91fb94b5ce
Summary: It's possible that a mock doesn't have an associated real module that it maps to. This is actually very common in www, where we have JS mocks for dynamic PHP JS modules. The implementation I chose seems like the smartest one for now: if a module cannot be resolved, we look up whether we have a mock with the same id. If we do, we just resolve it. That's it! And it also only does the minimum amount of resolution necessary. public Reviewed By: martinbigio Differential Revision: D2822277 fb-gh-sync-id: 7c9fbb6f69a0c0c85157c0650f5719d94a02410e |
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react-packager | ||
README.md | ||
babelRegisterOnly.js | ||
blacklist.js | ||
launchPackager.command | ||
package.json | ||
packager.sh | ||
react-native-xcode.sh | ||
rn-cli.config.js | ||
transformer.js |
README.md
React Native Packager
React Native Packager is a project similar in scope to browserify or webpack, it provides a CommonJS-like module system, JavaScript compilation (ES6, Flow, JSX), bundling, and asset loading.
The main difference is the Packager's focus on compilation and bundling speed. We aim for a sub-second edit-reload cycles. Additionally, we don't want users -- with large code bases -- to wait more than a few seconds after starting the packager.
The main deviation from the node module system is the support for our
proprietary module format known as @providesModule
. However, we
discourage people to use this module format because going forward, we
want to completely separate our infrastructure from React Native and
provide an experience most JavaScript developers are familiar with,
namely the node module format. We want to even go further, and let you
choose your own packager and asset pipeline or even integrate into
your existing infrastructure.
React Native users need not to understand how the packager work, however, this documentation might be useful for advanced users and people who want to fix bugs or add features to the packager (patches welcome!).
HTTP interface
The main way you'd interact with the packager is via the HTTP interface. The following is the list of endpoints and their respective functions.
/path/to/moduleName.bundle
Does the following in order:
- parse out
path/to/moduleName
- add a
.js
suffix to the path - looks in your project root(s) for the file
- recursively collects all the dependencies from an in memory graph
- runs the modules through the transformer (might just be cached)
- concatenate the modules' content into a bundle
- responds to the client with the bundle (and a SourceMap URL)
/path/to/moduleName.map
- if the package has been previously generated via the
.bundle
endpoint then the source map will be generated from that package - if the package has not been previously asked for, this will go
through the same steps outlined in the
.bundle
endpoint then generate the source map.
Note that source map generation currently assumes that the code has been compiled with jstransform, which preserves line and column numbers which allows us to generate source maps super fast.
/path/to/moduleName.(map|bundle) query params
You can pass options for the bundle creation through the query params,
if the option is boolean 1/0
or true/false
is accepted.
Here are the current options the packager accepts:
dev
boolean, defaults to true: sets a global__DEV__
variable which will effect how the React Native core libraries behave.minify
boolean, defaults to false: whether to minify the bundle.runModule
boolean, defaults to true: whether to require your entry point module. So if you requestedmoduleName
, this option will add arequire('moduleName')
the end of your bundle.inlineSourceMap
boolean, defaults to false: whether to inline source maps.
/debug
This is a page used for debugging, it has links to two pages:
- Cached Packages: which shows you the packages that's been already generated and cached
- Dependency Graph: is the in-memory graph of all the modules and their dependencies
Programmatic API
The packager is made of two things:
- The core packager (which we're calling ReactPackager)
- The scripts, devtools launcher, server run etc.
ReactPackager is how you mainly interact with the API.
var ReactPackager = require('./react-packager');
ReactPackager.middleware(options)
Returns a function that can be used in a connect-like middleware. Takes the following options:
projectRoots
array (required): Is the roots where your JavaScript file will existblacklistRE
regexp: Is a patter to ignore certain paths from the packagerpolyfillModuleName
array: Paths to polyfills you want to be included at the start of the bundlecacheVersion
string: used in creating the cache fileresetCache
boolean, defaults to false: whether to use the cache on disktransformModulePath
string: Path to the module used as a JavaScript transformernonPersistent
boolean, defaults to false: Whether the server should be used as a persistent deamon to watch files and update itselfassetRoots
array: Where should the packager look for assetsgetTransformOptionsModulePath
string: Path to module that exports a function that acts as a middleware for generating options to pass to the transformer based on the bundle and module being transformed.
ReactPackager.buildPackageFromUrl(options, url)
Build a package from a url (see the .bundle
endpoint). options
is
the same options that is passed to ReactPackager.middleware
ReactPackager.getDependencies(options, main)
Given an entry point module. Recursively collect all the dependent
modules and return it as an array. options
is the same options that
is passed to ReactPackager.middleware
Debugging
To get verbose output when running the packager, define an environment variable:
export DEBUG=ReactNativePackager:*
You can combine this with other values, e.g. DEBUG=babel,ReactNativePackager:*
. Under the hood this uses the debug
package, see its documentation for all the available options.
The /debug
endpoint discussed above is also useful.
FAQ
Can I use this in my own non-React Native project?
Yes. It's not really tied to React Native, however feature development is informed by React Native needs.
Why didn't you use webpack?
We love webpack, however, when we tried on our codebase it was slower than our developers would like it to be. You can find more discussion about the subject here.