admin管理员组文章数量:1356957
I have a web app that I pile with webpack. One of the modules that my code uses is named table.js
. Until recently, it's just been another module and has been piled into my bundle.js
file with everything else.
Now I need to run table.js
in a Web Worker, so I need to pull it and its dependencies into a separate file that can be loaded both standalone and by my other modules.
At first I thought to include table.js
in my webpack.config.js
's entry
.
var config = {
...
entry: {
app: [ './src/main.js', './src/classes/table.js' ],
vendors: [],
},
...
}
That didn't work. Then I thought to separate it out like my vendors bundle.
var config = {
/* for vendors (and other modules) we have a CDN for */
addExternal: function (name, globalVar) {
this.externals[name] = globalVar;
this.entry.vendors.push(name);
},
/* for vendors we don't have a CDN for */
addVendor: function (name, path) {
this.resolve.alias[name] = path;
this.entry.vendors.push(name);
},
addPlugin: function (plugin) {
this.plugins.push(plugin);
},
entry: {
app: [ './src/main.js' ],
vendors: [],
table: [ __dirname + '/src/classes/table.js' ]
},
plugins: [],
externals: { },
output: {
path: __dirname + '/public/dist/',
filename: 'bundle.js',
publicPath: '/dist/',
sourceMapFile: '[file].map'
},
resolve: {
alias: { 'table': './src/classes/table.js' },
extensions: [ '', '.js', '.jsx' ]
},
...
}
/* add vendors and externals */
...
config.addPlugin(new CommonsChunkPlugin('vendors', 'vendors.js'));
config.addPlugin(new CommonsChunkPlugin('table', 'table.js'));
This seems to pull Table and its dependencies into a chunk of bundle.js
, 1.bundle.js
. Unfortunately, then calling import Table from 'table'
causes this error:
ERROR in CommonsChunkPlugin: While running in normal mode it's not allowed to use a non-entry chunk (table)
I also have a circular dependency between TableStore
and Table
. TableStore
needs to stay in bundle.js
because it shouldn't be loaded into the Web Worker. Previously, when I've needed to throw things into a separate chunk, I've done:
if (someThingNeedsRequiring) {
require.ensure([], () => {
require('something');
}
}
With the circular dependency, this doesn't seem to work.
/* table.js */
let _inWebWorker = self instanceof Window,
TableStore = null;
if (!_inWebWorker) {
require.ensure([], function() { TableStore = require('../stores/table-store'); } );
}
/* table-store.js */
import Table from 'table';
Could someone set me straight on the correct way to have my webpack.config.js
and how to use my import
s in my module files?
I have a web app that I pile with webpack. One of the modules that my code uses is named table.js
. Until recently, it's just been another module and has been piled into my bundle.js
file with everything else.
Now I need to run table.js
in a Web Worker, so I need to pull it and its dependencies into a separate file that can be loaded both standalone and by my other modules.
At first I thought to include table.js
in my webpack.config.js
's entry
.
var config = {
...
entry: {
app: [ './src/main.js', './src/classes/table.js' ],
vendors: [],
},
...
}
That didn't work. Then I thought to separate it out like my vendors bundle.
var config = {
/* for vendors (and other modules) we have a CDN for */
addExternal: function (name, globalVar) {
this.externals[name] = globalVar;
this.entry.vendors.push(name);
},
/* for vendors we don't have a CDN for */
addVendor: function (name, path) {
this.resolve.alias[name] = path;
this.entry.vendors.push(name);
},
addPlugin: function (plugin) {
this.plugins.push(plugin);
},
entry: {
app: [ './src/main.js' ],
vendors: [],
table: [ __dirname + '/src/classes/table.js' ]
},
plugins: [],
externals: { },
output: {
path: __dirname + '/public/dist/',
filename: 'bundle.js',
publicPath: '/dist/',
sourceMapFile: '[file].map'
},
resolve: {
alias: { 'table': './src/classes/table.js' },
extensions: [ '', '.js', '.jsx' ]
},
...
}
/* add vendors and externals */
...
config.addPlugin(new CommonsChunkPlugin('vendors', 'vendors.js'));
config.addPlugin(new CommonsChunkPlugin('table', 'table.js'));
This seems to pull Table and its dependencies into a chunk of bundle.js
, 1.bundle.js
. Unfortunately, then calling import Table from 'table'
causes this error:
ERROR in CommonsChunkPlugin: While running in normal mode it's not allowed to use a non-entry chunk (table)
I also have a circular dependency between TableStore
and Table
. TableStore
needs to stay in bundle.js
because it shouldn't be loaded into the Web Worker. Previously, when I've needed to throw things into a separate chunk, I've done:
if (someThingNeedsRequiring) {
require.ensure([], () => {
require('something');
}
}
With the circular dependency, this doesn't seem to work.
/* table.js */
let _inWebWorker = self instanceof Window,
TableStore = null;
if (!_inWebWorker) {
require.ensure([], function() { TableStore = require('../stores/table-store'); } );
}
/* table-store.js */
import Table from 'table';
Could someone set me straight on the correct way to have my webpack.config.js
and how to use my import
s in my module files?
2 Answers
Reset to default 7(It's been quite a while since I figured this out, and I haven't touched the project in nearly six months, so I may have missed some of the details. Comment if it's not working, and I'll try to figure out what I'm missing.)
webpack.config
It turns out there are two handy-dandy JavaScript packages for doing what I want: worker-loader
and workerjs
.
npm install --save workerjs worker-loader
I added this in my webpack.config.js:
var config = {
// ...
worker: {
output: {
filename: '[name].worker.js',
chunkFilename: '[name].worker.js'
}
},
// ...
}
require()
In order to specify that I want my class to be run in a WebWorker file, my require looks like:
// ecmaScript 6
import TableWorker from 'worker?name=tableRoller!path/to/table';
// ecmaScript 5
var TableWorker = require('worker?name=tableRoller!path/to/table');
TableWorker
is just a variable name I used for table.js's export default class Table {...}
. The name=tableRoller
specifies the generated outputted [name].worker.js
filename. For example, I have another WebWorker named distCalc.worker.js
, so my import
looks like:
import DistWorker from 'worker?name=distCalc!path/to/distWorker';
Note that in this case, distWorker
only ever runs in a WebWorker, while Table
is used in both my main.js
entry point and my tableRoller.worker.js
WebWorker file.
workerjs
and worker-loader
generate a new entry point file and pull in all of the dependencies of those classes. Tobias Koppers (worker-loader) and Eugene Ware (workerjs) are geniuses.
Detecting WebWorker
My _inWebWorker
detection is:
let _inWebWorker = typeof Window === 'undefined';
Change output filename in your webpack.config.js file
output: {
path: __dirname + '/public/dist/',
filename: '[name].js',
publicPath: '/dist/',
sourceMapFile: '[file].map'
},
then Webpack can separate your entries with its name in dist directory.
本文标签: javascriptUse Webpack to split out a module so that it can be loaded in a WebWorkerStack Overflow
版权声明:本文标题:javascript - Use Webpack to split out a module so that it can be loaded in a WebWorker - Stack Overflow 内容由网友自发贡献,该文观点仅代表作者本人, 转载请联系作者并注明出处:http://www.betaflare.com/web/1744000017a2573685.html, 本站仅提供信息存储空间服务,不拥有所有权,不承担相关法律责任。如发现本站有涉嫌抄袭侵权/违法违规的内容,一经查实,本站将立刻删除。
发表评论