The NormalModuleReplacementPlugin
allows you to replace resources that match resourceRegExp
with newResource
. If newResource
is relative, it is resolved relative to the previous resource. If newResource
is a function, it is expected to overwrite the request attribute of the supplied resource.
This can be useful for allowing different behaviour between builds.
new webpack.NormalModuleReplacementPlugin(
resourceRegExp,
newResource
)
Replace a specific module when building for a development environment.
Say you have a config file some/path/config.development.module.js
and a special version for production in some/path/config.production.module.js
Just add the following plugin when building for production:
new webpack.NormalModuleReplacementPlugin(
/some\/path\/config\.development\.js/,
'./config.production.js'
);
Conditional build depending on an specified environment.
Say you want a configuration with specific values for different build targets.
module.exports = function(env) {
var appTarget = env.APP_TARGET || 'VERSION_A';
return {
plugins: [
new webpack.NormalModuleReplacementPlugin(/(.*)-APP_TARGET(\.*)/, function(resource) {
resource.request = resource.request.replace(/-APP_TARGET/, `-${appTarget}`);
})
]
}
}
Create the two config files:
app/config-VERSION_A.js
export default {
title : 'I am version A'
}
app/config-VERSION_B.js
export default {
title : 'I am version B'
}
Then import that config using the keyword you're looking for in the regexp:
import config from 'app/config-APP_TARGET';
console.log(config.title);
And now you just get the right config imported depending on which target you're building for:
webpack --env.APP_TARGET VERSION_A
=> 'I am version A'
webpack --env.APP_TARGET VERSION_B
=> 'I am version B'