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Webpack Stats Plugin — Formidable, We build the modern web

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This plugin will ingest the webpack stats object, process / transform the object and write out to a file for further consumption.

The most common use case is building a hashed bundle and wanting to programmatically refer to the correct bundle path in your Node.js server.

Installation

The plugin is available via npm:

$ npm install --save-dev webpack-stats-plugin
$ yarn add --dev webpack-stats-plugin

Examples

We have example webpack configurations for all versions of webpack. See., e.g. test/scenarios/webpack5/webpack.config.js.

CLI

If you are using webpack-cli, you can enable with:

$ webpack-cli --plugin webpack-stats-plugin/lib/stats-writer-plugin

Basic

A basic webpack.config.js-based integration:

const { StatsWriterPlugin } = require("webpack-stats-plugin");

module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    // Everything else **first**.

    // Write out stats file to build directory.
    new StatsWriterPlugin({
      filename: "stats.json", // Default
    }),
  ],
};

Custom stats Configuration

This option is passed to the webpack compiler's getStats().toJson() method.

const { StatsWriterPlugin } = require("webpack-stats-plugin");

module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    new StatsWriterPlugin({
      stats: {
        all: false,
        assets: true,
      },
    }),
  ],
};

Custom Transform Function

The transform function has a signature of:

/**
 * Transform skeleton.
 *
 * @param {Object} data           Stats object
 * @param {Object} opts           Options
 * @param {Object} opts.compiler  Current compiler instance
 * @returns {String}              String to emit to file
 */
function (data, opts) {}

which you can use like:

const { StatsWriterPlugin } = require("webpack-stats-plugin");

module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    new StatsWriterPlugin({
      transform(data, opts) {
        return JSON.stringify(
          {
            main: data.assetsByChunkName.main[0],
            css: data.assetsByChunkName.main[1],
          },
          null,
          2
        );
      },
    }),
  ],
};

Promise transform

You can use an asynchronous promise to transform as well:

const { StatsWriterPlugin } = require("webpack-stats-plugin");

module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    new StatsWriterPlugin({
      filename: "stats-transform-promise.json",
      transform(data) {
        return Promise.resolve().then(() =>
          JSON.stringify(
            {
              main: data.assetsByChunkName.main,
            },
            null,
            INDENT
          )
        );
      },
    }),
  ],
};

Plugins

StatsWriterPlugin(opts)

Stats writer module.

Stats can be a string or array (we'll have an array due to source maps):

"assetsByChunkName": {
  "main": [
    "cd6371d4131fbfbefaa7.bundle.js",
    "../js-map/cd6371d4131fbfbefaa7.bundle.js.map"
  ]
},

fields, stats

The stats object is big. It includes the entire source included in a bundle. Thus, we default opts.fields to ["assetsByChunkName"] to only include those. However, if you want the whole thing (maybe doing an opts.transform function), then you can set fields: null in options to get all of the stats object.

You may also pass a custom stats config object (or string preset) via opts.stats in order to select exactly what you want added to the data passed to the transform. When opts.stats is passed, opts.fields will default to null.

See:

filename

The opts.filename option can be a file name or path relative to output.path in webpack configuration. It should not be absolute. It may also be a function, in which case it will be passed the current compiler instance and expected to return a filename to use.

transform

By default, the retrieved stats object is JSON.stringify'ed:

new StatsWriterPlugin({
  transform(data) {
    return JSON.stringify(data, null, 2);
  },
});

By supplying an alternate transform you can target any output format. See test/scenarios/webpack5/webpack.config.js for various examples including Markdown output.

Internal notes

In modern webpack, the plugin uses the processAssets compilation hook if available when adding the stats object file to the overall compilation to write out along with all the other webpack-built assets. This is the last possible place to hook in before the compilation is frozen in future webpack releases.

In earlier webpack, the plugin uses the much later emit compiler hook. There are technically some assets/stats data that could be added after processAssets and before emit, but for most practical uses of this plugin users shouldn't see any differences in the usable data produced by different versions of webpack.

Maintenance Status

Active: Formidable is actively working on this project, and we expect to continue for work for the foreseeable future. Bug reports, feature requests and pull requests are welcome.