the builder, of builders.
enables configs that would take hundreds or thousands of lines, with just a few properties.
const FlipHub = require('fliphub')
new FlipHub({entry: './src/index.js'}).build()
yarn add fliphub
npm i fliphub --save
π β changelog
keep up to date! updated frequently.
one app? two apps? 100 apps? fusebox, rollup, and webpack? nodejs server, inferno, and react? existing configs? happy and no happy pack? at the same time? no sweat.
const FlipHub = require('fliphub')
// take an existing config, flip it to fusebox or rollup or webpack
const config = require('./webpack.config.js')
config.flips = {to: 'fusebox'}
const apps = [
config,
{
name: 'infernod',
entry: './src/index.js',
presets: ['inferno', 'neutrino-preset-happypack', 'web'],
},
{
name: 'backend',
entry: './backend/src',
presets: ['node'],
},
]
FlipHub.init({apps}).build()
const { FlipHub } = require('fliphub')
const apps = [
{
name: 'reacted',
presets: ['react'],
},
{
name: 'infernod',
presets: ['inferno'],
},
]
FlipHub.init({
presets: {
reusable: {
entry: './src/index.js',
flips: {to: 'fusebox'},
},
},
apps,
}).build()
they are configured for each environment by default and can be customized for any config you want
- build systems are notorious for their difficulty.
- finding and setting up the right
- scripts
- plugins
- loaders
- configs
- requiring the dependencies
- bloating your config files
- making configs for
- development bundling
- production bundling
- production dev bundling
- test environments
- development servers
- production servers
- tedious, with a high barrier of entry
- time intensive; switching build systems for 1 app is grueling
- ... all of the above for every application
- with the flip of a flag, you can go from webpack, to fusebox, to rollup or any other supported build system.
- existing configs can be used and enhanced with ease.
- easily create presets & hubs to start converting your build system to another, flip the switch to keep compatibility without breaking everything,
- examples-minimal
- examples-canadas
- examples-monorepo
- examples-react
- examples-react-and-alias
- examples-typescript
- examples-node
- examples-lint
- examples-compat π§
- examples-tests π§
- examples-webworker π§
- examples-code-splitting π§
- examples-es6-ts-config π§
- examples-flags π§
white-list flags are used to filter which apps are run for different operations
const apps = [{
presets: ['alias-resolve', 'neutrino-preset-web', 'eslint'],
}]
const appsWithArgs = [{
presets: {
aliasResolve: __dirname,
presetWeb: null,
eslint: require('./.eslintrc.js')
},
}]
v0 is still available as flipbox but is unmaintained.