The bundle is generated by running “webpack” directly - gulp is no longer needed as an intermediary. The resulting config is a lot shorter, although more configuration is pushed into lib.js. Modules are shared between javascript files as global variables. Although this global state pollution is a bit messy, I don’t think it’s practically any worse than the previous state, and it highlights the heavy coupling between the different packages we have in place. Reducing the width of the coupling between the core javascript and add-on modules would probably be a better way of dealing with this than replacing global variables with some other kind of global state. The web pack execution seems roughly twice as fast - if I clear out my framework/client/dist/js folder, it takes 13.3s to rebuild. However, it’s not rebuilding other files inside dist, only the bundle files. CSS files are now included from javascript and incorporated into bundle.css by the webpack. Although the style-loader is helpful in some dev workflows (it allows live reload), it introduces a flash of unstyled content which makes it inappropriate for production. Instead ExtractTextPlugin is used to write all the aggregated CSS into a single bundle.css file. A style-loader-based configuration could be introduced for dev environments, if we make use of the webpack live reloader in the future. Note that the following features have been removed as they don't appear to be necessary when using Webpack: - UMD module generation - thirdparty dist file copying LeftAndMain.js deps: Without it, ssui.core.js gets loaded too late, which leads e.g. to buttons being initialised without this added behaviour.
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Client-side build tooling
Core JavaScript, CSS, and thirdparty dependencies are managed with the build tooling described below.
Note this only applies to core SilverStripe dependencies, you're free to manage dependencies in your project codebase however you like.
Installation
The NodeJS JavaScript runtime is the foundation of our client-side build tool chain. If you want to do things like upgrade dependencies, make changes to core JavaScript or SCSS files, you'll need Node installed on your dev environment. Our build tooling supports the v4.x (LTS) version of NodeJS.
If you already have a newer version of Node.js installed, check out the Node Version Manager to run multiple versions in your environment.
Since we're compiling SVG icons, you'll also need to compile native Node addons,
which requires gcc
or a similar compiler - see node-gyp
for instructions on how to get a compiler running on your platform.
npm is the package manager we use for JavaScript dependencies.
It comes bundled with NodeJS so should already have it installed if you have Node.
The configuration for an npm package goes in package.json
.
Once you've installed Node.js, run the following command in each core module folder:
npm install
The Basics: ES6, Webpack and Babel
[ECMAScript 6](https://github.com/lukehoban/es6features](https://github.com/lukehoban/es6features) (ES6) is the newest version of the ECMAScript standard. It has some great new features, but the browser support is still patchy, so we use Babel to transform ES6 source files back to ES5 files for distribution.
Webpack contains the build tooling to
"transpile" various syntax patterns (ES6, SCSS) into a format the browser can understand,
and resolve ES6's import
(details).
Webpack provides the entry point to our build tooling through a webpack.config.js
file in the root folder of each core module.
Babel is a JavaScript compiler. It takes JavaScript files as input, performs some transformations, and outputs other JavaScript files. In SilverStripe we use Babel to transform our JavaScript in two ways.
Build Commands
The script
property of a package.json
file can be used to define command line
[scripts](https://docs.npmjs.com/misc/scripts](https://docs.npmjs.com/misc/scripts).
A nice thing about running commands from an npm script is binaries located in
node_modules/.bin/
are temporally added to your $PATH
. This means we can use dependencies
defined in package.json
for things like compiling JavaScript and SCSS, and not require
developers to install these tools globally. This means builds are much more consistent
across development environments.
To run an npm script, open up your terminal, change to the directory where package.json
is located, and run $ npm run <SCRIPT_NAME>
. Where <SCRIPT_NAME>
is the name of the
script you wish to run.
build
$ npm run build
Runs Webpack to builds the core JavaScript files. You will need to run this script whenever you make changes to a JavaScript file.
Run this script with -- --watch
to automatically rebuild on file changes.
The first --
separator is required to separate arguments from NPM's own ones.
$ npm run build -- --watch
css
$ npm run css
Compiles all of the .scss
files into minified .css
files.
Run this script with -- --watch
to automatically rebuild on file changes.
The first --
separator is required to separate arguments from NPM's own ones.
$ npm run css -- --watch
lint
$ npm run lint
Run eslint
over JavaScript files reports errors.
test
$ npm run test
Runs the JavaScript unit tests.
coverage
$ npm run coverage
Generates a coverage report for the JavaScript unit tests. The report is generated
in the coverage
directory.
lock
$ npm run lock
Generates a "shrinkwrap" file containing all npm package versions and writes it to
npm-shrinkwrap.json
. Run this command whenever a new package is added to package.json
,
or when updating packages. Commit the resulting npm-shrinkwrap.json
. This uses a third party
npm-shrinkwrap library
since the built-in npm shrinkwrap
(without a dash) has proven unreliable.
Requiring SilverStripe ES6 Modules in your own CMS customisation
SilverStripe creates bundles which contain many dependencies you might also
want to use in your own CMS customisation (e.g. react
).
You might also need some of SilverStripe's own ES6 modules (e.g. components/FormBuilder
).
To avoid double including these in your own generated bundles, we have exposed many libraries as Webpack externals. This helps to keep the file size of your own bundle small, and avoids execution issues with multiple versions of the same library.
In order to find out which libraries are exposed, check
the framework/admin/client/src/bundles/
files for require('expose?...')
statements.
A shortened webpack.config.js
in your own module could look as follows:
module.exports = {
entry: {
'bundle': `mymodule/client/src/js/bundle.js`,
},
output: {
path: './client/dist',
filename: 'js/[name].js',
},
externals: {
'components/FormBuilder/FormBuilder': 'FormBuilder',
jQuery: 'jQuery',
react: 'react',
}
};
Now you can use the following statements in your ES6 code without double includes:
import react from 'react';
import jQuery from 'jQuery';
import FormBuilder from 'components/FormBuilder/FormBuilder';