7.7 KiB
🏄🏻 A collection of opinionated configurations for a building a code bundle via rollup for presetter
• Quick Start • Project Structure • Customization • Scripts •
Features
presetter-preset-rollup is an opinionated preset for you to setup rollup in a fraction of time you usually take via presetter.
- 🗞️ Rollup 2
- 2️⃣ Dual CJS and ESM modules export by default
- 🍄 Common rollup packages included as one single bundle
@rollup/plugin-commonjs
@rollup/plugin-graphql
@rollup/plugin-image
@rollup/plugin-json
@rollup/plugin-yaml
rollup
<~ of course including rollup itselfrollup-plugin-postcss
rollup-plugin-ts
rollup-plugin-tsconfig-paths
rollup-plugin-visualizer
Quick Start
FULL DOCUMENTATION IS AVAILABLE HERE
- Bootstrap your project with
presetter-preset-essentials
&presetter-preset-rollup
npx presetter use presetter-preset presetter-preset-rollup
That's. One command and you're set.
After bootstrapping, you would see a lot of configuration files generated, including a rollup.config.ts
that has all plugins configured properly for you.
- Develop and run life cycle scripts provided by the preset
At this point, all development packages specified in the preset are installed, and now you can try to run some example life cycle scripts (e.g. run prepare).
IMPORTANT For NodeJS to import the correct export, remember to specify the following in your project's package.json too!
{
"main": "lib/index.js",
"module": "lib/index.mjs",
"types": "lib/index.d.ts",
"exports": {
"require": "./lib/index.js",
"import": "./lib/index.mjs"
}
}
Project Structure
After installation, your project file structure should resemble the following or with more configuration files if you also installed other presets such as presetter-preset-essentials
.
Implement your business logic under source
and prepare tests under spec
.
TIPS You can always change the source directory to other (e.g. src) by setting the source
variable in .presetterrc.json
. See the customization section below for more details.
(root)
├─ .git
├─ .presetterrc.json
├─ node_modules
├─ source
│ ├─ <folders>
│ ├─ index.ts
│ ├─ (auxiliary).ts
├─ spec
│ ├─ *.spec.ts
├─ package.json
└─ rollup.config.ts
Customization
By default, this preset exports a handy configuration for rollup for a typescript project.
But you can further customize (either extending or replacing) the configuration by specifying the change in the config file (.presetterrc
or .presetterrc.json
).
These settings are available in the config
field in the config file. For directories, the setting is specified in the variable
field.
The structure of .presetterrc
should follow the interface below:
interface PresetterRC {
/** name(s) of the preset e.g. presetter-preset-rollup */
name: string | string[];
/** additional configuration passed to the preset for generating the configuration files */
config?: {
// ┌─ configuration for other tools via other presets (e.g. presetter-preset-essentials)
// ...
/** additional configuration for rollup */
rollup?: {
// ┌─ any configuration supported by rollup, see https://rollupjs.org/guide/en/#configuration-files
// ...
/** list of plugin and its options */
plugins?:
| NormalizedRollupConfig['plugins']
| Array<
| string
| [name: string]
| [
name: string,
options:
| Record<string, unknown>
| `@apply ${string}`
| `@import ${string}`
| null,
]
>;
};
};
/** variables to be substituted in templates */
variable?: {
/** the directory containing all source code (default: source) */
source?: string;
/** the directory containing all output tile (default: source) */
output?: string;
};
}
For generating rollup.config.ts
, this preset also support the @apply
and @import
directives such that you can also import configuration from other packages or ts/js files.
The usage of the directives is simple. In any part of the configuration for rollup, you can simply put
@apply package_name
or @import package_name
and the preset will automatically replace the content with an imported variable. For example:
{
"rollup": {
"plugins": [
[
"@apply rollup-plugin-postcss[default]",
{ "plugins": "@import ./postcss.config[default.plugins]" }
]
]
}
}
will create a rollup.config.ts
file with the following content:
import * as import0 from 'rollup-plugin-postcss';
import * as import1 from './postcss.config';
export default {
plugins: [import0.default(...[{ plugins: import1.default.plugins }])],
};
The syntax for both the directives is quite similar.
Use @apply
in a situation that you have to invoke a function from an imported package,
such as rollup-plugin-postcss
in the above example.
You can also specify the arguments for the invoked function in the form of ["@apply package", options]
For @import
, use it if you want to import value from another package or ts/js file.
For example, @import ./postcss.config[default.plugins]
would allow you to refer default.plugins
from ./postcss.config
in the above example.
In addition to the directives, to specify the plugins for rollup, you can write it in three ways similar to babel.
- A object with plugin name as the key and its options as its value e.g.
{'@apply @rollup/plugin-typescript[default]': {options}}
- Name of a plugin in an array e.g.
['@apply @rollup/plugin-typescript[default]']
- Doublet of
[plugin name, options]
in an array e.g.[['@apply @rollup/plugin-typescript[default]', {options}]]
Script Template Summary
run build
: Bundle your code via rolluprun develop
: Continuous code build and watch