Parcel plugin for declaring externals. These externals will not be bundled. :package:
As with any other Parcel plugin you should make sure to have the Parcel bundler installed and the plugin referenced from the package.json of your project.
The package.json has to be changed to either contain peerDependencies
or externals
. The latter is more flexible.
Consider the following snippet (from package.json):
{
"peerDependencies": {
"react": "*"
}
}
This plugin will omit React from your bundle. Instead, a call to require('react')
will be left over. If the global require inserted by Parcel does not know how to resolve it you will face an error.
Alternatively, you could have also written the following snippet (from package.json):
{
"externals": [
"react"
]
}
Potentially, instead you want to hint Parcel that you already have a global available coming from another script. The externals
definition can help you.
Consider the following snippet (from package.json):
{
"externals": {
"react": "React"
}
}
Here we tell the plugin to alias the react
module with React
. In this case we reference a global variable React
, which obviously must exist.
Note: Don't confuse this with the abilities coming from parcel-plugin-html-externals. Values that are non-string instances will be ignored. So you can actually use both plugins, parcel-plugin-externals
and parcel-plugin-html-externals
if you want to (or just one of the two).
The object syntax is a shorthand for combining the keys and values for a replacement expression. The snippet above is acutally equalivant to:
{
"externals": [
"react => React"
]
}
Expressions could be more complex:
{
"externals": [
"react => window.dependencies.React"
]
}
In this case dependencies
must exist globally with React
being one of its properties.
Alternatively, you could forward one module to another with require
:
{
"externals": [
"react => require('preact')"
]
}
Important: This is an early version of the plugin. Please give feedback on GitHub, especially regarding configuration and syntax. The idea is to keep the plugin simple and the options straight and to the point.
Sometimes you want to externalize a whole set of dependencies, potentially by a given rule, e.g., react-*
or similar. For such cases you can also refer to a module that does the replacement rule determination:
{
"externals": "./tools/ruleFactory.js"
}
The rule factory module is just a simple Node.js module that exports a function:
const rx = /react-(.*?)\//;
module.exports = function(path) {
const result = rx.exec(path);
if (result) {
const suffix = result[1];
const name = suffix[0].toUpperCase() + suffix.substr(1);
return `react-${suffix} => React${name}`;
}
return undefined;
};
What you need to return is either undefined
(i.e., the module will not be externalized) or the replacement rule.
Remark: If the rule does not contain the forward =>
slash it will be interpreted as returnValue => require('returnValue')
, where returnValue
is the part returned from the function.
By default, the modules must be present in the local installation. Otherwise Parcel will complain. This is not always possible / the case.
In this scenario you'll need a virtual module. You can get support for this via Parcel's standard alias
.
Consider the following snippet (from package.json):
{
"externals": [
"react",
"foo"
],
"alias": {
"foo": "./src/foo-virtual.js"
}
}
Here, we will identify that foo is an external alias and still externalize the call (in the given example to use require('foo')
). You could leave the virtual module empty.
Important: If you have multiple virtual modules you should give them all unique paths. Otherwise, this plugin cannot distinguish between them.
If you need further fine-grained control (e.g., for switching between development and production builds) you can just use the factory function introduced above.
To simplify you can also use the factory module to export the array directly.
const isProduction = process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production';
module.exports = isProduction ? [
'my-dep',
'react'
] : [
'my-dep'
];
This way you can get flexibility without sacrificing convenience.
This project adheres to semantic versioning.
You can find the changelog in the CHANGELOG.md file.
This plugin is released using the MIT license. For more information see the LICENSE file.