on disk the files are written. filename is used solely for naming the individual files.

single entry

{
  entry: './src/app.js',
  output: {
    filename: 'bundle.js',
    path: __dirname + '/build'
  }
}

// writes to disk: ./build/bundle.js

multiple entries

If your configuration creates more than a single "chunk" (as with multiple entry points or when using plugins like CommonsChunkPlugin), you should use substitutions to ensure that each file has a unique name.

[name] is replaced by the name of the chunk.

[hash] is replaced by the hash of the compilation.

[chunkhash] is replaced by the hash of the chunk.

{
  entry: {
    app: './src/app.js',
    search: './src/search.js'
  },
  output: {
    filename: '[name].js',
    path: __dirname + '/build'
  }
}

// writes to disk: ./build/app.js, ./build/search.js

output.path

The output directory as an absolute path (required).

[hash] is replaced by the hash of the compilation.

output.publicPath

The publicPath specifies the public URL address of the output files when referenced in a browser. For loaders that embed <script> or <link> tags or reference assets like images, publicPath is used as the href or url() to the file when it's different than their location on disk (as specified by path). This can be helpful when you want to host some or all output files on a different domain or on a CDN. The Webpack Dev Server also uses this to determine the path where the output files are expected to be served from. As with path you can use the [hash] substitution for a better caching profile.

config.js

output: {
	path: "/home/proj/public/assets",
	publicPath: "/assets/"
}

index.html

<head>
  <link href="/assets/spinner.gif"/>
</head>

And a more complicated example of using a CDN and hashes for assets.

config.js

output: {
	path: "/home/proj/cdn/assets/[hash]",
	publicPath: "http://cdn.example.com/assets/[hash]/"
}

Note: In cases when the eventual publicPath of output files isn't known at compile time, it can be left blank and set dynamically at runtime in the entry point file. If you don't know the publicPath while compiling, you can omit it and set __webpack_public_path__ on your entry point.

 __webpack_public_path__ = myRuntimePublicPath

// rest of your application entry

output.chunkFilename

The filename of non-entry chunks as a relative path inside the output.path directory.

[id] is replaced by the id of the chunk.

[name] is replaced by the name of the chunk (or with the id when the chunk has no name).

[hash] is replaced by the hash of the compilation.

[chunkhash] is replaced by the hash of the chunk.

output.sourceMapFilename

The filename of the SourceMaps for the JavaScript files. They are inside the output.path directory.

[file] is replaced by the filename of the JavaScript file.

[id] is replaced by the id of the chunk.

[hash] is replaced by the hash of the compilation.

Default: "[file].map"

output.devtoolModuleFilenameTemplate

Filename template string of function for the sources array in a generated SourceMap.

[resource] is replaced by the path used by Webpack to resolve the file, including the query params to the rightmost loader (if any).

[resource-path] is the same as [resource] but without the loader query params.

[loaders] is the list of loaders and params up to the name of the rightmost loader (only explicit loaders).

[all-loaders] is the list of loaders and params up to the name of the rightmost loader (including automatic loaders).

[id] is replaced by the id of the module.

[hash] is replaced by the hash of the module identifier.

[absolute-resource-path] is replaced with the absolute filename.

Default (devtool=[inline-]source-map): "webpack:///[resource-path]"
Default (devtool=eval): "webpack:///[resource-path]?[loaders]"
Default (devtool=eval-source-map): "webpack:///[resource-path]?[hash]"

Can also be defined as a function instead of a string template. The function will accept an info object parameter which exposes the following properties:

  • identifier
  • shortIdentifier
  • resource
  • resourcePath
  • absoluteResourcePath
  • allLoaders
  • query
  • moduleId
  • hash

output.devtoolFallbackModuleFilenameTemplate

Similar to output.devtoolModuleFilenameTemplate but used in the case of duplicate module identifiers.

Default: "webpack:///[resourcePath]?[hash]"

output.devtoolLineToLine

Enable line-to-line mapped mode for all/specified modules. Line-to-line mapped mode uses a simple SourceMap where each line of the generated source is mapped to the same line of the original source. It's a performance optimization. Only use it if your performance needs to be better and you are sure that input lines match which generated lines.

true enables it for all modules (not recommended)

An object {test, include, exclude} similar to module.loaders enables it for specific files.

Default: disabled

output.hotUpdateChunkFilename

The filename of the Hot Update Chunks. They are inside the output.path directory.

[id] is replaced by the id of the chunk.

[hash] is replaced by the hash of the compilation. (The last hash stored in the records)

Default: "[id].[hash].hot-update.js"

output.hotUpdateMainFilename

The filename of the Hot Update Main File. It is inside the output.path directory.

[hash] is replaced by the hash of the compilation. (The last hash stored in the records)

Default: "[hash].hot-update.json"

output.jsonpFunction

The JSONP function used by webpack for async loading of chunks.

A shorter function may reduce the filesize a bit. Use a different identifier when having multiple webpack instances on a single page.

Default: "webpackJsonp"

output.hotUpdateFunction

The JSONP function used by webpack for async loading of hot update chunks.

Default: "webpackHotUpdate"

output.pathinfo

Include comments with information about the modules.

require(/* ./test */23)

Do not use this in production.

Default: false

output.library

If set, export the bundle as library. output.library is the name.

Use this if you are writing a library and want to publish it as single file.

output.libraryTarget

Which format to export the library:

"var" - Export by setting a variable: var Library = xxx (default)

"this" - Export by setting a property of this: this["Library"] = xxx

"commonjs" - Export by setting a property of exports: exports["Library"] = xxx

"commonjs2" - Export by setting module.exports: module.exports = xxx

"amd" - Export to AMD (optionally named - set the name via the library option)

"umd" - Export to AMD, CommonJS2 or as property in root

Default: "var"

If output.library is not set, but output.libraryTarget is set to a value other than var, every property of the exported object is copied (Except amd, commonjs2 and umd).

output.umdNamedDefine

If output.libraryTarget is set to umd and output.library is set, setting this to true will name the AMD module.

output.sourcePrefix

Prefixes every line of the source in the bundle with this string.

Default: "\t"

output.crossOriginLoading

This option enables cross-origin loading of chunks.

Possible values are:

false - Disable cross-origin loading.

"anonymous" - Cross-origin loading is enabled. When using anonymous no credentials will be sent with the request.

"use-credentials" - Cross-origin loading is enabled and credentials will be send with the request.

For more information on cross-origin loading see MDN

Default: false

module

Options affecting the normal modules (NormalModuleFactory)

module.loaders

An array of automatically applied loaders.

Each item can have these properties:

  • test: A condition that must be met
  • exclude: A condition that must not be met
  • include: An array of paths or files where the imported files will be transformed by the loader
  • loader: A string of "!" separated loaders
  • loaders: An array of loaders as string

A condition may be a RegExp (tested against absolute path), a string containing the absolute path, a function(absPath): bool, or an array of one of these combined with "and".

See more: loaders

IMPORTANT: The loaders here are resolved relative to the resource which they are applied to. This means they are not resolved relative to the configuration file. If you have loaders installed from npm and your node_modules folder is not in a parent folder of all source files, webpack cannot find the loader. You need to add the node_modules folder as an absolute path to the resolveLoader.root option. (resolveLoader: { root: path.join(__dirname, "node_modules") })

Example:

module: {
  loaders: [
    {
      // "test" is commonly used to match the file extension
      test: /\.jsx$/,

      // "include" is commonly used to match the directories
      include: [
        path.resolve(__dirname, "app/src"),
        path.resolve(__dirname, "app/test")
      ],

      // "exclude" should be used to exclude exceptions
      // try to prefer "include" when possible

      // the "loader"
      loader: "babel-loader" // or "babel" because webpack adds the '-loader' automatically
    }
  ]
}

module.preLoaders, module.postLoaders

Syntax like module.loaders.

An array of applied pre and post loaders.

module.noParse

Don't parse files matching a RegExp or an array of RegExps.

It's matched against the full resolved request.

This can boost the performance when ignoring big libraries.

The files are expected to have no call to require, define, or similar. They are allowed to use exports and module.exports.

automatically created contexts defaults module.xxxContextXxx

There are multiple options to configure the defaults for an automatically created context. We differentiate three types of automatically created contexts:

  • exprContext: An expression as a dependency (i. e. require(expr))
  • wrappedContext: An expression plus pre- and/or suffixed string (i. e. require("./templates/" + expr))
  • unknownContext: Any other unparsable usage of require (i. e. require)

Four options are possible for automatically created contexts:

  • request: The request for context.
  • recursive: Subdirectories should be traversed.
  • regExp: The RegExp for the expression.
  • critical: This type of dependency should be consider as critical (emits a warning).

All options and defaults:

unknownContextRequest = ".", unknownContextRecursive = true, unknownContextRegExp = /^\.\/.*$/, unknownContextCritical = true

exprContextRequest = ".", exprContextRegExp = /^\.\/.*$/, exprContextRecursive = true, exprContextCritical = true

wrappedContextRegExp = /.*/, wrappedContextRecursive = true, wrappedContextCritical = false

Note: module.wrappedContextRegExp only refers to the middle part of the full RegExp. The remaining is generated from prefix and suffix.

Example:

{
  module: {
	// Disable handling of unknown requires
	unknownContextRegExp: /$^/,
	unknownContextCritical: false,

	// Disable handling of requires with a single expression
	exprContextRegExp: /$^/,
	exprContextCritical: false,

	// Warn for every expression in require
	wrappedContextCritical: true
  }
}

resolve

Options affecting the resolving of modules.

resolve.alias

Replace modules with other modules or paths.

Expects an object with keys being module names. The value is the new path. It's similar to a replace but a bit more clever. If the key ends with $ only the exact match (without the $) will be replaced.

If the value is a relative path it will be relative to the file containing the require.

Examples: Calling a require from /abc/entry.js with different alias settings.

alias: require("xyz") require("xyz/file.js")
{} /abc/node_modules/xyz/index.js /abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
{ xyz: "/absolute/path/to/file.js" } /absolute/path/to/file.js error
{ xyz$: "/absolute/path/to/file.js" } /absolute/path/to/file.js /abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
{ xyz: "./dir/file.js" } /abc/dir/file.js error
{ xyz$: "./dir/file.js" } /abc/dir/file.js /abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
{ xyz: "/some/dir" } /some/dir/index.js /some/dir/file.js
{ xyz$: "/some/dir" } /some/dir/index.js /abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
{ xyz: "./dir" } /abc/dir/index.js /abc/dir/file.js
{ xyz: "modu" } /abc/node_modules/modu/index.js /abc/node_modules/modu/file.js
{ xyz$: "modu" } /abc/node_modules/modu/index.js /abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
{ xyz: "modu/some/file.js" } /abc/node_modules/modu/some/file.js error
{ xyz: "modu/dir" } /abc/node_modules/modu/dir/index.js /abc/node_modules/dir/file.js
{ xyz: "xyz/dir" } /abc/node_modules/xyz/dir/index.js /abc/node_modules/xyz/dir/file.js
{ xyz$: "xyz/dir" } /abc/node_modules/xyz/dir/index.js /abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js

index.js may resolve to another file if defined in the package.json.

/abc/node_modules may resolve in /node_modules too.

resolve.root

The directory (absolute path) that contains your modules. May also be an array of directories. This setting should be used to add individual directories to the search path.

It must be an absolute path! Don't pass something like ./app/modules.

Example:

var path = require('path');

// ...
resolve: {
  root: [
    path.resolve('./app/modules'),
    path.resolve('./vendor/modules')
  ]
}

resolve.modulesDirectories

An array of directory names to be resolved to the current directory as well as its ancestors, and searched for modules. This functions similarly to how node finds "node_modules" directories. For example, if the value is ["mydir"], webpack will look in "./mydir", "../mydir", "../../mydir", etc.

Default: ["web_modules", "node_modules"]

Note: Passing "../someDir", "app", "." or an absolute path isn't necessary here. Just use a directory name, not a path. Use only if you expect to have a hierarchy within these folders. Otherwise you may want to use the resolve.root option instead.

resolve.fallback

A directory (or array of directories absolute paths), in which webpack should look for modules that weren't found in resolve.root or resolve.modulesDirectories.

resolve.extensions

An array of extensions that should be used to resolve modules. For example, in order to discover CoffeeScript files, your array should contain the string ".coffee".

Default: [".webpack.js", ".web.js", ".js"]

IMPORTANT: Setting this option will override the default, meaning that webpack will no longer try to resolve modules using the default extensions. If you want modules that were required with their extension (e.g. require('./somefile.ext')) to be properly resolved, you must include an empty string in your array. Similarly, if you want modules that were required without extensions (e.g. require('underscore')) to be resolved to files with ".js" extensions, you must include ".js" in your array.

resolve.packageMains

Check these fields in the package.json for suitable files.

Default: ["webpack", "browser", "web", "browserify", ["jam", "main"], "main"]

Note: This option has been changed to resolve.mainFields in webpack 2.

resolve.packageAlias

Check this field in the package.json for an object. Key-value-pairs are treated as aliasing according to this spec

Not set by default

Example: "browser" to check the browser field.

resolve.unsafeCache

Enable aggressive but unsafe caching for the resolving of a part of your files. Changes to cached paths may cause failure (in rare cases). An array of RegExps, only a RegExp or true (all files) is expected. If the resolved path matches, it'll be cached.

Default: []

resolveLoader

Like resolve but for loaders.

// Default:
{
	modulesDirectories: ["web_loaders", "web_modules", "node_loaders", "node_modules"],
	extensions: ["", ".webpack-loader.js", ".web-loader.js", ".loader.js", ".js"],
	packageMains: ["webpackLoader", "webLoader", "loader", "main"]
}

Note that you can use alias here and other features familiar from resolve. For example { txt: 'raw-loader' } would shim txt!templates/demo.txt to use raw-loader.

resolveLoader.moduleTemplates

That's a resolveLoader only property.

It describes alternatives for the module name that are tried.

Default: ["*-webpack-loader", "*-web-loader", "*-loader", "*"]

externals

Specify dependencies that shouldn't be resolved by webpack, but should become dependencies of the resulting bundle. The kind of the dependency depends on output.libraryTarget.

As value an object, a string, a function, a RegExp, and an array is accepted.

  • string: An exact matched dependency becomes external. The same string is used as external dependency.
  • object: If an dependency matches exactly a property of the object, the property value is used as dependency. The property value may contain a dependency type prefixed and separated with a space. If the property value is true the property name is used instead. If the property value is false the externals test is aborted and the dependency is not external. See example below.
  • function: function(context, request, callback(err, result)) The function is called on each dependency. If a result is passed to the callback function this value is handled like a property value of an object (above bullet point).
  • RegExp: Every matched dependency becomes external. The matched text is used as the request for the external dependency. Because the request is the exact code used to generate the external code hook, if you are matching a commonjs package (e.g. '../some/package.js'), instead use the function external strategy. You can import the package via callback(null, "require('" + request + "')", which generates a module.exports = require('../some/package.js');, using require outside of webpack context.
  • array: Multiple values of the scheme (recursive).

Example:

{
	output: { libraryTarget: "commonjs" },
	externals: [
		{
			a: false, // a is not external
			b: true, // b is external (require("b"))
			"./c": "c", // "./c" is external (require("c"))
			"./d": "var d" // "./d" is external (d)
		},
		// Every non-relative module is external
		// abc -> require("abc")
		/^[a-z\-0-9]+$/,
		function(context, request, callback) {
			// Every module prefixed with "global-" becomes external
			// "global-abc" -> abc
			if(/^global-/.test(request))
				return callback(null, "var " + request.substr(7));
			callback();
		},
		"./e" // "./e" is external (require("./e"))
	]
}
type value resulting import code
"var" "abc" module.exports = abc;
"var" "abc.def" module.exports = abc.def;
"this" "abc" (function() { module.exports = this["abc"]; }());
"this" ["abc", "def"] (function() { module.exports = this["abc"]["def"]; }());
"commonjs" "abc" module.exports = require("abc");
"commonjs" ["abc", "def"] module.exports = require("abc").def;
"amd" "abc" define(["abc"], function(X) { module.exports = X; })
"umd" "abc" everything above

Enforcing amd or umd in a external value will break if not compiling as amd/umd target.

Note: If using umd you can specify an object as external value with property commonjs, commonjs2, amd and root to set different values for each import kind.

target

  • "web" Compile for usage in a browser-like environment (default)
  • "webworker" Compile as WebWorker
  • "node" Compile for usage in a node.js-like environment (use require to load chunks)
  • "async-node" Compile for usage in a node.js-like environment (use fs and vm to load chunks async)
  • "node-webkit" Compile for usage in webkit, uses jsonp chunk loading but also supports build in node.js modules plus require("nw.gui") (experimental)
  • "electron" Compile for usage in Electron – supports require-ing Electron-specific modules.
  • "electron-renderer" Compile for electron renderer process, provide a target using JsonpTemplatePlugin, FunctionModulePlugin for browser environment and NodeTargetPlugin and ExternalsPlugin for commonjs and electron bulit-in modules. Note: need webpack >= 1.12.15.

bail

Report the first error as a hard error instead of tolerating it.

profile

Capture timing information for each module.

Hint: Use the analyze tool to visualize it. --json or stats.toJson() will give you the stats as JSON.

cache

Cache generated modules and chunks to improve performance for multiple incremental builds.

This is enabled by default in watch mode.

You can pass false to disable it.

You can pass an object to enable it and let webpack use the passed object as cache. This way you can share the cache object between multiple compiler calls. Note: Don't share the cache between calls with different options.

debug

Switch loaders to debug mode.

devtool

Choose a developer tool to enhance debugging.

eval - Each module is executed with eval and //@ sourceURL.

source-map - A SourceMap is emitted. See also output.sourceMapFilename.

hidden-source-map - Same as source-map, but doesn't add a reference comment to the bundle.

inline-source-map - A SourceMap is added as DataUrl to the JavaScript file.

eval-source-map - Each module is executed with eval and a SourceMap is added as DataUrl to the eval.

cheap-source-map - A SourceMap without column-mappings. SourceMaps from loaders are not used.

cheap-module-source-map - A SourceMap without column-mappings. SourceMaps from loaders are simplified to a single mapping per line.

Prefixing @, # or #@ will enforce a pragma style. (Defaults to @ in webpack@1 and # in webpack@2; using # is recommended)

Combinations are possible. hidden, inline, eval and pragma style are exclusive.

i. e. cheap-module-inline-source-map, cheap-eval-source-map, #@source-map

Hint: If your modules already contain SourceMaps you'll need to use the source-map-loader to merge it with the emitted SourceMap.

devtool build speed rebuild speed production supported quality
eval +++ +++ no generated code
cheap-eval-source-map + ++ no transformed code (lines only)
cheap-source-map + o yes transformed code (lines only)
cheap-module-eval-source-map o ++ no original source (lines only)
cheap-module-source-map o - yes original source (lines only)
eval-source-map -- + no original source
source-map -- -- yes original source

Example:

{
	devtool: "#inline-source-map"
}
// =>
//# sourceMappingURL=...

Note: With the next major version the default for -d will change to cheap-module-eval-source-map

devServer

Can be used to configure the behaviour of webpack-dev-server when the webpack config is passed to webpack-dev-server CLI.

Example:

{
	devServer: {
		contentBase: "./build",
	}
}

node

Include polyfills or mocks for various node stuff:

  • console: true or false
  • global: true or false
  • process: true, "mock" or false
  • Buffer: true or false
  • __filename: true (real filename relative to the context option), "mock" ("/index.js") or false (normal node __dirname)
  • __dirname: true (real dirname relative to the context option), "mock" ("/") or false (normal node __dirname)
  • <node buildin>: true, "mock", "empty" or false
// Default:
{
	console: false,
	global: true,
	process: true,
	Buffer: true,
	__filename: "mock",
	__dirname: "mock",
	setImmediate: true
}

amd

Set the value of require.amd and define.amd.

Example: amd: { jQuery: true } (for old 1.x AMD versions of jquery)

loader

Custom values available in the loader context.

recordsPath, recordsInputPath, recordsOutputPath

Store/Load compiler state from/to a json file. This will result in persistent IDs of modules and chunks.

An absolute path is expected. recordsPath is used for recordsInputPath and recordsOutputPath if they left undefined.

This is required when using Hot Code Replacement between multiple calls to the compiler.

plugins

Add additional plugins to the compiler.

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