hint列表
注释:
Not every hint apply to all apps. Some hints have positive and negative effects so it depends on your needs.
Hints are ordered by importance (most important comes first), but importance heavily depends on the app.
Hints are categorized by App, Developer and/or Build performance. Sometimes multiple categories apply.
App performance: Your app perform better. This affects the user of your app and/or the cost of serving the app to the user.
Developer performance: This makes it easier for your developers to write the app.
Build performance: The build of your app is faster and/or more stable.
App 性能
- Minimize you bundle with the
UglifyJsPlugin
(App, for every app) - Use Code Splitting: improves initial download size, at the cost of more requests (App, for big apps)
- Hint for React apps: Use the react-proxy-loader
- Add hashes to output files and enable Long Caching time on server: improves times for second visit (App, for every app)
- Hint: Use records to keep module/chunk ids as consistent as possible
- Hint for static HTML pages: Use the html-webpack-plugin
- Don't delete no longer used assets immediately after they are no longer used. Wait a few weeks before deleting them from server. Result: No 404s for users that keep browser windows open for long time (App, for every app)
- Use the
DefinePlugin
to pass configuration from config to app: Embedded into bundle, Conditional code is removed with minimized (App, for apps with configuration)- Use the
EnvironmentPlugin
to passprocess.env
from build to app
- Use the
- Check bundle stats with analyse tool for problems: Improve total download size, Improve cohesion (App/Developer, for big apps)
- Hint: Use the
stats-webpack-plugin
or the--json
CLI option to get the stats - Hint: Use the
profile
option to gather more performance stats
- Hint: Use the
- Extract common modules into separate script file: improves caching for switching between pages, at the cost of additional requests for the initial page (App, for app with multiple entry points)
- Remove duplication with
npm dedupe
/npm 4
and theDedupePlugin
: improve total download size (App, for app using npm) - Do CSS processing with webpack: (App/Developer, for every app)
- static assets (font/image/...) processing with webpack. (for every app)
- inline static assets with the url-loader: improves time to initial view (by reducing roundtrips), at the cost of total download size (for every app)
- Separate CSS file with the extract-text-webpack-plugin: eliminates FOUC for prerendered markup, improves time to initial view (by parallizing CSS and JS downloading) (for app with many CSS or prerendered content)
- static assets (font/image/...) processing with webpack. (for every app)
- Fit the chunking to your needs via many Code Splitting Points and the chunk optimization plugins (
LimitChunkCountPlugin
,MinChunkSizePlugin
,AggressiveMergingPlugin
, ) - Preload additional chunks by adding a script tag and deferring the chunk load: Faster initial view (App, for routed apps)
Developer performance
- Use a configuration file (webpack.config.js) instead of passing CLI options: Easier to mantain, more options (Developer, for every app)
- Don't rewrite incompatible JS, but use
imports-loader
/exports-loader
to make it compatible: Easier to upgrade to new version (Developer, for every app) - Use webpack devtools for debugging in browser: Better debugging experiance, real source code, real module names, at the cost of slower build and difference to production build (Developer, for every app)
- Write modules with ES6 module syntax: This is more future proof and allows more advanced optimizations (Developer/App/Build, for every app)
- Current Status: Use the
babel-loader
to transform ES6 module syntax to CommonJS - Future: webpack 2 understand ES6 module syntax
- Future: webpack enables advanced optimizations
- Current Status: Use the
- Use
output.library
to build libraries that export stuff (Developer, for libraries) - Use
externals
to declare dependencies of your bundle on the target environment (Developer, for libraries and apps) - Enable Hot Module Replacement (HMR) for faster page updates (Developer, for every app)
- Hint for React apps: Use the
react-hot-loader
orreact-transform
- Hint for CSS: Use the
style-loader
(withoutextract-text-webpack-plugin
) for HMR - Hint for custom routers: Write custom handlers for updates at least at router level
- Hint for React apps: Use the
- Use Javascript in webpack config to share common configuration etc. (Developer, for every app)
- Use
resolve.root
to configure a path to your app modules: Allows shorter references to dependencies (Developer, for big apps) - Use
karma
withkarma-webpack
to test modules in the browser (Developer, for every app) - Use
target
to build for other environments than the browser (Developer, for non-browser apps) - Use the
BannerPlugin
to add comments to the output assets: Licensing (Developer, for libraries) - Use
debug
to switch loaders to debug mode which provide more debug information (if the loader supports it): Better debugging experiance (Developer, for every app)
Build performance
- Use incremental compilation: faster second build (Build, for every app)
- Hint: Switch watching to polling with the
watchOptions.poll
option only if watching over network or inside of VMs
- Hint: Switch watching to polling with the
- Use in-memory compilation for development build: faster build, less disk usage, at the cost of memory usage (Build, for every app)
- Hint: Use the webpack-dev-server
- Use multiple entry points instead of running webpack multiple times: Faster build, entry points can share chunks (Build/App, for multi page apps)
- Pass an array of configurations to webpack to compile them in parallel while sharing disk cache and watchers: Faster builds and rebuilds, less problems with too many watchers (Build, for big apps with multiple configurations)
- Use
module.noParse
for big CommonJS files without dependencies: Faster build times (Build, for app with these modules)
Unsorted
Feel free to add more hints to any category. If you were to add it or in which order you can add it to the
Unsorted
section and some more experienced user will pick it up.