Allows the creation of multiple bundles with one configuration. Kinda like the multi-compiler but where it concerns imports of a specific file extension. And obviously this module gives you crazy performance and will reduce your bundling time compared to the multi-compiler.
$ npm install dailymotion/webpack-multi-output
Note This module has been developed with and for webpack v1.13.1. It may not work correctly with other versions.
Use the loader with the appropriate file extension you want, then use the plugin to define the values you want as output:
import WebpackMultiOutputPlugin from 'webpack-multi-output/plugin'
module.exports = {
entry: path.join(__dirname, 'src/index.js'),
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
filename: 'bundle.js',
},
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.i18n$/,
loader: 'webpack-multi-output',
}
]
},
plugins: [
new WebpackMultiOutputPlugin({
values: ['en', 'fr', 'es']
})
]
}
This will produce a bundle.js
and a bundle for each value given to the plugin ([value].bundle.js
). The imported file will be replaced by a file with the filename changed to the value. Example because this sentence is not clear at all:
// your code
var translations = require(`./i18n/en.i18n`)
With the configuration above, this will produce three bundles: en.bundle.js
with translations
being the content of ./i18n/en.i18n
, fr.bundle.js
with the content of ./i18n/fr.i18n
and es.bundle.js
with the content of ./i18n/es.i18n
.
Using require.ensure()
? No problem. If the module you require needs also require some .i18n
files (following the example above), the plugin will also create multiple versions for all given values. And all bundles will load the appropriate chunks: for example, the bundle fr.bundle.js
will load the chunk fr.1.bundle.js
.
values
: The plugin will produce a bundle for each value given, appending the value to the bundle name.assets
: See the documentation below.uglify
: If you're using this module for json, enable this option to minify it. See Uglify for more informations.debug
: Log when the plugin adds an asset. Default tofalse
The assets-webpack-plugin doesn't really understand what we're doing here. So to replace it you have an option to get a similar json file with assets, mapped with the values:
// webpack config
new WebpackMultiOutputPlugin({
values: ['en', 'fr'],
assets: {
filename: 'assets.json',
path: path.join(__dirname, 'dist'),
prettyPrint: true,
}
})
This configuration will output:
{
"en": {
"app": {
"js": "bundle-fr.js"
}
},
"en": {
"app": {
"js": "bundle-en.js"
}
}
}
If you need an asset file per value, just use [value]
in the filename
option:
new WebpackMultiOutputPlugin({
values: ['en', 'fr'],
assets {
filename: '[value].json',
path: path.join(__dirname, 'dist'),
prettyPrint: true,
}
})
This will create a en.json
and a fr.json
, each one with their corresponding assets.
Depending on the plugins you want to use in parallel, be carefull where the order of your plugins in your configuration.
The plugin performs a replacement in the code. If you want to use the Uglify plugin in parallel and the files you are requiring are json, you can use the uglify
option so the json content will be minified. This will give you a huge perf boost when bundling as uglify will run only once.
If you are not using webpack-multi-output
to require something else than json, make sure to use the Uglify plugin after so the code replaced will be minified.
// ...
plugins: [
// the define plugin will probably be in front
new webpack.DefinePlugin({
__DEV__: process.env.NODE_ENV == 'dev',
}),
new webpack.optimize.UglifyJsPlugin({
output:{
comments: false
},
compressor: {
warnings: false
}
}),
new WebpackMultiOutputPlugin({
values: ['en', 'fr', 'es'],
uglify: true,
}),
]
DefinePlugin
OccurenceOrderPlugin
UglifyJsPlugin
extract-text-webpack-plugin
See What for informations about what the plugin is doing and how.