Easily translate sprockets require directives into JavaScript module dependencies. Useful for migrating a Rails project to Webpack module bundling.
require
,require_tree
,require_directory
, andrequire_self
sprocket directives- Vendor assets in
vendor/assets/javascripts
- Gem assets (resulting from
bundle show <gem>
) - JST Eco assets
npm install --save sprockets-preloader
Include as a preLoader
, e.g.
module: {
preLoaders: [
{ loader: require.resolve('sprockets-preloader') },
],
}
should avoid .erb.
and .md
files
- Recommended:
webpack-rails
gem to integrate webpack asset helpers in Rails - Make
non_webpack_compatible_before_webpack
sprocket asset for all.erb
assets - Make
non_webpack_compatible_after_webpack
sprocket asset for all.erb
assets dependent on webpack assets - Note: any gem's
erb
dependencies should be included in either of the above files - Add
coffee-loader
to parse CoffeeScript files - Add
eco-loader
to parse Eco files - Top-level
var
expressions actually polluted the global closure. Removing thevar
keyword should suffice as a transition remedy.
webpack.config.js
should contain something similarly to:
module: {
preLoaders: [
{ loader: require.resolve('sprockets-preloader') },
],
loaders: [
{ test: /\.coffee$/, loader: require.resolve('coffee-loader') },
{ test: /\.eco$/, loader: require.reseolve('eco-loader') },
],
}
application.html.erb
should contain something similarly to:
<%= javascript_include_tag 'non_webpack_compatible_before_webpack' %>
<%= javascript_include_tag *webpack_asset_paths('application') %>
<%= javascript_include_tag 'non_webpack_compatible_after_webpack' %>
Please dedicate time to converting files manually once all dependencies are working with webpack (e.g. development, test, production) Easiest to move gem and vendor dependencies as module dependencies (from NPM or the like). For each JavaScript file in the Rails assets manifest, convert to module dependencies. Perhaps this can be released as a script to convert require directives.
For a more automated approach, consider using another Mavenlink loader: kitno-loader. Although currently in an alpha stage, its goal is to automagically convert (CoffeeScript) files into CommonJS-compliant modules.
As always, once these loaders have reach stability in your codebase, it is encouraged to write to disk.