The externals
configuration option provides a way of excluding dependencies from the output bundles. Instead, the created bundle relies on that dependency to be present in the consumer's (any end-user application) environment. This feature is typically most useful to library developers, however there are a variety of applications for it.
string
object
function
RegExp
[string, object, function, RegExp]
Prevent bundling of certain import
ed packages and instead retrieve these external dependencies at runtime.
For example, to include jQuery from a CDN instead of bundling it:
index.html
<script
src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-3.1.0.js"
integrity="sha256-slogkvB1K3VOkzAI8QITxV3VzpOnkeNVsKvtkYLMjfk="
crossorigin="anonymous"
></script>
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
//...
externals: {
jquery: 'jQuery',
},
};
This leaves any dependent modules unchanged, i.e. the code shown below will still work:
import $ from 'jquery';
$('.my-element').animate(/* ... */);
The bundle with external dependencies can be used in various module contexts, such as CommonJS, AMD, global and ES2015 modules. The external library may be available in any of these forms:
module.exports.default
.commonjs
but using AMD module system.The following syntaxes are accepted...
See the example above. The property name jquery
indicates that the module jquery
in import $ from 'jquery'
should be excluded. In order to replace this module, the value jQuery
will be used to retrieve a global jQuery
variable. In other words, when a string is provided it will be treated as root
(defined above and below).
On the other hand, if you want to externalise a library that is available as a CommonJS module, you can provide the external library type together with the library name.
For example, if you want to exclude fs-extra
from the output bundle and import it during the runtime instead, you can specify it as follows:
module.exports = {
// ...
externals: {
'fs-extra': 'commonjs2 fs-extra',
},
};
This leaves any dependent modules unchanged, i.e. the code shown below:
import fs from 'fs-extra';
will compile to something like:
const fs = require('fs-extra');
module.exports = {
//...
externals: {
subtract: ['./math', 'subtract'],
},
};
subtract: ['./math', 'subtract']
allows you select part of a commonjs module, where ./math
is the module and your bundle only requires the subset under the subtract
variable. This example would translate to require('./math').subtract;
module.exports = {
//...
externals: {
react: 'react',
},
// or
externals: {
lodash: {
commonjs: 'lodash',
amd: 'lodash',
root: '_', // indicates global variable
},
},
// or
externals: {
subtract: {
root: ['math', 'subtract'],
},
},
};
This syntax is used to describe all the possible ways that an external library can be made available. lodash
here is available as lodash
under AMD and CommonJS module systems but available as _
in a global variable form. subtract
here is available via the property subtract
under the global math
object (e.g. window['math']['subtract']
).
function ({ context, request, contextInfo, getResolve }, callback)
function ({ context, request, contextInfo, getResolve }) => promise
5.15.0+It might be useful to define your own function to control the behavior of what you want to externalize from webpack. webpack-node-externals, for example, excludes all modules from the node_modules
directory and provides options to whitelist packages.
Here're arguments the function can receive:
ctx
(object
): Object containing details of the file.ctx.context
(string
): The directory of the file which contains the import.ctx.request
(string
): The import path being requested.ctx.contextInfo
(string
): Contains information about the issuer (e.g. the layer).ctx.getResolve
5.15.0+: Get a resolve function with the current resolver options.callback
(function (err, result, type)
): Callback function used to indicate how the module should be externalized.The callback function takes three arguments:
err
(Error
): Used to indicate if there has been an error while externalizing the import. If there is an error, this should be the only parameter used.result
(string
[string]
object
): Describes the external module. Can accept a string in the format ${type} ${path}
, or one of the other standard external formats (string
, [string]
, or object
)type
(string
): Optional parameter that indicates the module type (if it has not already been indicated in the result
parameter).As an example, to externalize all imports where the import path matches a regular expression you could do the following:
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
//...
externals: [
function ({ context, request }, callback) {
if (/^yourregex$/.test(request)) {
// Externalize to a commonjs module using the request path
return callback(null, 'commonjs ' + request);
}
// Continue without externalizing the import
callback();
},
],
};
Other examples using different module formats:
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
externals: [
function (ctx, callback) {
// The external is a `commonjs2` module located in `@scope/library`
callback(null, '@scope/library', 'commonjs2');
},
],
};
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
externals: [
function (ctx, callback) {
// The external is a global variable called `nameOfGlobal`.
callback(null, 'nameOfGlobal');
},
],
};
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
externals: [
function (ctx, callback) {
// The external is a named export in the `@scope/library` module.
callback(null, ['@scope/library', 'namedexport'], 'commonjs');
},
],
};
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
externals: [
function (ctx, callback) {
// The external is a UMD module
callback(null, {
root: 'componentsGlobal',
commonjs: '@scope/components',
commonjs2: '@scope/components',
amd: 'components',
});
},
],
};
Every dependency that matches the given regular expression will be excluded from the output bundles.
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
//...
externals: /^(jquery|\$)$/i,
};
In this case, any dependency named jQuery
, capitalized or not, or $
would be externalized.
Sometimes you may want to use a combination of the above syntaxes. This can be done in the following manner:
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
//...
externals: [
{
// String
react: 'react',
// Object
lodash: {
commonjs: 'lodash',
amd: 'lodash',
root: '_', // indicates global variable
},
// [string]
subtract: ['./math', 'subtract'],
},
// Function
function ({ context, request }, callback) {
if (/^yourregex$/.test(request)) {
return callback(null, 'commonjs ' + request);
}
callback();
},
// Regex
/^(jquery|\$)$/i,
],
};
For more information on how to use this configuration, please refer to the article on how to author a library.
function
object
Specify externals by layer.
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
externals: {
byLayer: {
layer: {
external1: 'var 43',
},
},
},
};
string = 'var'
Specify the default type of externals. amd
, umd
, system
and jsonp
externals depend on the output.libraryTarget
being set to the same value e.g. you can only consume amd
externals within an amd
library.
Supported types:
'amd'
'amd-require'
'assign'
'commonjs'
'commonjs-module'
'global'
'import'
- uses import()
to load a native EcmaScript module (async module)'jsonp'
'module'
'node-commonjs'
'promise'
- same as 'var'
but awaits the result (async module)'self'
'system'
'script'
'this'
'umd'
'umd2'
'var'
'window'
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
//...
externalsType: 'promise',
};
Specify the default type of externals as 'module'
. Webpack will generate code like import * as X from '...'
for externals used in a module.
Make sure to enable experiments.outputModule
first, otherwise webpack will throw errors.
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
experiments: {
outputModule: true,
},
externalsType: 'module',
};
Specify the default type of externals as 'node-commonjs'
. Webpack will import createRequire
from 'module'
to construct a require function for loading externals used in a module.
module.export = {
experiments: {
outputModule: true,
},
externalsType: 'node-commonjs',
};
Specify the default type of externals as 'script'
. Webpack will Load the external as a script exposing predefined global variables with HTML <script>
element. The <script>
tag would be removed after the script has been loaded.
module.exports = {
externalsType: 'script',
externals: {
packageName: [
'http://example.com/script.js',
'global',
'property',
'property',
], // properties are optional
},
};
You can also use the shortcut syntax if you're not going to specify any properties:
module.exports = {
externalsType: 'script',
externals: {
packageName: 'global@http://example.com/script.js', // no properties here
},
};
Note that output.publicPath
won't be added to the provided URL.
Let's load a lodash
from CDN:
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
// ...
externalsType: 'script',
externals: {
lodash: ['https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/lodash@4.17.19/lodash.min.js', '_'],
},
};
Then use it in code:
import _ from 'lodash';
console.log(_.head([1, 2, 3]));
Here's how we specify properties for the above example:
module.exports = {
// ...
externalsType: 'script',
externals: {
lodash: [
'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/lodash@4.17.19/lodash.min.js',
'_',
'head',
],
},
};
Both local variable head
and global window._
will be exposed when you import
lodash
:
import head from 'lodash';
console.log(head([1, 2, 3])); // logs 1 here
console.log(window._.head(['a', 'b'])); // logs a here
object
Enable presets of externals for specific targets.
Option | Description | Input Type |
---|---|---|
electron | Treat common electron built-in modules in main and preload context like electron , ipc or shell as external and load them via require() when used. | boolean |
electronMain | Treat electron built-in modules in the main context like app , ipc-main or shell as external and load them via require() when used. | boolean |
electronPreload | Treat electron built-in modules in the preload context like web-frame , ipc-renderer or shell as external and load them via require() when used. | boolean |
electronRenderer | Treat electron built-in modules in the renderer context like web-frame , ipc-renderer or shell as external and load them via require() when used. | boolean |
node | Treat node.js built-in modules like fs , path or vm as external and load them via require() when used. | boolean |
nwjs | Treat NW.js legacy nw.gui module as external and load it via require() when used. | boolean |
web | Treat references to http(s)://... and std:... as external and load them via import when used. (Note that this changes execution order as externals are executed before any other code in the chunk). | boolean |
webAsync | Treat references to http(s)://... and std:... as external and load them via async import() when used (Note that this external type is an async module, which has various effects on the execution). | boolean |
Note that if you're going to output ES Modules with those node.js-related presets, webpack will set the default externalsType
to node-commonjs
which would use createRequire
to construct a require function instead of using require()
.
Example
Using node
preset will not bundle built-in modules and treats them as external and loads them via require()
when used.
webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
// ...
externalsPresets: {
node: true,
},
};