developit/microbundle
Zero-configuration bundler for tiny modules.
repo name | developit/microbundle |
repo link | https://github.com/developit/microbundle |
homepage | https://npm.im/microbundle |
language | JavaScript |
size (curr.) | 1031 kB |
stars (curr.) | 4428 |
created | 2017-12-11 |
license | |
✨ Features:
- One dependency to bundle your library using only a
package.json
- Support for ESnext & async/await (via Bublé & async-to-promises)
- Produces tiny, optimized code for all inputs
- Supports multiple entry modules (
cli.js
+index.js
, etc) - Creates multiple output formats for each entry (CJS, UMD & ESM)
- 0 configuration TypeScript support
- Built-in Terser compression & gzipped bundle size tracking
🔧 Installation
Download
npm i -D microbundle
Set up your package.json
{
"source": "src/foo.js", // Your source file (same as 1st arg to microbundle)
"main": "dist/foo.js", // output path for CommonJS/Node
"module": "dist/foo.module.js", // output path for JS Modules
"unpkg": "dist/foo.umd.js", // optional, for unpkg.com
"scripts": {
"build": "microbundle", // uses "source" and "main" as input and output paths by default
"dev": "microbundle watch"
}
}
New: Modern JS
Microbundle now has a new modern
format (microbundle -f modern
).
Modern output still bundles and compresses your code, but it keeps useful syntax
around that actually helps compression:
// Our source, "src/make-dom.js":
export default async function makeDom(tag, props, children) {
const el = document.createElement(tag);
el.append(...(await children));
return Object.assign(el, props);
}
Microbundle compiles the above to this:
export default async (e, t, a) => {
const n = document.createElement(e);
return n.append(...(await a)), Object.assign(n, t);
};
This is enabled by default - all you have to do is add the field to your package.json
. You might choose to ship modern JS using the “module” field:
{
"main": "dist/foo.umd.js", // legacy UMD bundle (for Node & CDN's)
"module": "dist/foo.modern.module.js", // modern ES2017 bundle
"scripts": {
"build": "microbundle src/foo.js -f modern,umd"
}
}
📦 Usage
Microbundle includes two commands - build
(the default) and watch
. Neither require any options, but you can tailor things to suit your needs a bit if you like.
microbundle
/ microbundle build
Unless overridden via the command line, microbundle uses the source
property in your package.json
to locate the input file, and the main
property for the output.
For UMD builds, microbundle will use a snake case version of the name
field in your package.json
as export name. This can be overridden either by providing an amdName
key in your package.json
or via the --name
flag in the cli.
microbundle watch
Acts just like microbundle build
, but watches your source files and rebuilds on any change.
Using with TypeScript
Just point the input to a .ts
file through either the cli or the source
key in your package.json
and you’re done.
Using CSS Modules
By default any css file imported as .module.css
, will be treated as a css-module. If you wish to treat all .css
imports as a module, specify the cli flag --css-modules true
. If you wish to disable all css-module behaviours set the
flag to false
.
The default scope name when css-modules is turned on will be, in watch mode _[name]__[local]__[hash:base64:5]
and when
you build _[hash:base64:5]
. This can be overriden by specifying the flag, eg
--css-modules "_something_[hash:base64:7]"
. Note: by setting this, it will be treated as a true, and thus, all .css
imports will be scoped.
flag | import | is css module? |
---|---|---|
null | import ‘./my-file.css’; | :x: |
null | import ‘./my-file.module.css’; | :white_check_mark: |
false | import ‘./my-file.css’; | :x: |
false | import ‘./my-file.module.css’; | :x: |
true | import ‘./my-file.css’; | :white_check_mark: |
true | import ‘./my-file.module.css’; | :white_check_mark: |
Specifying builds in package.json
You can specify output builds in a package.json
as follows:
"main": "dist/foo.js", // CJS bundle
"umd:main": "dist/foo.umd.js", // UMD bundle
"module": "dist/foo.m.js", // ES Modules bundle
"source": "src/foo.js", // custom entry module (same as 1st arg to microbundle)
"types": "dist/foo.d.ts", // TypeScript typings
Mangling Properties
To achieve the smallest possible bundle size, libraries often wish to rename internal object properties or class members to smaller names - transforming this._internalIdValue
to this._i
. Microbundle doesn’t do this by default, however it can be enabled by createing a mangle.json
file (or a "mangle"
property in your package.json). Within that file, you can specify a regular expression pattern to control which properties should be mangled. For example: to mangle all property names beginning an underscore:
{
"mangle": {
"regex": "^_"
}
}
It’s also possible to configure repeatable short names for each mangled property, so that every build of your library has the same output. See the wiki for a complete guide to property mangling in Microbundle.
All CLI Options
Usage
$ microbundle <command> [options]
Available Commands
build Build once and exit
watch Rebuilds on any change
For more info, run any command with the `--help` flag
$ microbundle build --help
$ microbundle watch --help
Options
-v, --version Displays current version
-i, --entry Entry module(s)
-o, --output Directory to place build files into
-f, --format Only build specified formats (default modern,es,cjs,umd)
-w, --watch Rebuilds on any change (default false)
--target Specify your target environment (node or web) (default web)
--external Specify external dependencies, or 'none'
--globals Specify globals dependencies, or 'none'
--define Replace constants with hard-coded values
--alias Map imports to different modules
--compress Compress output using Terser
--strict Enforce undefined global context and add "use strict"
--name Specify name exposed in UMD builds
--cwd Use an alternative working directory (default .)
--sourcemap Generate source map (default true)
--raw Show raw byte size (default false)
--jsx A custom JSX pragma like React.createElement (default: h)
--tsconfig Specify the path to a custom tsconfig.json
--css-modules Configures .css to be treated as modules (default: null)
-h, --help Displays this message
Examples
$ microbundle build --globals react=React,jquery=$
$ microbundle build --define API_KEY=1234
$ microbundle build --alias react=preact
$ microbundle watch --no-sourcemap # don't generate sourcemaps
$ microbundle build --tsconfig tsconfig.build.json
🛣 Roadmap
Here’s what’s coming up for Microbundle:
🔨 Built with Microbundle
- Preact Fast 3kB React alternative with the same modern API. Components & Virtual DOM.
- Stockroom Offload your store management to a worker easily.
- Microenvi Bundle, serve, and hot reload with one command.
- Theme UI Build consistent, themeable React apps based on constraint-based design principles.
- react-recomponent Reason-style reducer components for React using ES6 classes.
- brazilian-utils Utils library for specific Brazilian businesses.
- react-hooks-lib A set of reusable react hooks.
- mdx-deck-live-code A library for mdx-deck to do live React and JS coding directly in slides.
- react-router-ext An Extended react-router-dom with simple usage.
- routex.js A dynamic routing library for Next.js.
- hooked-form A lightweight form-management library for React.
- goober Less than 1KB css-in-js alternative with a familiar API.