A loader is just a JavaScript module that exports a function. The loader runner calls this function and passes the result of the previous loader or the resource file into it. The this context of the function is filled-in by webpack and the loader runner with some useful methods that allow the loader (among other things) to change its invocation style to async, or get query parameters.
The first loader is passed one argument: the content of the resource file. The compiler expects a result from the last loader. The result should be a String or a Buffer (which is converted to a string), representing the JavaScript source code of the module. An optional SourceMap result (as a JSON object) may also be passed.
A single result can be returned in sync mode. For multiple results the this.callback() must be called. In async mode this.async() must be called to indicate that the loader runner should wait for an asynchronous result. It returns this.callback(). Then the loader must return undefined and call that callback.
The following sections provide some basic examples of the different types of loaders. Note that the map and meta parameters are optional, see this.callback below.
Either return or this.callback can be used to return the transformed content synchronously:
sync-loader.js
module.exports = function (content, map, meta) {
return someSyncOperation(content);
}; The this.callback method is more flexible as it allows multiple arguments to be passed as opposed to just the content.
sync-loader-with-multiple-results.js
module.exports = function (content, map, meta) {
this.callback(null, someSyncOperation(content), map, meta);
return; // always return undefined when calling callback()
}; For asynchronous loaders, this.async is used to retrieve the callback function:
async-loader.js
module.exports = function (content, map, meta) {
var callback = this.async();
someAsyncOperation(content, function (err, result) {
if (err) return callback(err);
callback(null, result, map, meta);
});
}; async-loader-with-multiple-results.js
module.exports = function (content, map, meta) {
var callback = this.async();
someAsyncOperation(content, function (err, result, sourceMaps, meta) {
if (err) return callback(err);
callback(null, result, sourceMaps, meta);
});
}; By default, the resource file is converted to a UTF-8 string and passed to the loader. By setting the raw flag to true, the loader will receive the raw Buffer. Every loader is allowed to deliver its result as a String or as a Buffer. The compiler converts them between loaders.
raw-loader.js
module.exports = function (content) {
assert(content instanceof Buffer);
return someSyncOperation(content);
// return value can be a `Buffer` too
// This is also allowed if loader is not "raw"
};
module.exports.raw = true; Loaders are always called from right to left. There are some instances where the loader only cares about the metadata behind a request and can ignore the results of the previous loader. The pitch method on loaders is called from left to right before the loaders are actually executed (from right to left).
For the following configuration of use:
module.exports = {
//...
module: {
rules: [
{
//...
use: ['a-loader', 'b-loader', 'c-loader'],
},
],
},
}; These steps would occur:
|- a-loader `pitch`
|- b-loader `pitch`
|- c-loader `pitch`
|- requested module is picked up as a dependency
|- c-loader normal execution
|- b-loader normal execution
|- a-loader normal execution So why might a loader take advantage of the "pitching" phase?
First, the data passed to the pitch method is exposed in the execution phase as well under this.data and could be useful for capturing and sharing information from earlier in the cycle.
module.exports = function (content) {
return someSyncOperation(content, this.data.value);
};
module.exports.pitch = function (remainingRequest, precedingRequest, data) {
data.value = 42;
}; Second, if a loader delivers a result in the pitch method, the process turns around and skips the remaining loaders. In our example above, if the b-loaders pitch method returned something:
module.exports = function (content) {
return someSyncOperation(content);
};
module.exports.pitch = function (remainingRequest, precedingRequest, data) {
if (someCondition()) {
return (
'module.exports = require(' +
JSON.stringify('-!' + remainingRequest) +
');'
);
}
}; The steps above would be shortened to:
|- a-loader `pitch`
|- b-loader `pitch` returns a module
|- a-loader normal execution The loader context represents the properties that are available inside of a loader assigned to the this property.
Given the following example, this require call is used:
In /abc/file.js:
require('./loader1?xyz!loader2!./resource?rrr'); this.versionLoader API version. Currently 2. This is useful for providing backwards compatibility. Using the version you can specify custom logic or fallbacks for breaking changes.
this.contextThe directory of the module. Can be used as a context for resolving other stuff.
In the example: /abc because resource.js is in this directory
this.rootContextSince webpack 4, the formerly this.options.context is provided as this.rootContext.
this.requestThe resolved request string.
In the example: '/abc/loader1.js?xyz!/abc/node_modules/loader2/index.js!/abc/resource.js?rrr'
this.queryoptions object, this will point to that object.options, but was invoked with a query string, this will be a string starting with ?.this.getOptions(schema)Extracts given loader options. Optionally, accepts JSON schema as an argument.
this.callbackA function that can be called synchronously or asynchronously in order to return multiple results. The expected arguments are:
this.callback(
err: Error | null,
content: string | Buffer,
sourceMap?: SourceMap,
meta?: any
); Error or nullstring or a Buffer.In case this function is called, you should return undefined to avoid ambiguous loader results.
this.asyncTells the loader-runner that the loader intends to call back asynchronously. Returns this.callback.
this.dataA data object shared between the pitch and the normal phase.
this.cacheableA function that sets the cacheable flag:
cacheable(flag = true: boolean) By default, loader results are flagged as cacheable. Call this method passing false to make the loader's result not cacheable.
A cacheable loader must have a deterministic result when inputs and dependencies haven't changed. This means the loader shouldn't have dependencies other than those specified with this.addDependency.
this.loadersAn array of all the loaders. It is writable in the pitch phase.
loaders = [{request: string, path: string, query: string, module: function}] In the example:
[
{
request: '/abc/loader1.js?xyz',
path: '/abc/loader1.js',
query: '?xyz',
module: [Function],
},
{
request: '/abc/node_modules/loader2/index.js',
path: '/abc/node_modules/loader2/index.js',
query: '',
module: [Function],
},
]; this.loaderIndexThe index in the loaders array of the current loader.
In the example: in loader1: 0, in loader2: 1
this.resourceThe resource part of the request, including query.
In the example: '/abc/resource.js?rrr'
this.resourcePathThe resource file.
In the example: '/abc/resource.js'
this.resourceQueryThe query of the resource.
In the example: '?rrr'
this.targetTarget of compilation. Passed from configuration options.
Example values: 'web', 'node'
this.webpackThis boolean is set to true when this is compiled by webpack.
this.sourceMapTells if source map should be generated. Since generating source maps can be an expensive task, you should check if source maps are actually requested.
this.emitWarningemitWarning(warning: Error) Emit a warning that will be displayed in the output like the following:
WARNING in ./src/lib.js (./src/loader.js!./src/lib.js)
Module Warning (from ./src/loader.js):
Here is a Warning!
@ ./src/index.js 1:0-25 this.emitErroremitError(error: Error) Emit an error that also can be displayed in the output.
ERROR in ./src/lib.js (./src/loader.js!./src/lib.js)
Module Error (from ./src/loader.js):
Here is an Error!
@ ./src/index.js 1:0-25 this.loadModuleloadModule(request: string, callback: function(err, source, sourceMap, module)) Resolves the given request to a module, applies all configured loaders and calls back with the generated source, the sourceMap and the module instance (usually an instance of NormalModule). Use this function if you need to know the source code of another module to generate the result.
this.loadModule in a loader context uses CommonJS resolve rules by default. Use this.getResolve with an appropriate dependencyType, e.g. 'esm', 'commonjs' or a custom one before using a different semantic.
this.resolveresolve(context: string, request: string, callback: function(err, result: string)) Resolve a request like a require expression.
context must be an absolute path to a directory. This directory is used as the starting location for the resolving.request is the request to be resolved. Usually either relative requests like ./relative or module requests like module/path are used, but absolute paths like /some/path are also possible as requests.callback is a normal Node.js-style callback function giving the resolved path.All dependencies of the resolving operation are automatically added as dependencies to the current module.
this.getResolvegetResolve(options: ResolveOptions): resolve
resolve(context: string, request: string, callback: function(err, result: string))
resolve(context: string, request: string): Promise<string> Creates a resolve function similar to this.resolve.
Any options under webpack resolve options are possible. They are merged with the configured resolve options. Note that "..." can be used in arrays to extend the value from resolve options, e.g. { extensions: [".sass", "..."] }.
options.dependencyType is an additional option. It allows us to specify the type of dependency, which is used to resolve byDependency from the resolve options.
All dependencies of the resolving operation are automatically added as dependencies to the current module.
this.addDependencyaddDependency(file: string)
dependency(file: string) // shortcut Add a file as dependency of the loader result in order to make them watchable. For example, sass-loader, less-loader uses this to recompile whenever any imported css file changes.
this.addContextDependencyaddContextDependency(directory: string) Add a directory as dependency of the loader result.
this.clearDependenciesclearDependencies(); Remove all dependencies of the loader result, even initial dependencies and those of other loaders. Consider using pitch.
this.emitFileemitFile(name: string, content: Buffer|string, sourceMap: {...}) Emit a file. This is webpack-specific.
this.hotInformation about HMR for loaders.
module.exports = function (source) {
console.log(this.hot); // true if HMR is enabled via --hot flag or webpack configuration
return source;
}; this.fsAccess to the compilation's inputFileSystem property.
this.modeRead in which mode webpack is running.
Possible values: 'production', 'development', 'none'
The loader interface provides all module relate information. However in rare cases you might need access to the compiler api itself.
Therefore you should only use them as a last resort. Using them will reduce the portability of your loader.
this._compilerAccess to the current Compiler object of webpack.
this._compilationAccess to the current Compilation object of webpack.
this.valuePass values to the next loader. If you know what your result exports if executed as a module, set this value here (as an only element array).
this.inputValuePassed from the last loader. If you would execute the input argument as a module, consider reading this variable for a shortcut (for performance).
this.debugA boolean flag. It is set when in debug mode.
this.minimizeTells if result should be minimized.
this._moduleHacky access to the Module object being loaded.
You can report errors from inside a loader by:
throw (or other uncaught exception). Throwing an error while a loader is running will cause current module compilation failure.callback (in async mode). Pass an error to the callback will also cause module compilation failure.For example:
./src/index.js
require('./loader!./lib'); Throwing an error from loader:
./src/loader.js
module.exports = function (source) {
throw new Error('This is a Fatal Error!');
}; Or pass an error to the callback in async mode:
./src/loader.js
module.exports = function (source) {
const callback = this.async();
//...
callback(new Error('This is a Fatal Error!'), source);
}; The module will get bundled like this:
/***/ "./src/loader.js!./src/lib.js":
/*!************************************!*\
!*** ./src/loader.js!./src/lib.js ***!
\************************************/
/*! no static exports found */
/***/ (function(module, exports) {
throw new Error("Module build failed (from ./src/loader.js):\nError: This is a Fatal Error!\n at Object.module.exports (/workspace/src/loader.js:3:9)");
/***/ }) Then the build output will also display the error (Similar to this.emitError):
ERROR in ./src/lib.js (./src/loader.js!./src/lib.js)
Module build failed (from ./src/loader.js):
Error: This is a Fatal Error!
at Object.module.exports (/workspace/src/loader.js:2:9)
@ ./src/index.js 1:0-25 As you can see below, not only error message, but also details about which loader and module are involved:
ERROR in ./src/lib.js(./src/loader.js!./src/lib.js)(from ./src/loader.js)@ ./src/index.js 1:0-25A new inline request syntax was introduced in webpack v4. Prefixing <match-resource>!=! to a request will set the matchResource for this request.
When a matchResource is set, it will be used to match with the module.rules instead of the original resource. This can be useful if further loaders should be applied to the resource, or if the module type needs to be changed. It's also displayed in the stats and used for matching Rule.issuer and test in splitChunks.
Example:
file.js
/* STYLE: body { background: red; } */
console.log('yep'); A loader could transform the file into the following file and use the matchResource to apply the user-specified CSS processing rules:
file.js (transformed by loader)
import './file.js.css!=!extract-style-loader/getStyles!./file.js';
console.log('yep'); This will add a dependency to extract-style-loader/getStyles!./file.js and treat the result as file.js.css. Because module.rules has a rule matching /\.css$/ and it will apply to this dependency.
The loader could look like this:
extract-style-loader/index.js
const stringifyRequest = require('loader-utils').stringifyRequest;
const getRemainingRequest = require('loader-utils').getRemainingRequest;
const getStylesLoader = require.resolve('./getStyle');
module.exports = function (source) {
if (STYLES_REGEXP.test(source)) {
source = source.replace(STYLES_REGEXP, '');
const remReq = getRemainingRequest(this);
return `import ${stringifyRequest(
`${this.resource}.css!=!${getStylesLoader}!${remReq}`
)};${source}`;
}
return source;
}; extract-style-loader/getStyles.js
module.exports = function (source) {
const match = STYLES_REGEXP.match(source);
return match[0];
}; Logging API is available since the release of webpack 4.37. When logging is enabled in stats configuration and/or when infrastructure logging is enabled, loaders may log messages which will be printed out in the respective logger format (stats, infrastructure).
this.getLogger() for logging which is a shortcut to compilation.getLogger() with loader path and processed file. This kind of logging is stored to the Stats and formatted accordingly. It can be filtered and exported by the webpack user.this.getLogger('name') to get an independent logger with a child name. Loader path and processed file is still added.this.getLogger() ? this.getLogger() : console to provide a fallback when an older webpack version is used which does not support getLogger method.