vite-plugin-cjs-interop
Vite plugin to unwrap default imports from CJS dependencies during SSR.
In Node.js, when a CJS module that contains both a default export and named exports is imported from an ESM module, the default export has to be accessed via the default
property of the imported module. Prior to version 5, Vite had some logic to handle this during development, but it didn't apply to SSR builds with external
CJS dependencies. Since Vite 5, the problem happens in development as well. You don't get any indication that it won't work in production. TypeScript doesn't complain either.
This plugin will automatically unwrap the default export from CJS dependencies that you specify during SSR builds. In other words, the following code:
import foo, { named, named2 as renamed } from "foo";
will be transformed into:
const {
default: foo = __cjsInterop1__,
named,
named2: renamed,
} = __cjsInterop1__?.default?.__esModule
? __cjsInterop1__.default
: __cjsInterop1__;
import __cjsInterop1__ from "foo";
which takes care of unwrapping the default export and creating a synthetic default export if necessary.
The change for dynamic imports is more complicated, but allows the import()
function to resolve to an object that not only resembles the standard ES6 namespace as expected, but also a CommonJS export:
const foo = await import("foo");
// ES6 namespace, with default export
foo.default.bar(); // Works
// CommonJS Module (some libraries expect this to work because webpack allows it)
foo.bar(); // Also works
npm install -D vite-plugin-cjs-interop
// vite.config.js
import { cjsInterop } from "vite-plugin-cjs-interop";
export default {
plugins: [
cjsInterop({
// List of CJS dependencies that require interop
dependencies: [
"some-package",
// Deep imports should be specified separately
"some-package/deep/import",
// But globs are supported
"some-package/foo/*",
// Even deep globs for scoped packages
"@some-scope/**",
// If you want to skip a specific package, you can use negative globs
"!@donottransformme/**",
],
}),
],
};
The matcher uses minimatch underneath, for more details on supported syntax.