Plugins are the backbone of webpack. webpack itself is built on the same plugin system that you use in your webpack configuration!
They also serve the purpose of doing anything else that a loader cannot do.
When consuming
webpack-sources
package in plugins, userequire('webpack').sources
instead ofrequire('webpack-sources')
to avoid version conflicts for persistent caching.
A webpack plugin is a JavaScript object that has an apply
method. This apply
method is called by the webpack compiler, giving access to the entire compilation lifecycle.
ConsoleLogOnBuildWebpackPlugin.js
const pluginName = 'ConsoleLogOnBuildWebpackPlugin';
class ConsoleLogOnBuildWebpackPlugin {
apply(compiler) {
compiler.hooks.run.tap(pluginName, compilation => {
console.log('The webpack build process is starting!!!');
});
}
}
module.exports = ConsoleLogOnBuildWebpackPlugin;
The first parameter of the tap method of the compiler hook should be a camelized version of the plugin name. It is advisable to use a constant for this so it can be reused in all hooks.
Since plugins can take arguments/options, you must pass a new
instance to the plugins
property in your webpack configuration.
Depending on how you are using webpack, there are multiple ways to use plugins.
webpack.config.js
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin'); //installed via npm
const webpack = require('webpack'); //to access built-in plugins
const path = require('path');
module.exports = {
entry: './path/to/my/entry/file.js',
output: {
filename: 'my-first-webpack.bundle.js',
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist')
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.(js|jsx)$/,
use: 'babel-loader'
}
]
},
plugins: [
new webpack.ProgressPlugin(),
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({template: './src/index.html'})
]
};
When using the Node API, you can also pass plugins via the plugins
property in the configuration.
some-node-script.js
const webpack = require('webpack'); //to access webpack runtime
const configuration = require('./webpack.config.js');
let compiler = webpack(configuration);
new webpack.ProgressPlugin().apply(compiler);
compiler.run(function(err, stats) {
// ...
});
Did you know: The example seen above is extremely similar to the webpack runtime itself! There are lots of great usage examples hiding in the webpack source code that you can apply to your own configurations and scripts!