These options change how modules are resolved. webpack provides reasonable defaults, but it is possible to change the resolving in detail. Have a look at Module Resolution for more explanation of how the resolver works.
resolve
object
Configure how modules are resolved. For example, when calling import "lodash"
in ES2015, the resolve
options can change where webpack goes to look for "lodash"
(see modules
).
resolve.alias
object
Create aliases to import
or require
certain modules more easily. For example, to alias a bunch of commonly used src/
folders:
alias: {
Utilities: path.resolve(__dirname, 'src/utilities/'),
Templates: path.resolve(__dirname, 'src/templates/')
}
Now, instead of using relative paths when importing like so:
import Utility from '../../utilities/utility';
you can use the alias:
import Utility from 'Utilities/utility';
A trailing $
can also be added to the given object's keys to signify an exact match:
alias: {
xyz$: path.resolve(__dirname, 'path/to/file.js')
}
which would yield these results:
import Test1 from 'xyz'; // Exact match, so path/to/file.js is resolved and imported
import Test2 from 'xyz/file.js'; // Not an exact match, normal resolution takes place
The following table explains other cases:
alias:
import "xyz"
import "xyz/file.js"
alias:
{}
import "xyz"
/abc/node_modules/xyz/index.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
alias:
{ xyz: "/abs/path/to/file.js" }
import "xyz"
/abs/path/to/file.js
import "xyz/file.js"
alias:
{ xyz$: "/abs/path/to/file.js" }
import "xyz"
/abs/path/to/file.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
alias:
{ xyz: "./dir/file.js" }
import "xyz"
/abc/dir/file.js
import "xyz/file.js"
alias:
{ xyz$: "./dir/file.js" }
import "xyz"
/abc/dir/file.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
alias:
{ xyz: "/some/dir" }
import "xyz"
/some/dir/index.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/some/dir/file.js
alias:
{ xyz$: "/some/dir" }
import "xyz"
/some/dir/index.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
alias:
{ xyz: "./dir" }
import "xyz"
/abc/dir/index.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/abc/dir/file.js
alias:
{ xyz: "modu" }
import "xyz"
/abc/node_modules/modu/index.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/abc/node_modules/modu/file.js
alias:
{ xyz$: "modu" }
import "xyz"
/abc/node_modules/modu/index.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
alias:
{ xyz: "modu/some/file.js" }
import "xyz"
/abc/node_modules/modu/some/file.js
import "xyz/file.js"
alias:
{ xyz: "modu/dir" }
import "xyz"
/abc/node_modules/modu/dir/index.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/abc/node_modules/dir/file.js
alias:
{ xyz: "xyz/dir" }
import "xyz"
/abc/node_modules/xyz/dir/index.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/abc/node_modules/xyz/dir/file.js
alias:
{ xyz$: "xyz/dir" }
import "xyz"
/abc/node_modules/xyz/dir/index.js
import "xyz/file.js"
/abc/node_modules/xyz/file.js
index.js
may resolve to another file if defined in the package.json
.
/abc/node_modules
may resolve in /node_modules
too.
resolve.aliasFields
string
Specify a field, such as browser
, to be parsed according to this specification. Default:
aliasFields: ["browser"]
resolve.cacheWithContext
boolean
(since webpack 3.1.0)
If unsafe cache is enabled, includes request.context
in the cache key. This option is taken into account by the enhanced-resolve
module. Since webpack 3.1.0 context in resolve caching is ignored when resolve or resolveLoader plugins are provided. This addresses a performance regression.
resolve.descriptionFiles
array
The JSON files to use for descriptions. Default:
descriptionFiles: ["package.json"]
resolve.enforceExtension
boolean
If true
, it will not allow extension-less files. So by default require('./foo')
works if ./foo
has a .js
extension, but with this enabled only require('./foo.js')
will work. Default:
enforceExtension: false
resolve.enforceModuleExtension
boolean
Whether to require to use an extension for modules (e.g. loaders). Default:
enforceModuleExtension: false
resolve.extensions
array
Automatically resolve certain extensions. This defaults to:
extensions: [".js", ".json"]
which is what enables users to leave off the extension when importing:
import File from '../path/to/file'
Using this will override the default array, meaning that webpack will no longer try to resolve modules using the default extensions. For modules that are imported with their extension, e.g.import SomeFile from "./somefile.ext"
, to be properly resolved, a string containing "*" must be included in the array.
resolve.mainFields
array
When importing from an npm package, e.g. import * as D3 from "d3"
, this option will determine which fields in its package.json
are checked. The default values will vary based upon the target
specified in your webpack configuration.
When the target
property is set to webworker
, web
, or left unspecified:
mainFields: ["browser", "module", "main"]
For any other target (including node
):
mainFields: ["module", "main"]
For example, the package.json
of D3 contains these fields:
{
...
main: 'build/d3.Node.js',
browser: 'build/d3.js',
module: 'index',
...
}
This means that when we import * as D3 from "d3"
this will really resolve to the file in the browser
property. The browser
property takes precedence here because it's the first item in mainFields
. Meanwhile, a Node.js application bundled by webpack will resolve by default to the file in the module
field.
resolve.mainFiles
array
The filename to be used while resolving directories. Default:
mainFiles: ["index"]
resolve.modules
array
Tell webpack what directories should be searched when resolving modules.
Absolute and relative paths can both be used, but be aware that they will behave a bit differently.
A relative path will be scanned similarly to how Node scans for node_modules
, by looking through the current directory as well as it's ancestors (i.e. ./node_modules
, ../node_modules
, and on).
With an absolute path, it will only search in the given directory.
resolve.modules
defaults to:
modules: ["node_modules"]
If you want to add a directory to search in that takes precedence over node_modules/
:
modules: [path.resolve(__dirname, "src"), "node_modules"]
resolve.unsafeCache
regex
array
boolean
Enable aggressive, but unsafe, caching of modules. Passing true
will cache everything. Default:
unsafeCache: true
A regular expression, or an array of regular expressions, can be used to test file paths and only cache certain modules. For example, to only cache utilities:
unsafeCache: /src\/utilities/
Changes to cached paths may cause failure in rare cases.
resolve.plugins
A list of additional resolve plugins which should be applied. It allows plugins such as DirectoryNamedWebpackPlugin
.
plugins: [
new DirectoryNamedWebpackPlugin()
]
resolve.symlinks
boolean
Whether to resolve symlinks to their symlinked location.
When enabled, symlinked resources are resolved to their real path, not their symlinked location. Note that this may cause module resolution to fail when using tools that symlink packages (like npm link
).
resolve.symlinks
defaults to:
symlinks: true
resolve.cachePredicate
function
A function which decides whether a request should be cached or not. An object is passed to the function with path
and request
properties. Default:
cachePredicate: function() { return true }
resolveLoader
object
This set of options is identical to the resolve
property set above, but is used only to resolve webpack's loader packages. Default:
{
modules: [ 'node_modules' ],
extensions: [ '.js', '.json' ],
mainFields: [ 'loader', 'main' ]
}
Note that you can use alias here and other features familiar from resolve. For example{ txt: 'raw-loader' }
would shimtxt!templates/demo.txt
to useraw-loader
.
resolveLoader.moduleExtensions
array
The extensions/suffixes which that are used when resolving loaders. Since version two, we strongly recommend using the full name, e.g. example-loader
, as much as possible for clarity. However, if you really wanted to exclude the -loader
bit, i.e. just use example
, you can use this option to do so:
moduleExtensions: [ '-loader' ]