These options determine how the different types of modules within a project will be treated.
module.noParse RegExp | [RegExp]
RegExp | [RegExp] | function (since webpack 3.0.0)
Prevent webpack from parsing any files matching the given regular expression(s). Ignored files should not have calls to import, require, define or any other importing mechanism. This can boost build performance when ignoring large libraries.
module.exports = {
//...
module: {
noParse: /jquery|lodash/,
// since webpack 3.0.0
noParse: function(content) {
return /jquery|lodash/.test(content);
}
}
};
module.rules array
An array of Rules which are matched to requests when modules are created. These rules can modify how the module is created. They can apply loaders to the module, or modify the parser.
A Rule can be separated into three parts — Conditions, Results and nested Rules.
There are two input values for the conditions:
The resource: An absolute path to the file requested. It's already resolved according to the resolve rules.
The issuer: An absolute path to the file of the module which requested the resource. It's the location of the import.
Example: When we import './style.css' within app.js, the resource is /path/to/style.css and the issuer is /path/to/app.js.
In a Rule the properties test, include, exclude and resource are matched with the resource and the property issuer is matched with the issuer.
When using multiple conditions, all conditions must match.
Be careful! The resource is the resolved path of the file, which means symlinked resources are the real path not the symlink location. This is good to remember when using tools that symlink packages (likenpm link), common conditions like/node_modules/may inadvertently miss symlinked files. Note that you can turn off symlink resolving (so that resources are resolved to the symlink path) viaresolve.symlinks.
Rule results are used only when the Rule condition matches.
There are two output values of a Rule:
These properties affect the loaders: loader, options, use.
For compatibility also these properties: query, loaders.
The enforce property affects the loader category. Whether it's a normal, pre- or post- loader.
The parser property affects the parser options.
Nested rules can be specified under the properties rules and oneOf.
These rules are evaluated when the Rule condition matches.
Rule.enforce Possible values: "pre" | "post"
Specifies the category of the loader. No value means normal loader.
There is also an additional category "inlined loader" which are loaders applied inline of the import/require.
There are two phases that all loaders enter one after the other:
post, inline, normal, pre. See Pitching Loader for details.pre, normal, inline, post. Transformation on the source code of a module happens in this phase.All normal loaders can be omitted (overridden) by prefixing ! in the request.
All normal and pre loaders can be omitted (overridden) by prefixing -! in the request.
All normal, post and pre loaders can be omitted (overridden) by prefixing !! in the request.
Inline loaders and ! prefixes should not be used as they are non-standard. They may be use by loader generated code.
Rule.exclude Rule.exclude is a shortcut to Rule.resource.exclude. If you supply a Rule.exclude option, you cannot also supply a Rule.resource. See Rule.resource and Condition.exclude for details.
Rule.include Rule.include is a shortcut to Rule.resource.include. If you supply a Rule.include option, you cannot also supply a Rule.resource. See Rule.resource and Condition.include for details.
Rule.issuer A Condition to match against the module that issued the request. In the following example, the issuer for the a.js request would be the path to the index.js file.
index.js
import A from './a.js';
This option can be used to apply loaders to the dependencies of a specific module or set of modules.
Rule.loader Rule.loader is a shortcut to Rule.use: [ { loader } ]. See Rule.use and UseEntry.loader for details.
Rule.loaders This option is deprecated in favor of Rule.use.
Rule.loaders is an alias to Rule.use. See Rule.use for details.
Rule.oneOf An array of Rules from which only the first matching Rule is used when the Rule matches.
module.exports = {
//...
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /.css$/,
oneOf: [
{
resourceQuery: /inline/, // foo.css?inline
use: 'url-loader'
},
{
resourceQuery: /external/, // foo.css?external
use: 'file-loader'
}
]
}
]
}
};
Rule.options / Rule.query Rule.options and Rule.query are shortcuts to Rule.use: [ { options } ]. See Rule.use and UseEntry.options for details.
Rule.queryis deprecated in favor ofRule.optionsandUseEntry.options.
Rule.parser An object with parser options. All applied parser options are merged.
Parsers may inspect these options and disable or reconfigure themselves accordingly. Most of the default plugins interpret the values as follows:
false disables the parser.true or leaving it undefined enables the parser.However, parser plugins may accept more than just a boolean. For example, the internal NodeStuffPlugin can accept an object instead of true to add additional options for a particular Rule.
Examples (parser options by the default plugins):
module.exports = {
//...
module: {
rules: [
{
//...
parser: {
amd: false, // disable AMD
commonjs: false, // disable CommonJS
system: false, // disable SystemJS
harmony: false, // disable ES2015 Harmony import/export
requireInclude: false, // disable require.include
requireEnsure: false, // disable require.ensure
requireContext: false, // disable require.context
browserify: false, // disable special handling of Browserify bundles
requireJs: false, // disable requirejs.*
node: false, // disable __dirname, __filename, module, require.extensions, require.main, etc.
node: {...} // reconfigure node layer on module level
}
}
]
}
}
Rule.resource A Condition matched with the resource. You can either supply a Rule.resource option or use the shortcut options Rule.test, Rule.exclude, and Rule.include. See details in Rule conditions.
Rule.resourceQuery A Condition matched with the resource query. This option is used to test against the query section of a request string (i.e. from the question mark onwards). If you were to import Foo from './foo.css?inline', the following condition would match:
module.exports = {
//...
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /.css$/,
resourceQuery: /inline/,
use: 'url-loader'
}
]
}
};
Rule.rules An array of Rules that is also used when the Rule matches.
Rule.sideEffects Possible values: false | an array of paths
Indicate what parts of the module contain side effects. See Tree Shaking for details.
Rule.test Rule.test is a shortcut to Rule.resource.test. If you supply a Rule.test option, you cannot also supply a Rule.resource. See Rule.resource and Condition.test for details.
Rule.use A list of UseEntries which are applied to modules. Each entry specifies a loader to be used.
Passing a string (i.e. use: [ "style-loader" ]) is a shortcut to the loader property (i.e. use: [ { loader: "style-loader "} ]).
Loaders can be chained by passing multiple loaders, which will be applied from right to left (last to first configured).
module.exports = {
//...
module: {
rules: [
{
//...
use: [
'style-loader',
{
loader: 'css-loader',
options: {
importLoaders: 1
}
},
{
loader: 'less-loader',
options: {
noIeCompat: true
}
}
]
}
]
}
};
See UseEntry for details.
Condition Conditions can be one of these:
{ test: Condition }: The Condition must match. The convention is to provide a RegExp or array of RegExps here, but it's not enforced.
{ include: Condition }: The Condition must match. The convention is to provide a string or array of strings here, but it's not enforced.
{ exclude: Condition }: The Condition must NOT match. The convention is to provide a string or array of strings here, but it's not enforced.
{ and: [Condition] }: All Conditions must match.
{ or: [Condition] }: Any Condition must match.
{ not: [Condition] }: All Conditions must NOT match.
Example:
module.exports = {
//...
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.css$/,
include: [
path.resolve(__dirname, 'app/styles'),
path.resolve(__dirname, 'vendor/styles')
]
}
]
}
};
UseEntry object
It must have a loader property being a string. It is resolved relative to the configuration context with the loader resolving options (resolveLoader).
It can have an options property being a string or object. This value is passed to the loader, which should interpret it as loader options.
For compatibility a query property is also possible, which is an alias for the options property. Use the options property instead.
Example:
module.exports = {
//...
module: {
rules: [
{
loader: 'css-loader',
options: {
modules: true
}
}
]
}
};
Note that webpack needs to generate a unique module identifier from the resource and all loaders including options. It tries to do this with a JSON.stringify of the options object. This is fine in 99.9% of cases, but may be not unique if you apply the same loaders with different options to the resource and the options have some stringified values.
It also breaks if the options object cannot be stringified (i.e. circular JSON). Because of this you can have a ident property in the options object which is used as unique identifier.
Avoid using these options as they are deprecated and will soon be removed.
These options describe the default settings for the context created when a dynamic dependency is encountered.
Example for an unknown dynamic dependency: require.
Example for an expr dynamic dependency: require(expr).
Example for an wrapped dynamic dependency: require("./templates/" + expr).
Here are the available options with their defaults:
module.exports = {
//...
module: {
exprContextCritical: true,
exprContextRecursive: true,
exprContextRegExp: false,
exprContextRequest: '.',
unknownContextCritical: true,
unknownContextRecursive: true,
unknownContextRegExp: false,
unknownContextRequest: '.',
wrappedContextCritical: false,
wrappedContextRecursive: true,
wrappedContextRegExp: /.*/,
strictExportPresence: false // since webpack 2.3.0
}
};
You can use the ContextReplacementPlugin to modify these values for individual dependencies. This also removes the warning.
A few use cases:
wrappedContextCritical: true.require(expr) should include the whole directory: exprContextRegExp: /^\.\//
require("./templates/" + expr) should not include subdirectories by default: wrappedContextRecursive: false
strictExportPresence makes missing exports an error instead of warning
© JS Foundation and other contributors
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0.
https://webpack.js.org/configuration/module