Awesome
Elm loader
Webpack loader for the Elm programming language.
It is aware of Elm dependencies and tracks them. This means that in watch
mode, if you require
an Elm module from a Webpack entry point, not only will
that .elm
file be watched for changes, but any other Elm modules it imports will
be watched for changes as well.
Installation
$ npm install --save elm-webpack-loader
Usage
Documentation: rules
webpack.config.js
:
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [{
test: /\.elm$/,
exclude: [/elm-stuff/, /node_modules/],
use: {
loader: 'elm-webpack-loader',
options: {}
}
}]
}
};
See the examples section below for the complete webpack configuration.
Options
cwd (default null) Recommended
You can add cwd=elmSource
to the loader:
var elmSource = __dirname + '/elm/path/in/project'
...
use: {
loader: 'elm-webpack-loader',
options: {
cwd: elmSource
}
}
...
cwd
should be set to the same directory as your elm.json
file. You can use this to specify a custom location within your project for your elm files. Note, this
will cause the compiler to look for all elm source files in the specified directory. This
approach is recommended as it allows the compile to watch elm.json as well as every file
in the source directories.
Optimize (default is true in production mode)
Set this to true to compile bundle in optimized mode. See https://elm-lang.org/0.19.0/optimize for more information.
...
use: {
loader: 'elm-webpack-loader',
options: {
optimize: true
}
}
...
Debug (default is true in development mode)
Set this to true to enable Elm's time traveling debugger.
...
use: {
loader: 'elm-webpack-loader',
options: {
debug: true
}
}
...
RuntimeOptions (default undefined
)
This allows you to control aspects of how elm make
runs with GHC Runtime Options.
The 0.19 version of elm make
supports a limited set of those options, the most useful of which is
for profiling a build. To profile a build use the settings runtimeOptions: '-s'
, which will print
out information on how much time is spent in mutations, in the garbage collector, etc.
Note: Using the flags below requires building a new elm make
binary with -rtsopts
enabled!
If you notice your build spending a lot of time in the garbage collector, you can likely optimize it
with some additional flags to give it more memory, e.g. -A128M -H128M -n8m
.
...
use: {
loader: 'elm-webpack-loader',
options: {
runtimeOptions: ['-A128M', '-H128M', '-n8m']
}
}
...
Files (default - path to 'required' file)
elm make allows you to specify multiple modules to be combined into a single bundle
elm make Main.elm Path/To/OtherModule.elm --output=combined.js
The files
option allows you to do the same within webpack
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.elm$/,
exclude: [/elm-stuff/, /node_modules/],
loader: 'elm-webpack-loader',
options: {
files: [
path.resolve(__dirname, "path/to/Main.elm"),
path.resolve(__dirname, "Path/To/OtherModule.elm")
]
}
}
]
}
(Note: It's only possible to pass array options when using the object style of loader configuration.)
You're then able to use this with
import Elm from "./elm/Main";
Elm.Main.init({node: document.getElementById("main")});
Elm.Path.To.OtherModule.init({node: document.getElementById("other")});
Hot module reloading
Hot module reloading is supported by installing elm-hot-webpack-loader and adding it to your list of loaders. It should look something like this:
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.elm$/,
exclude: [/elm-stuff/, /node_modules/],
use: [
{ loader: 'elm-hot-webpack-loader' },
{ loader: 'elm-webpack-loader' }
]
}
]
}
IMPORTANT: elm-hot-webpack-loader
must be placed in the list immediately before elm-webpack-loader
.
Upstream options
All options are sent down as an options
object to node-elm-compiler. For example, you can
explicitly pick the local elm
binary by setting the option pathToElm
:
...
use: {
loader: 'elm-webpack-loader',
options: {
pathToElm: 'node_modules/.bin/elm'
}
}
...
For a list all possible options, consult the source.
Notes
Example
You can find an example in the example
folder.
To run:
npm install
npm run build
You can have webpack watch for changes with: npm run watch
You can run the webpack dev server with: npm run dev
For a full featured example project that uses elm-webpack-loader see pmdesgn/elm-webpack-starter .
noParse
Webpack can complain about precompiled files (files compiled by elm make
).
You can silence this warning with
noParse. You can see it in use
in the example.
module: {
rules: [...],
noParse: [/.elm$/]
}
Revisions
8.0.0
- Fix watching when using the dev server. Use
compiler.watching
instead ofcompiler.options.watch
as the latter doesn't work with the dev server.
7.0.0
- Logs build output directly to stdout to retain formatting.
- Remove stack trace for errors, as they're never relevant.
optimize
anddebug
flags are now set by default depending on the webpack mode.- Removed several options which provide little benefit.
- Reduced number of dependencies.
6.0.0
- Elm is now a peer dependency.
- Documentation fixes.
5.0.0
- Support for Elm 0.19, drops support for Elm 0.18.
4.3.1
- Fix a bug where maxInstances might end up being higher than expected
4.3.0
- Set maxInstances to 1
- Patch watching behaviour
- Add
forceWatch
to force watch mode
4.2.0
Make live reloading work more reliably
4.1.0
Added maxInstances
for limiting of instances
4.0.0
Watching is now done based on elm-package.json, faster startup time via @eeue56
3.1.0
Add support for --debug
via node-elm-compiler
3.0.6
Allow version bumps of node-elm-compiler.
3.0.5
Upgrade to latest node-elm-compiler, which fixes some dependency tracking issues.
3.0.4
Fix potential race condition between dependency checking and compilation.
3.0.3
Use node-elm-compiler 4.0.1+ for important bugfix.
3.0.2
Use node-elm-compiler 4.0.0+
3.0.1
Pass a real error object to webpack on failures.
3.0.0
Support Elm 0.17, and remove obsolete appendExport
option.
2.0.0
Change warn
to be a pass-through compiler flag rather than a way to specify
logging behavior.
1.0.0
Initial stable release.