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Made by Antonio Ramirez

fastify-webpack-hot

1.1.0

@gajus

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Downloads:3515
$ npm install fastify-webpack-hot
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fastify-webpack-hot 🔥

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A Fastify plugin for serving files emitted by Webpack with Hot Module Replacement (HMR).

  • fastify-webpack-hot 🔥
    • Basic HMR Setup
    • Examples
    • Recipes
      • Accessing Webpack Stats
      • Accessing Output File System
      • Compressing Response
    • Difference from webpack-dev-server
    • Troubleshooting
      • Node.js Logging

Basic HMR Setup

import webpack from 'webpack';
import {
  fastifyWebpackHot,
} from 'fastify-webpack-hot';

const compiler = webpack({
  entry: [
    'fastify-webpack-hot/client',
    path.resolve(__dirname, '../app/main.js'),
  ],
  mode: 'development',
  plugins: [
    new webpack.HotModuleReplacementPlugin(),
  ],
});

void app.register(fastifyWebpackHot, {
  compiler,
});

Examples

  • TypeScript, Fastify and Webpack HRM example (uses Webpack Hot Module Replacement API)
  • TypeScript, Fastify, Webpack and React HRM example (uses ReactRefreshWebpackPlugin)

Recipes

Accessing Webpack Stats

Stats instance is accessible under request.webpack.stats:

app.get('*', async (request, reply) => {
  const stats = request.webpack.stats.toJson({
    all: false,
    entrypoints: true,
  });

  // ...
);

The most common use case for accessing stats is for identifying and constructing the entrypoint assets, e.g.

for (const asset of stats.entrypoints?.main.assets ?? []) {
  if (asset.name.endsWith('.js')) {
    htmlBody +=
      '<script defer="defer" src="/' + asset.name + '"></script>\n';
  }
}

Accessing Output File System

You can access Output File System by referencing compiler.outputFileSystem. However, this will have the type of OutputFileSystem, which is incompatible with memfs, which is used by this package. Therefore, a better way to access outputFileSystem is by referencing request.webpack.outputFileSystem:

app.get('*', async (request, reply) => {
  const stats = JSON.parse(
    await request.webpack.outputFileSystem.promises.readFile(
      path.join(__dirname, '../dist/stats.json'),
      'utf8'
    )
  );

  // ...
);

This example shows how you would access stats.json generated by webpack-stats-plugin.

Note: You likely won't need to use this because fastify-webpack-hot automatically detects which assets have been generated and serves them at output.publicPath.

Compressing Response

This plugin is compatible with compression-webpack-plugin, i.e. This plugin will serve compressed files if the following conditions are true:

  • Your outputs include compressed file versions (either .br or .gz)
  • Request includes a matching accept-encoding header

Example compression-webpack-plugin configuration:

new CompressionPlugin({
  algorithm: 'brotliCompress',
  deleteOriginalAssets: false,
  filename: '[path][base].br',
  compressionOptions: {
    level: zlib.constants.BROTLI_MIN_QUALITY,
  },
  minRatio: 0.8,
  test: /\.(js|css|html|svg)$/,
  threshold: 10_240,
})

Note: You may also try using fastify-compress, however, beware of the outstanding issue that may cause the server to crash (fastify-compress#215).

Difference from webpack-dev-server

  • Supports Hot Module Replacement.
  • Does not allow to override default HTTP methods (GET, HEAD).
  • Does not allow to provide custom headers.
  • Does not allow to create an index.
  • Does not support serverSideRender
  • Does not support writeToDisk
  • Does not support MultiCompiler
  • Does not support Accept-Ranges

All of the above are relatively straightforward to implement, however, I didn't have a use-case for them. If you have a use-case, please raise a PR.

Troubleshooting

Node.js Logging

This project uses roarr logger to output the program's state.

Export ROARR_LOG=true environment variable to enable log printing to stdout.

Use roarr-cli program to pretty-print the logs.