First, to answer your smaller questions:
- No, you're not supposed to run your PHP application through a webpack dev server. Explained in the Live Reloading section below.
- No, you won't have to rewrite your assets. Probably. See the CSS and Edge Cases sections below.
Disclaimer: I'll only take on a small fraction of your question. Its scope is just way too broad to be packed into just one StackOverflow answer.
I will only get in touch with
- setting up a development and a production environment for webpack
- bundling your first JavaScript
which should give you a foundation to build on.
I'll also mention some things you may want to add and link according resources to read through.
So, let's go.
Requirements
I assume you have Node.js and npm installed on your machine and roughly know how to use them.
I also assume you have webpack
and webpack-cli
installed as (dev) dependencies of your project (not just globally):
npm install --save-dev webpack webpack-cli
Update: Earlier versions of this answer did not require installing webpack-cli
. As of version 4 (February 2018), webpack's CLI resides in its own package, hence the additional required package.
Set up development and a production workflow
You usually want to do stuff differently in development than in production (minifying in production, live-reloading in development, ...)
To achieve that, we'll want to split up our configuration files.
Prepare the directory structure
Let's agree to ignore the webpack config from your question. We'll start all over, we'd have to change almost everything anyway.
First, create a build
folder inside your project root. Build-related stuff will go there, since we don't want to pollute your project's root folder with config files. (You're free to name this folder differently, but keep track of that during this tutorial.)
Create a config.base.js
, a config.production.js
and a config.development.js
file inside that folder.
Great, we have config files for two build chains now. The configurations are still empty though, so let's now fill them with some basic logic.
Install webpack-merge
But first, we'll need to install webpack-merge
.
npm install --save-dev webpack-merge
This package allows us to deeply merge multiple webpack configurations. We want to use it to create webpack configurations depending on our current environment.
Adjust your configuration
Now adjust your build/config.base.js
:
module.exports = {
// We'll place webpack configuration for all environments here
}
The file does obviously just export an empty object right now, but we'll need that for the following steps.
Put this code in your build/config.production.js
:
const merge = require('webpack-merge')
module.exports = merge(require('./config.base.js'), {
mode: 'production'
// We'll place webpack configuration for production environment here
})
And almost the same code goes into your build/config.development.js
:
const merge = require('webpack-merge')
module.exports = merge(require('./config.base.js'), {
mode: 'development',
watch: true
// All webpack configuration for development environment will go here
})
I guess it's pretty intuitive what this does:
Using webpack with the config.development.js
configuration will fetch the common configuration and merge its own config declaration in.
Update: The mode
option in the above config files was added in webpack 4 (released February 2018). It sets a bunch of sensible defaults for development and production bundles.
Now running the process would look like this from the command line:
npx webpack --config build/config.development.js
# If the above doesn't work, you probably have an older version of npm (< 5.1) installed
# While npx is a really great tool, you can of course still call the path of the webpack executable manually:
node_modules/.bin/webpack --config build/config.development.js
...and vice versa for the production
environment.
That command is rather clunky to use, but no worries, we'll address that later.
Make some helper files
There are information we'll be wanting to centralize to make them easily exchangeable. File paths are such a thing. So let's extract them.
Create a paths.js
in your build
folder and have it export some paths we'll want to use later:
const path = require('path')
// I'm really just guessing your project's folder structure from reading your question,
// you might want to adjust this whole section
module.exports = {
// The base path of your source files, especially of your index.js
SRC: path.resolve(__dirname, '..', 'public'),
// The path to put the generated bundle(s)
DIST: path.resolve(__dirname, '..', 'public', 'dist'),
/*
This is your public path.
If you're running your app at http://example.com and I got your DIST folder right,
it'll simply be "/dist".
But if you're running it locally at http://localhost/my/app, it will be "/my/app/dist".
That means you should probably *not* hardcode that path here but write it to a
machine-related config file. (If you don't already have something like that,
google for "dotenv" or something similar.)
*/
ASSETS: '/dist'
}
Create aliases
As mentioned above, we could technically run our build chain in development
mode like this:
npx webpack --config build/config.development.js
That's an uncomfortably verbose command though, so let's change that.
It's way more convenient to run your build process via npm
scripts. Add one script per environment to your package.json
like this:
{
"scripts": {
"dev": "webpack --config build/config.development.js",
"prod": "webpack --config build/config.production.js"
}
}
Now you can run your build chains with npm run dev
resp. npm run prod
– which is much easier to memorize and faster to type.
...as soon as there'es anything to build, of course.
Bundle JavaScript
Okay, that was actually a fair amount of work without achieving too much so far.
So let's start with something more exciting: We'll define a JavaScript entry point.
Define an entry point
Put the following code into your build/config.base.js
(replacing the existing code entirely):
const path = require('path')
const { SRC, DIST, ASSETS } = require('./paths')
module.exports = {
entry: {
scripts: path.resolve(SRC, 'js', 'index.js')
},
output: {
// Put all the bundled stuff in your dist folder
path: DIST,
// Our single entry point from above will be named "scripts.js"
filename: '[name].js',
// The output path as seen from the domain we're visiting in the browser
publicPath: ASSETS
}
}
Create the JavaScript file
The above configuration expects an index.js
to live in your SRC/js
folder (as defined in the build/paths.js
).
Let's create that file with the following content:
import './jquery.min.js'
import './jquery.migrate.js'
import './jquery.bxslider.min.js'
import './jquery.appear.js'
import './jquery.countTo.js'
import './bootstrap.js'
As you can see, the index.js
just imports all of the files you want to use.
If you now run
npm run prod
from your terminal, a scripts.js
file will be created in your DIST
folder. You can include that into your markup with a plain ol' <script>
tag.
Congratulations, you've got a working webpack setup!
Dive deeper
This mini-tutorial really just scraped the surface of what you can do with webpack. It gives you a pretty solid foundation for your configuration which you now can fill with whatever you need. And that will actually be quite a lot of stuff.
I'll list a few more things you may want to enhance, with some links to read through.
webpack Concepts
If you want to use webpack, it can be hard to do so if you don't know about its underlying concepts. Juho Veps?l?inen created a great guide on getting started with webpack which helped me a whole lot. He's also a webpack core contributor so you can be sure he knows what he's talking about.
Especially loaders are a concept you'll really need to know.
Many of the hints on this list are also explained there.
Read more: SurviveJS – webpack tutorial
Code Splitting
It does what the name's saying: You might not want to pack all your JavaScript into one bulky output file.
It's a job webpack does for you to split off parts of your bundle which you only need on certain pages of your application.
Also, depending on how frequently you're working on your project's JavaScript, it might be a good idea to split off third party code from your bundle for caching purposes.
Read more: webpack Documentation – Code Splitting
Caching
You may want to enhance your site's caching behaviour by adding a hash to your bundled file names which depends on their content. This will create (for example) a script.31aa1d3cad014475a618.js
instead of a scripts.js
.
That file can then be cached indefinitely because as soon as its contents change, the file name will change as well.
Your PHP code might then use the webpack-manifest-plugin
to gain access to the generated file names.
Read more:
Transpiling
In case you want to use modern ES2015 code in your site's JavaScript (and are targeting non-evergreen browsers), you'll want to transpile them down to regular ES5. (If the term "ES2015" does not make any sense to you, you're most likely not using it and can ignore this paragraph.)
Read more: