Let's start by clearing up a common misconception. webpack is a module bundler like Browserify or Brunch. It is not a task runner like Make, Grunt, or Gulp. Task runners handle automation of common development tasks such as linting, building, or testing your project. Compared to bundlers, task runners have a higher level focus. You can still benefit from their higher level tooling while leaving the problem of bundling to webpack.
Bundlers help you get your JavaScript and stylesheets ready for deployment, transforming them into a format that's suitable for the browser. For example, JavaScript can be minified or split into chunks and lazy-loaded to improve performance. Bundling is one of the most important challenges in web development, and solving it well can remove a lot of pain from the process.
The good news is that, while there is some overlap, task runners and bundlers can play well together if approached in the right way. This guide provides a high-level overview of how webpack can be integrated into some of the more popular task runners.
Often webpack users use npm scripts
as their task runner. This is a good starting point. Cross-platform support can become a problem, but there are several workarounds for that. Many, if not most users, get by with npm scripts
and various levels of webpack configuration and tooling.
So while webpack's core focus is bundling, there are a variety of extensions that can enable you to use it for jobs typical of a task runner. Integrating a separate tool adds complexity, so be sure to weigh the pros and cons before going forward.
For those using Grunt, we recommend the grunt-webpack
package. With grunt-webpack
you can run webpack or webpack-dev-server as a task, get access to stats within template tags, split development and production configurations and more. Start by installing grunt-webpack
as well as webpack
itself if you haven't already:
npm install --save-dev grunt-webpack webpack
Then register a configuration and load the task:
Gruntfile.js
const webpackConfig = require('./webpack.config.js');
module.exports = function (grunt) {
grunt.initConfig({
webpack: {
options: {
stats: !process.env.NODE_ENV || process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development',
},
prod: webpackConfig,
dev: Object.assign({ watch: true }, webpackConfig),
},
});
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-webpack');
};
For more information, please visit the repository.
Gulp is also a fairly straightforward integration with the help of the webpack-stream
package (a.k.a. gulp-webpack
). In this case, it is unnecessary to install webpack
separately as it is a direct dependency of webpack-stream
:
npm install --save-dev webpack-stream
You can require('webpack-stream')
instead of webpack
and optionally pass it an configuration:
gulpfile.js
const gulp = require('gulp');
const webpack = require('webpack-stream');
gulp.task('default', function () {
return gulp
.src('src/entry.js')
.pipe(
webpack({
// Any configuration options...
})
)
.pipe(gulp.dest('dist/'));
});
For more information, please visit the repository.
The mocha-webpack
utility can be used for a clean integration with Mocha. The repository offers more details on the pros and cons but essentially mocha-webpack
is a simple wrapper that provides almost the same CLI as Mocha itself and provides various webpack functionality like an improved watch mode and improved path resolution. Here is a small example of how you would install it and use it to run a test suite (found within ./test
):
npm install --save-dev webpack mocha mocha-webpack
mocha-webpack 'test/**/*.js'
For more information, please visit the repository.
The karma-webpack
package allows you to use webpack to pre-process files in Karma.
npm install --save-dev webpack karma karma-webpack
karma.conf.js
module.exports = function (config) {
config.set({
frameworks: ['webpack'],
files: [
{ pattern: 'test/*_test.js', watched: false },
{ pattern: 'test/**/*_test.js', watched: false },
],
preprocessors: {
'test/*_test.js': ['webpack'],
'test/**/*_test.js': ['webpack'],
},
webpack: {
// Any custom webpack configuration...
},
plugins: ['karma-webpack'],
});
};
For more information, please visit the repository.