chore(deps): update dependency esbuild to ^0.17.0 #72
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This PR contains the following updates:
^0.16.0
->^0.17.0
Release Notes
evanw/esbuild
v0.17.0
Compare Source
This release deliberately contains backwards-incompatible changes. To avoid automatically picking up releases like this, you should either be pinning the exact version of
esbuild
in yourpackage.json
file (recommended) or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as^0.16.0
or~0.16.0
. See npm's documentation about semver for more information.At a high level, the breaking changes in this release fix some long-standing issues with the design of esbuild's incremental, watch, and serve APIs. This release also introduces some exciting new features such as live reloading. In detail:
Move everything related to incremental builds to a new
context
API (#1037, #1606, #2280, #2418)This change removes the
incremental
andwatch
options as well as theserve()
method, and introduces a newcontext()
method. The context method takes the same arguments as thebuild()
method but only validates its arguments and does not do an initial build. Instead, builds can be triggered using therebuild()
,watch()
, andserve()
methods on the returned context object. The new context API looks like this:The switch to the context API solves a major issue with the previous API which is that if the initial build fails, a promise is thrown in JavaScript which prevents you from accessing the returned result object. That prevented you from setting up long-running operations such as watch mode when the initial build contained errors. It also makes tearing down incremental builds simpler as there is now a single way to do it instead of three separate ways.
In addition, this release also makes some subtle changes to how incremental builds work. Previously every call to
rebuild()
started a new build. If you weren't careful, then builds could actually overlap. This doesn't cause any problems with esbuild itself, but could potentially cause problems with plugins (esbuild doesn't even give you a way to identify which overlapping build a given plugin callback is running on). Overlapping builds also arguably aren't useful, or at least aren't useful enough to justify the confusion and complexity that they bring. With this release, there is now only ever a single active build per context. Callingrebuild()
before the previous rebuild has finished now "merges" with the existing rebuild instead of starting a new build.Allow using
watch
andserve
together (#805, #1650, #2576)Previously it was not possible to use watch mode and serve mode together. The rationale was that watch mode is one way of automatically rebuilding your project and serve mode is another (since serve mode automatically rebuilds on every request). However, people want to combine these two features to make "live reloading" where the browser automatically reloads the page when files are changed on the file system.
This release now allows you to use these two features together. You can only call the
watch()
andserve()
APIs once each per context, but if you call them together on the same context then esbuild will automatically rebuild both when files on the file system are changed and when the server serves a request.Support "live reloading" through server-sent events (#802)
Server-sent events are a simple way to pass one-directional messages asynchronously from the server to the client. Serve mode now provides a
/esbuild
endpoint with anchange
event that triggers every time esbuild's output changes. So you can now implement simple "live reloading" (i.e. reloading the page when a file is edited and saved) like this:The event payload is a JSON object with the following shape:
This JSON should also enable more complex live reloading scenarios. For example, the following code hot-swaps changed CSS
<link>
tags in place without reloading the page (but still reloads when there are other types of changes):Implementing live reloading like this has a few known caveats:
These events only trigger when esbuild's output changes. They do not trigger when files unrelated to the build being watched are changed. If your HTML file references other files that esbuild doesn't know about and those files are changed, you can either manually reload the page or you can implement your own live reloading infrastructure instead of using esbuild's built-in behavior.
The
EventSource
API is supposed to automatically reconnect for you. However, there's a bug in Firefox that breaks this if the server is ever temporarily unreachable: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1809332. Workarounds are to use any other browser, to manually reload the page if this happens, or to write more complicated code that manually closes and re-creates theEventSource
object if there is a connection error. I'm hopeful that this bug will be fixed.Browser vendors have decided to not implement HTTP/2 without TLS. This means that each
/esbuild
event source will take up one of your precious 6 simultaneous per-domain HTTP/1.1 connections. So if you open more than six HTTP tabs that use this live-reloading technique, you will be unable to use live reloading in some of those tabs (and other things will likely also break). The workaround is to enable HTTPS, which is now possible to do in esbuild itself (see below).Add built-in support for HTTPS (#2169)
You can now tell esbuild's built-in development server to use HTTPS instead of HTTP. This is sometimes necessary because browser vendors have started making modern web features unavailable to HTTP websites. Previously you had to put a proxy in front of esbuild to enable HTTPS since esbuild's development server only supported HTTP. But with this release, you can now enable HTTPS with esbuild without an additional proxy.
To enable HTTPS with esbuild:
Generate a self-signed certificate. There are many ways to do this. Here's one way, assuming you have
openssl
installed:Add
--keyfile=key.pem
and--certfile=cert.pem
to your esbuild development server commandClick past the scary warning in your browser when you load your page
If you have more complex needs than this, you can still put a proxy in front of esbuild and use that for HTTPS instead. Note that if you see the message "Client sent an HTTP request to an HTTPS server" when you load your page, then you are using the incorrect protocol. Replace
http://
withhttps://
in your browser's URL bar.Keep in mind that esbuild's HTTPS support has nothing to do with security. The only reason esbuild now supports HTTPS is because browsers have made it impossible to do local development with certain modern web features without jumping through these extra hoops. Please do not use esbuild's development server for anything that needs to be secure. It's only intended for local development and no considerations have been made for production environments whatsoever.
Better support copying
index.html
into the output directory (#621, #1771)Right now esbuild only supports JavaScript and CSS as first-class content types. Previously this meant that if you were building a website with a HTML file, a JavaScript file, and a CSS file, you could use esbuild to build the JavaScript file and the CSS file into the output directory but not to copy the HTML file into the output directory. You needed a separate
cp
command for that.Or so I thought. It turns out that the
copy
loader added in version 0.14.44 of esbuild is sufficient to have esbuild copy the HTML file into the output directory as well. You can add something likeindex.html --loader:.html=copy
and esbuild will copyindex.html
into the output directory for you. The benefits of this are a) you don't need a separatecp
command and b) theindex.html
file will automatically be re-copied when esbuild is in watch mode and the contents ofindex.html
are edited. This also goes for other non-HTML file types that you might want to copy.This pretty much already worked. The one thing that didn't work was that esbuild's built-in development server previously only supported implicitly loading
index.html
(e.g. loading/about/index.html
when you visit/about/
) whenindex.html
existed on the file system. Previously esbuild didn't support implicitly loadingindex.html
if it was a build result. That bug has been fixed with this release so it should now be practical to use thecopy
loader to do this.Fix
onEnd
not being called in serve mode (#1384)Previous releases had a bug where plugin
onEnd
callbacks weren't called when using the top-levelserve()
API. This API no longer exists and the internals have been reimplemented such thatonEnd
callbacks should now always be called at the end of every build.Incremental builds now write out build results differently (#2104)
Previously build results were always written out after every build. However, this could cause the output directory to fill up with files from old builds if code splitting was enabled, since the file names for code splitting chunks contain content hashes and old files were not deleted.
With this release, incremental builds in esbuild will now delete old output files from previous builds that are no longer relevant. Subsequent incremental builds will also no longer overwrite output files whose contents haven't changed since the previous incremental build.
The
onRebuild
watch mode callback was removed (#980, #2499)Previously watch mode accepted an
onRebuild
callback which was called whenever watch mode rebuilt something. This was not great in practice because if you are running code after a build, you likely want that code to run after every build, not just after the second and subsequent builds. This release removes option to provide anonRebuild
callback. You can create a plugin with anonEnd
callback instead. TheonEnd
plugin API already exists, and is a way to run some code after every build.You can now return errors from
onEnd
(#2625)It's now possible to add additional build errors and/or warnings to the current build from within your
onEnd
callback by returning them in an array. This is identical to how theonStart
callback already works. The evaluation ofonEnd
callbacks have been moved around a bit internally to make this possible.Note that the build will only fail (i.e. reject the promise) if the additional errors are returned from
onEnd
. Adding additional errors to the result object that's passed toonEnd
won't affect esbuild's behavior at all.Print URLs and ports from the Go and JS APIs (#2393)
Previously esbuild's CLI printed out something like this when serve mode is active:
The CLI still does this, but now the JS and Go serve mode APIs will do this too. This only happens when the log level is set to
verbose
,debug
, orinfo
but not when it's set towarning
,error
, orsilent
.Upgrade guide for existing code:
Rebuild (a.k.a. incremental build):
Before:
After:
Previously the first build was done differently than subsequent builds. Now both the first build and subsequent builds are done using the same API.
Serve:
Before:
After:
Watch:
Before:
After:
Watch with
onRebuild
:Before:
After:
The
onRebuild
function has now been removed. The replacement is to make a plugin with anonEnd
callback.Previously
onRebuild
did not fire for the first build (only for subsequent builds). This was usually problematic, so usingonEnd
instead ofonRebuild
is likely less error-prone. But if you need to emulate the old behavior ofonRebuild
that ignores the first build, then you'll need to manually count and ignore the first build in your plugin (as demonstrated above).Notice how all of these API calls are now done off the new context object. You should now be able to use all three kinds of incremental builds (
rebuild
,serve
, andwatch
) together on the same context object. Also notice how callingdispose
on the context is now the common way to discard the context and free resources in all of these situations.v0.16.17
Compare Source
Fix additional comment-related regressions (#2814)
This release fixes more edge cases where the new comment preservation behavior that was added in 0.16.14 could introduce syntax errors. Specifically:
These cases caused esbuild to generate code with a syntax error in version 0.16.14 or above. These bugs have now been fixed.
v0.16.16
Compare Source
Fix a regression caused by comment preservation (#2805)
The new comment preservation behavior that was added in 0.16.14 introduced a regression where comments in certain locations could cause esbuild to omit certain necessary parentheses in the output. The outermost parentheses were incorrectly removed for the following syntax forms, which then introduced syntax errors:
This regression has been fixed.
v0.16.15
Compare Source
Add
format
to input files in the JSON metafile dataWhen
--metafile
is enabled, input files may now have an additionalformat
field that indicates the export format used by this file. When present, the value will either becjs
for CommonJS-style exports oresm
for ESM-style exports. This can be useful in bundle analysis.For example, esbuild's new Bundle Size Analyzer now uses this information to visualize whether ESM or CommonJS was used for each directory and file of source code (click on the CJS/ESM bar at the top).
This information is helpful when trying to reduce the size of your bundle. Using the ESM variant of a dependency instead of the CommonJS variant always results in a faster and smaller bundle because it omits CommonJS wrappers, and also may result in better tree-shaking as it allows esbuild to perform tree-shaking at the statement level instead of the module level.
Fix a bundling edge case with dynamic import (#2793)
This release fixes a bug where esbuild's bundler could produce incorrect output. The problematic edge case involves the entry point importing itself using a dynamic
import()
expression in an imported file, like this:Remove new type syntax from type declarations in the
esbuild
package (#2798)Previously you needed to use TypeScript 4.3 or newer when using the
esbuild
package from TypeScript code due to the use of a getter in an interface innode_modules/esbuild/lib/main.d.ts
. This release removes this newer syntax to allow people with versions of TypeScript as far back as TypeScript 3.5 to use this latest version of theesbuild
package. Here is change that was made to esbuild's type declarations:v0.16.14
Compare Source
Preserve some comments in expressions (#2721)
Various tools give semantic meaning to comments embedded inside of expressions. For example, Webpack and Vite have special "magic comments" that can be used to affect code splitting behavior:
Since esbuild can be used as a preprocessor for these tools (e.g. to strip TypeScript types), it can be problematic if esbuild doesn't do additional work to try to retain these comments. Previously esbuild special-cased Webpack comments in these specific locations in the AST. But Vite would now like to use similar comments, and likely other tools as well.
So with this release, esbuild now will attempt to preserve some comments inside of expressions in more situations than before. This behavior is mainly intended to preserve these special "magic comments" that are meant for other tools to consume, although esbuild will no longer only preserve Webpack-specific comments so it should now be tool-agnostic. There is no guarantee that all such comments will be preserved (especially when
--minify-syntax
is enabled). So this change does not mean that esbuild is now usable as a code formatter. In particular comment preservation is more likely to happen with leading comments than with trailing comments. You should put comments that you want to be preserved before the relevant expression instead of after it. Also note that this change does not retain any more statement-level comments than before (i.e. comments not embedded inside of expressions). Comment preservation is not enabled when--minify-whitespace
is enabled (which is automatically enabled when you use--minify
).v0.16.13
Compare Source
Publish a new bundle visualization tool
While esbuild provides bundle metadata via the
--metafile
flag, previously esbuild left analysis of it completely up to third-party tools (well, outside of the rudimentary--analyze
flag). However, the esbuild website now has a built-in bundle visualization tool:You can pass
--metafile
to esbuild to output bundle metadata, then upload that JSON file to this tool to visualize your bundle. This is helpful for answering questions such as:I'm publishing this tool because I think esbuild should provide some answer to "how do I visualize my bundle" without requiring people to reach for third-party tools. At the moment the tool offers two types of visualizations: a radial "sunburst chart" and a linear "flame chart". They serve slightly different but overlapping use cases (e.g. the sunburst chart is more keyboard-accessible while the flame chart is easier with the mouse). This tool may continue to evolve over time.
Fix
--metafile
and--mangle-cache
with--watch
(#1357)The CLI calls the Go API and then also writes out the metafile and/or mangle cache JSON files if those features are enabled. This extra step is necessary because these files are returned by the Go API as in-memory strings. However, this extra step accidentally didn't happen for all builds after the initial build when watch mode was enabled. This behavior used to work but it was broken in version 0.14.18 by the introduction of the mangle cache feature. This release fixes the combination of these features, so the metafile and mangle cache features should now work with watch mode. This behavior was only broken for the CLI, not for the JS or Go APIs.
Add an
original
field to the metafileThe metadata file JSON now has an additional field: each import in an input file now contains the pre-resolved path in the
original
field in addition to the post-resolved path in thepath
field. This means it's now possible to run certain additional analysis over your bundle. For example, you should be able to use this to detect when the same package subpath is represented multiple times in the bundle, either because multiple versions of a package were bundled or because a package is experiencing the dual-package hazard.Configuration
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