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webpack-dashboard - A CLI dashboard for webpack dev server

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webpack-dashboard

A CLI dashboard for your webpack dev server

 

What's this all about?

When using webpack, especially for a dev server, you are probably used to seeing something like this:

687474703a2f2f692e696d6775722e636f6d2f70

 

That's cool, but it's mostly noise and scrolly and not super helpful. This plugin changes that. Now when you run your dev server, you basically work at NASA:

687474703a2f2f692e696d6775722e636f6d2f35

 

Install

npm install webpack-dashboard --save-dev

Use

First, import the plugin and add it to your webpack config, or apply it to your compiler:

// Import the plugin:
var DashboardPlugin = require('webpack-dashboard/plugin');

// If you aren't using express, add it to your webpack configs plugins section:
plugins: [
    new DashboardPlugin()
]

// If you are using an express based dev server, add it with compiler.apply
compiler.apply(new DashboardPlugin());

If using a custom port, the port number must be included in the options object here, as well as passed using the -p flag in the call to webpack-dashboard. See how below:

plugins: [
    new DashboardPlugin({ port: 3001 })
]

In the latest version, you can either run your app, and run webpack-dashboard independently (by installing with npm install webpack-dashboard -g) or run webpack-dashboard from your package.json. So if your dev server start script previously looked like:

"scripts": {
    "dev": "node index.js"
}

You would change that to:

"scripts": {
    "dev": "webpack-dashboard -- node index.js"
}

Now you can just run your start script like normal, except now, you are awesome. Not that you weren't before. I'm just saying. More so.

 

InspectPack and Node Environments

Webpack Dashboard does additional analysis of individual module sizes, asset sizes, and any problems when your bundle is unminified and not in a production environment. The Webpack Plugin automatically adds pathinfo = true to your configuration’s output object. Environments are defined through the DefinePlugin with process.env["NODE_ENV"] being "production". Webpack Dashboard will produce a warning if a production configuration is run.

 

Run it

Finally, start your server using whatever command you have set up. Either you have npm run dev or npm start pointed at node devServer.js or something along those lines.

Then, sit back and pretend you're an astronaut.

 

Supported Operating Systems and Terminals

  • macOS → Webpack Dashboard works in Terminal, iTerm 2, and Hyper. For mouse events, like scrolling, in Terminal you will need to ensure View → Enable Mouse Reporting is enabled. This is supported in macOS El Capitan, Sierra, and High Sierra. In iTerm 2, to select full rows of text hold the ⌥ Opt key. To select a block of text hold the ⌥ Opt + ⌘ Cmd key combination.
  • Windows 10 → Webpack Dashboard works in Command Prompt, PowerShell, and Linux Subsystem for Windows. Mouse events are not supported at this time, as discussed further in the documentation of the underlying terminal library we use Blessed. The main log can be scrolled using the , , Page Up, and Page Down keys.
  • Linux → Webpack Dashboard has been verified in the built-in terminal app for Debian-based Linux distributions such as Ubuntu or Mint. Mouse events and scrolling are supported automatically. To highlight or select lines hold the ⇧ Shift key.

 

API

webpack-dashboard (CLI)

 

Options

-c, --color [color] - Custom ANSI color for your dashboard
-m, --minimal - Runs the dashboard in minimal mode
-t, --title [title] - Set title of terminal window
-p, --port [port] - Custom port for socket communication server

 

 

Arguments

[command] - The command you want to run, i.e. webpack-dashboard -- node index.js

 

Webpack plugin


Options

  • host - Custom host for connection the socket client
  • port - Custom port for connecting the socket client
  • root - Custom full path to project root (where package.json + node_modules are if not in process.cwd())
  • handler - Plugin handler method, i.e. dashboard.setData

 

Note: you can also just pass a function in as an argument, which then becomes the handler, i.e. new DashboardPlugin(dashboard.setData)

 

 

 

Download: webpack-dashboard-master.zip

or

git clone https://github.com/FormidableLabs/webpack-dashboard.git

 

Credits

Module output deeply inspired by: https://github.com/robertknight/webpack-bundle-size-analyzer

Error output deeply inspired by: https://github.com/facebookincubator/create-react-app

 

Sources:

Edited by Fi8sVrs
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