Awesome
This package has been renamed to react-app-alias
- react-app-rewire-alias -> react-app-alias
Deprecaterd! Use react-app-alias instead.
For easy migration to major release with renaming follow this migration guide
Alias solution for craco or rewired create-react-app
This is more than simple alias. This is also a multi-project src
directory. Currently, create-react-app
(CRA) does not support more than one
src
directory in the project. Monorepo, multi-repo and library projects with
examples require more than one directory like src
.
This is merely an alias and multi-source solution for CRA and this is not a replacement for multi-package management tools like Lerna.
This requires to modify the CRA webpack configuration in runtime (without ejecting) and works with one of:
- react-app-rewired
- customize-cra
- craco (see Using craco below)
This allows:
- quality and secure exports from outside
src
- absolute imports
- any
./directory
at root outside ofsrc
with Babel and CRA features
This is designed for:
- monorepo projects
- multi-repo projects
- library projects with examples
Advantages over other solutions:
-
provided fully functional aliases and allows the use of Babel, JSX, etc. outside of
src
(outside of projectroot
may be enbled with special way see the section below) -
provided fully secure aliases and uses the same module scope plugin from the original create-react-app package for modules (instead of removing it), to minimize the probability of including unwanted code
Installation
yarn add --dev react-app-rewire-alias
or
npm install --save-dev react-app-rewire-alias
Usage
By default folders for alias may be near to src folder or in it.
Outside of project root
is enabled with special way, see below.
Usage steps:
- enumerate aliases in jsconfig.paths.json or tsconfig.paths.json
- include it in jsconfig.json or tsconfig.json
- enable your favorite any of react-app-rewired or craco
- apply this package plugin in config of react-app-rewired or craco
Enumerate aliases in jsconfig.paths.json or tsconfig.paths.json
Create a separate file jsconfig.paths.json
or tsconfig.paths.json
, like this:
// jsconfig.paths.json or tsconfig.paths.json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": ".",
"paths": {
"example/*": ["example/src/*"],
"@library/*": ["library/src/*"]
}
}
}
Add extends section to jsconfig.json or tsconfig.json
The paths section must not be configured directly in jsconfig.json
or tsconfig.json
, but in a separate extends file mentioned above.
Now include this file in extends section, like this:
// jsconfig.json or tsconfig.json
{
"extends": "./jsconfig.paths.json", // or "./tsconfig.paths.json"
"compilerOptions": {
// ...
}
}
Configure plugin for react-app-rewired
// config-overrides.js
const {alias, configPaths} = require('react-app-rewire-alias')
const aliasMap = configPaths('./tsconfig.paths.json') // or jsconfig.paths.json
module.exports = alias(aliasMap)
module.exports.jest = aliasJest(aliasMap)
aliasMap may be filled manually, for non-typescript only, see api
Configure plugin for craco
// craco.config.js
const {CracoAliasPlugin, configPaths} = require('react-app-rewire-alias')
const aliasMap = configPaths('./tsconfig.paths.json') // or jsconfig.paths.json
module.exports = {
plugins: [
{
plugin: CracoAliasPlugin,
options: {alias: aliasMap}
}
]
}
aliasMap may be filled manually, for non-typescript only, see api
Enable react-app-rewired
Integrating react-app-rewired
into your project is simple
(see its documentation):
Create config-overrides.js
mentioned above, in the project's root directory
(the same including the package.json
and src
directory).
Install react-app-rewired
yarn add --dev react-app-rewired
- or -
npm install --save-dev react-app-rewired
and rewrite the package.json
like this:
"scripts": {
- "start": "react-scripts start",
+ "start": "react-app-rewired start",
+ ... // same way
}
Enable craco
According to craco docs install craco:
yarn add --dev craco
- or -
npm install --save-dev craco
and replace react-scripts
in package.json
:
"scripts": {
- "start": "react-scripts start",
+ "start": "craco start",
+ ... // same way
}
API
- alias(aliasMap)(webpackConfig)
The function alias()
accepts aliases declared in form:
const aliasMap = {
example: 'example/src',
'@library': 'library/src',
}
module.exports = alias(aliasMap)
To make all things worked, aliases must be declared in jsconfig.json
or tsconfig.json
.
However, it must be declared in a separate extends file (see section Workaround for "aliased imports are not supported"
below)
The result is a function which will modify Wepack config
- configPaths()
The function configPaths()
loads paths from file compatible with jsconfig.json
or tsconfig.json
and returns path in form acceptable for alias()
function.
The tsconfig.json
is prioritized over the jsconfig.json
in the loading sequence.
const aliasMap = configPaths('./tsconfig.paths.json')
module.exports = alias(aliasMap)
- extendability
As any react-app-rewire
or customize-cra
rewire extension this can be integrated
with another:
module.exports = function override(config) {
const modifiedConfig = alias(...)(config)
...
return someElse(modifiedConfig)
}
module.exports.jest = function override(config) {
const modifiedConfig = aliasJest(...)(config)
...
return modifiedConfig
}
Workaround for "aliased imports are not supported"
CRA overwrites
your tsconfig.json
at runtime and removes paths
from the tsconfig.json
,
which is not officially supported, with this message:
The following changes are being made to your tsconfig.json file: - compilerOptions.paths must not be set (aliased imports are not supported)
The suggested workaround
is to move the paths to a different .json
file, e.g. tsconfig.paths.json
, like this:
/* tsconfig.paths.json */
{
"compilerOptions": {
"baseUrl": ".",
"paths": {
"example/*": ["example/src/*"],
"@library/*": ["library/src/*"]
}
}
}
with that file's subsequent inclusion in the tsconfig.json
using extends
:
/* tsconfig.json */
{
"extends": "./tsconfig.paths.json"
}
Outside of root
Alias folders outside of the root of the project currently fully functional and works fine but are not recommended. It has more complicated implementation which currently named dangerous and exported from package separately. Due to complicity it has a higher probability of being incompatible with the next release of create-react-app until an update is released, since these are different systems. However same is for the base implementation but with less probability of being incompatibe with next cra release.
It provides aliases with the same feature set as the original create-react-app
.
create-react-app
does not support aliases and additional src
-like directories as
it does not supports aliases outside of the root
project directory.
Aliases outside or project root
directory may be implemented with some
limitation
of feature set. That is solved by disabling ESLint checking.
This implementation is moved to separated code set named aliasDangerous
to be not confused
with alias
. To use it just replace import like this:
- const {alias, configPaths, CracoAliasPlugin} = require('react-app-rewire-alias')
+ const {aliasDangerous, configPaths, CracoAliasPlugin} = require('react-app-rewire-alias/lib/aliasDangerous')
And replace alias
with aliasDangerous
:
module.exports = function override(config) {
aliasDangerous({
...configPaths('tsconfig.paths.json')
})(config)
return config
}
Tips
- keep only one
node_modules
directory
Confusions in deps versions may bring unclear errors or problems. For example, an application
is not working without any error. Or another example is error in react-router
- <Route>
component do not see <Router>
when actually code is correct and it falls with:
should not use Route or withRouter() outside a Router
This may be a result of some confusion in node_modules
folders for multi-repo projects.
Same take place in plain create-react-app
if somehow one or more additional
node_modulest
directories appear in src
.
To avoid this problem use only one main project node_modules
directory.
- keep away from working with nested project
Default bundler configuration doesn't assume your configuration and may mix deps from
node_modules
from different projects (top project and nested project) so this may
bring mentioned above confusions with deps versions. To avoid problems:
do not install and run within nested project directly when it is nested or integrated
in another one - but only independent top level configuration Or consider to eject
or configure Webpack manually.
- do not relay to deps versions synchronization
Some libraries use instanceof
and other type comparisions. For example , two objects
created with the same params in the same code of the same library version but installed in
different node_modules
and bundled separately - will mostly have the same data and same
behaviour but different instance type. Such libraries will be unable to recognize their own
objects and will lead to unpredictable behaviour. So use only one main project
node_modules
directory.