🍣 A Rollup plugin to convert CommonJS modules to ES6, so they can be included in a Rollup bundle
This plugin requires an LTS Node version (v8.0.0+) and Rollup v1.20.0+.
Using npm:
npm install @rollup/plugin-commonjs --save-dev
Create a rollup.config.js
configuration file and import the plugin:
import commonjs from '@rollup/plugin-commonjs';
export default {
input: 'src/index.js',
output: {
dir: 'output',
format: 'cjs'
},
plugins: [commonjs()]
};
Then call rollup
either via the CLI or the API.
Type: String|Array[String]
Default: []
Some modules contain dynamic require
calls, or require modules that contain circular dependencies, which are not handled well by static imports.
Including those modules as dynamicRequireTargets
will simulate a CommonJS (NodeJS-like) environment for them with support for dynamic and circular dependencies.
Note: In extreme cases, this feature may result in some paths being rendered as absolute in the final bundle. The plugin tries to avoid exposing paths from the local machine, but if you are dynamicRequirePaths
with paths that are far away from your project's folder, that may require replacing strings like "/Users/John/Desktop/foo-project/"
-> "/"
.
Example:
commonjs({
dynamicRequireTargets: [
// include using a glob pattern (either a string or an array of strings)
'node_modules/logform/*.js',
// exclude files that are known to not be required dynamically, this allows for better optimizations
'!node_modules/logform/index.js',
'!node_modules/logform/format.js',
'!node_modules/logform/levels.js',
'!node_modules/logform/browser.js'
]
});
Type: String
| Array[...String]
Default: null
A minimatch pattern, or array of patterns, which specifies the files in the build the plugin should ignore. By default non-CommonJS modules are ignored.
Type: String
| Array[...String]
Default: null
A minimatch pattern, or array of patterns, which specifies the files in the build the plugin should operate on. By default CommonJS modules are targeted.
Type: Array[...String]
Default: ['.js']
Search for extensions other than .js in the order specified.
Type: Boolean
Default: false
If true, uses of global
won't be dealt with by this plugin.
Type: Boolean
Default: true
If false, skips source map generation for CommonJS modules.
Type: Array[...String | (String) => Boolean]
Default: []
Sometimes you have to leave require statements unconverted. Pass an array containing the IDs or an id => boolean
function. Only use this option if you know what you're doing!
Since most CommonJS packages you are importing are probably dependencies in node_modules
, you may need to use @rollup/plugin-node-resolve:
// rollup.config.js
import resolve from '@rollup/plugin-node-resolve';
import commonjs from '@rollup/plugin-commonjs';
export default {
input: 'main.js',
output: {
file: 'bundle.js',
format: 'iife',
name: 'MyModule'
},
plugins: [resolve(), commonjs()]
};
Symlinks are common in monorepos and are also created by the npm link
command. Rollup with @rollup/plugin-node-resolve
resolves modules to their real paths by default. So include
and exclude
paths should handle real paths rather than symlinked paths (e.g. ../common/node_modules/**
instead of node_modules/**
). You may also use a regular expression for include
that works regardless of base path. Try this:
commonjs({
include: /node_modules/
});
Whether symlinked module paths are realpathed or preserved depends on Rollup's preserveSymlinks
setting, which is false by default, matching Node.js' default behavior. Setting preserveSymlinks
to true in your Rollup config will cause import
and export
to match based on symlinked paths instead.
ES modules are always parsed in strict mode. That means that certain non-strict constructs (like octal literals) will be treated as syntax errors when Rollup parses modules that use them. Some older CommonJS modules depend on those constructs, and if you depend on them your bundle will blow up. There's basically nothing we can do about that.
Luckily, there is absolutely no good reason not to use strict mode for everything — so the solution to this problem is to lobby the authors of those modules to update them.