Webpack plugin that emits a json file with assets paths.
When working with Webpack you might want to generate your bundles with a generated hash in them (for cache busting).
This plug-in outputs a json file with the paths of the generated assets so you can find them from somewhere else.
The output is a JSON object in the form:
{
"bundle_name": {
"asset_kind": "/public/path/to/asset"
}
}
Where:
"bundle_name"
is the name of the bundle (the key of the entry object in your webpack config, or "main" if your entry is an array)."asset_kind"
is the camel-cased file extension of the asset
For example, given the following webpack config:
{
entry: {
one: ['src/one.js'],
two: ['src/two.js']
},
output: {
path: path.join(__dirname, "public", "js"),
publicPath: "/js/",
filename: '[name]_[hash].bundle.js'
}
}
The plugin will output the following json file:
{
"one": {
"js": "/js/one_2bb80372ebe8047a68d4.bundle.js"
},
"two": {
"js": "/js/two_2bb80372ebe8047a68d4.bundle.js"
}
}
npm install assets-webpack-plugin --save-dev
In your webpack config include the plug-in. And add it to your config:
var path = require('path')
var AssetsPlugin = require('assets-webpack-plugin')
var assetsPluginInstance = new AssetsPlugin()
module.exports = {
// ...
output: {
path: path.join(__dirname, "public", "js"),
filename: "[name]-bundle-[hash].js",
publicPath: "/js/"
},
// ....
plugins: [assetsPluginInstance]
}
You can pass the following options:
filename: Name for the created json file. Defaults to webpack-assets.json
new AssetsPlugin({filename: 'assets.json'})
fullPath: True by default. If false the output will not include the full path of the generated file.
new AssetsPlugin({fullPath: false})
e.g.
/public/path/bundle.js
vs bundle.js vs
path: Path where to save the created json file. Defaults to the current directory.
new AssetsPlugin({path: path.join(__dirname, 'app', 'views')})
prettyPrint: Whether to format the json output for readability. Defaults to false.
new AssetsPlugin({prettyPrint: true})
processOutput: Formats the assets output. Defaults is JSON stringify function.
new AssetsPlugin({
processOutput: function (assets) {
return 'window.staticMap = ' + JSON.stringify(assets)
}
})
update: When set to true, the output json file will be updated instead of overwritten. Defaults to false.
new AssetsPlugin({update: true})
metadata: Inject metadata into the output file. All values will be injected into the key "metadata".
new AssetsPlugin({metadata: {version: 123}})
// Manifest will now contain:
// {
// metadata: {version: 123}
// }
If you use webpack multi-compiler mode and want your assets written to a single file, you must use the same instance of the plugin in the different configurations.
For example:
var webpack = require('webpack')
var AssetsPlugin = require('assets-webpack-plugin')
var assetsPluginInstance = new AssetsPlugin()
webpack([
{
entry: {one: 'src/one.js'},
output: {path: 'build', filename: 'one-bundle.js'},
plugins: [assetsPluginInstance]
},
{
entry: {two:'src/two.js'},
output: {path: 'build', filename: 'two-bundle.js'},
plugins: [assetsPluginInstance]
}
])
You can use this with Rails to find the bundled Webpack assets via sprockets. In ApplicationController
you might have:
def script_for(bundle)
path = Rails.root.join('app', 'views', 'webpack-assets.json') # This is the file generated by the plug-in
file = File.read(path)
json = JSON.parse(file)
json[bundle]['js']
end
Then in the actions:
def show
@script = script_for('clients') # this will retrieve the bundle named 'clients'
end
And finally in the views:
<div id="app">
<script src="<%= @script %>"></script>
</div>
npm test