A teensy, squeaky π€ clean Webpack CLI
webpack-nano
operates on the premise that all options for configuring a webpack build are set via a config file.
Using npm:
npm install webpack-nano --save-dev
webpack-nano
is an evergreen module. π² This module requires an Active LTS Node version (v10.0.0+).
- Holy bananas π it's itsy bitsy
- Doesn't hit you over the head with an avalanche of flags and options
- Allows any number of user-defined flags
- It does one thing: tells webpack to start a build
- ~90% smaller than webpack-cli and webpack-command
$ npx wp --help
Usage
$ wp [...options]
Options
--config A path to a webpack config file
--config.{name} A path to a webpack config file, and the config name to run
--json Emit bundle information as JSON
--help Displays this message
--silent Instruct the CLI to produce no console output
--version Displays webpack-nano and webpack versions
Examples
$ wp
$ wp --help
$ wp --config webpack.config.js
$ wp --config.serve webpack.config.js
With webpack-cli
users are limited as to the flags they can use on with the $ webpack
binary, and are instructed to use the --env
flag for custom data. Well that's just ππ. With webpack-nano
users can specify an unlimited number of custom flags, without restriction.
Say you have a bundle which can be built to use different asset locations from cloud data sources, like Amazon S3 or Google Cloud Storage. And in this scenario you prefer to specify that location using a command-line flag. If you were using webpack-cli
, you'd have to use the --env.source
flag (or you'd get a big 'ol error) and use a function for your webpack.config.js
export. Using webpack-nano
:
$ wp --config webpack.config.js --source s3
// webpack.config.js
const argv = require('webpack-nano/argv');
const { source } = argv;
module.exports = {
...
}
β¨ Magic. The webpack-nano/argv
export provides quick and easy access to parsed command-line arguments, allowing the user to define the CLI experience as they want to.
Webpack configuration files can be written using a variety of module loaders. e.g. Babel or TypeScript. webpack-nano
allows users to use file types like webpack.config.babel.js
, webpack.config.es6
, webpack.config.mjs
, and webpack.config.ts
. Users are responsible for installing a compatible module loader when using these special file types. The table below represents the supported file types and their compatible loaders:
Extension | Compatible Loaders |
---|---|
.babel.js |
@babel/register , babel-register , babel-core/register , babel/register |
.babel.ts |
@babel/register |
.es6 |
@babel/register |
.mjs |
@babel/register |
.ts |
ts-node/register , typescript-node/register , typescript-register , typescript-require |
This project attempts not to make assumptions about how a build should behave, and that includes webpack stats
. By default, webpack-nano
will apply two stats
options: colors
(based on supports-color
and exclude: ['node_modules']
). These can be quickly overridden by including these key/values in your stats configuration.