Speed up your Webpack build with esbuild! 🔥
esbuild is a JavaScript bundler written in Go that supports blazing fast ESNext & TypeScript transpilation and JS minification.
esbuild-loader lets you harness the speed of esbuild in your Webpack build by offering faster alternatives for transpilation (eg. babel-loader/ts-loader) and minification (eg. Terser)!
Curious how much faster your build will be? See what users are saying.
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npm i -D esbuild-loader
In webpack.config.js
:
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
- {
- test: /\.js$/,
- use: 'babel-loader',
- },
+ {
+ test: /\.js$/,
+ loader: 'esbuild-loader',
+ options: {
+ loader: 'jsx', // Remove this if you're not using JSX
+ target: 'es2015' // Syntax to compile to (see options below for possible values)
+ }
+ },
...
],
},
}
In webpack.config.js
:
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
- {
- test: /\.tsx?$/,
- use: 'ts-loader'
- },
+ {
+ test: /\.tsx?$/,
+ loader: 'esbuild-loader',
+ options: {
+ loader: 'tsx', // Or 'ts' if you don't need tsx
+ target: 'es2015'
+ }
+ },
...
]
},
}
If you have a tsconfig.json
file, esbuild-loader will automatically detect it.
Alternatively, you can also pass it in directly via the tsconfigRaw
option:
{
test: /\.tsx?$/,
loader: 'esbuild-loader',
options: {
loader: 'tsx',
target: 'es2015',
+ tsconfigRaw: require('./tsconfig.json')
}
}
tsconfig
options (see TransformOptions
interface) and does not do type-checks. It's recommended to use a type-aware IDE or tsc --noEmit
for type-checking instead. It is also recommended to enable isolatedModules
and esModuleInterop
options in your tsconfig
by the esbuild docs.
Use tsconfig-paths-webpack-plugin to add support for tsconfig.json#paths
.
Since esbuild-loader only uses esbuild to transform code, it cannot help Webpack with resolving tsconfig.json#paths.
You can replace JS minifiers like Terser or UglifyJs. Checkout the benchmarks to see how much faster esbuild is. The target
option tells esbuild that it can use newer JS syntax to perform better minification.
In webpack.config.js
:
+ const { ESBuildMinifyPlugin } = require('esbuild-loader')
module.exports = {
...,
+ optimization: {
+ minimizer: [
+ new ESBuildMinifyPlugin({
+ target: 'es2015' // Syntax to compile to (see options below for possible values)
+ })
+ ]
+ },
}
If you're not using TypeScript, JSX, or any syntax unsupported by Webpack, you can also leverage the minifier for transpilation (as an alternative to Babel). It will be faster because there's less files to work on and will produce a smaller output because the polyfills will only be bundled once for the entire build instead of per file. Simply set the target
option on the minifier to specify which support level you want.
There are two ways to minify CSS, depending on your setup. You should already have CSS setup in your build using css-loader
.
If your CSS is extracted and emitted as a CSS file, you can replace CSS minification plugins like css-minimizer-webpack-plugin
or optimize-css-assets-webpack-plugin
with the same ESBuildMinifyPlugin
by enabling the css
option.
Assuming the CSS is extracted using something like MiniCssExtractPlugin, in webpack.config.js
:
const { ESBuildMinifyPlugin } = require('esbuild-loader')
const MiniCssExtractPlugin = require('mini-css-extract-plugin');
module.exports = {
...,
optimization: {
minimizer: [
new ESBuildMinifyPlugin({
target: 'es2015',
+ css: true // Apply minification to CSS assets
})
]
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.css$/i,
use: [
MiniCssExtractPlugin.loader,
'css-loader'
]
}
]
},
plugins: [
new MiniCssExtractPlugin()
]
}
If your CSS is not emitted as a CSS file, but rather loaded via JS using something like style-loader
, you can use the loader for minification.
In webpack.config.js
:
module.exports = {
...,
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.css$/i,
use: [
'style-loader',
'css-loader',
+ {
+ loader: 'esbuild-loader',
+ options: {
+ loader: 'css',
+ minify: true
+ }
+ }
]
}
]
}
}
If you'd like to see working Webpack builds that use esbuild-loader for basic JS, React, TypeScript, or Next.js, check out the examples repo.
esbuild-loader comes with a version of esbuild it has been tested to work with. However, esbuild has a frequent release cadence, and while we try to keep up with the important releases, it can easily go out of date.
Use the implementation
option in the loader or the minify plugin to pass in your own version of esbuild (eg. a newer one).
+ const esbuild = require('esbuild')
...
module.exports = {
...,
module: {
rules: [
{
test: ...,
loader: 'esbuild-loader',
options: {
...,
+ implementation: esbuild
}
}
]
}
}
The implementation
option will be removed once esbuild reaches a stable release. Instead esbuild will become a peerDependency so you always provide your own.
The loader supports all Transform options from esbuild.
Note:
- Source-maps are automatically configured for you via
devtool
.sourcemap
/sourcefile
options are ignored. - The root
tsconfig.json
is automatically detected for you. You don't need to pass intsconfigRaw
unless it's in a different path.
Here are some common configurations and custom options:
Type: string | Array<string>
Default: 'es2015'
The target environment (e.g. es2016
, chrome80
, esnext
).
Read more about it in the esbuild docs.
Type: 'js' | 'jsx' | 'ts' | 'tsx' | 'css' | 'json' | 'text' | 'base64' | 'file' | 'dataurl' | 'binary' | 'default'
Default: 'js'
The loader to use to handle the file. See the type for possible values.
Read more about it in the esbuild docs.
Type: string
Default: React.createElement
Customize the JSX factory function name to use.
Read more about it in the esbuild docs.
Type: string
Default: React.Fragment
Customize the JSX fragment function name to use.
Read more about it in the esbuild docs.
Type: { transform: Function }
Custom esbuild-loader option.
Use it to pass in a different esbuild version.
The loader supports all Transform options from esbuild.
Type: string | Array<string>
Default: 'esnext'
Target environment (e.g. 'es2016'
, ['chrome80', 'esnext']
)
Read more about it in the esbuild docs.
Here are some common configurations and custom options:
Type: boolean
Default: true
Enable JS minification. Enables all minify*
flags below.
To have nuanced control over minification, disable this and enable the specific minification you want below.
Read more about it in the esbuild docs.
Type: boolean
Minify JS by removing whitespace.
Type: boolean
Minify JS by shortening identifiers.
Type: boolean
Minify JS using equivalent but shorter syntax.
Type: 'none' | 'inline' | 'eof' | 'external'
Default: 'inline'
Read more about it in the esbuild docs.
Type: boolean
Default: Webpack devtool
configuration
Whether to emit sourcemaps.
Type: boolean
Default: false
Custom esbuild-loader option.
Whether to minify CSS files.
Type: string | RegExp | Array<string | RegExp>
Custom esbuild-loader option.
Filter assets to include in minification
Type: string | RegExp | Array<string | RegExp>
Custom esbuild-loader option.
Filter assets to exclude from minification
Type: { transform: Function }
Custom esbuild-loader option.
Use it to pass in a different esbuild version.
No. esbuild plugins are only available in the build API. And esbuild-loader uses the transform API instead of the build API for two reasons:
-
The build API is for creating JS bundles, which is what Webpack does. If you want to use esbuild's build API, consider using esbuild directly instead of Webpack.
-
The build API reads directly from the file-system, but Webpack loaders operate in-memory. Webpack loaders are essentially just functions that are called with the source-code as the input. Not reading from the file-system allows loaders to be chainable. For example, using
vue-loader
to compile Single File Components (.vue
files), then usingesbuild-loader
to transpile just the JS part of the SFC.
Is it possible to use esbuild's inject option?
No. The inject
option is only available in the build API. And esbuild-loader uses the transform API.
However, you can use the Webpack equivalent ProvidePlugin instead.
If you're using React, check out this example on how to auto-import React in your components.
No. If you really need them, consider porting them over to a Webpack loader.
And please don't chain babel-loader
and esbuild-loader
. The speed gains come from replacing babel-loader
.
Why am I not getting a 100x speed improvement as advertised?
Running esbuild as a standalone bundler vs esbuild-loader + Webpack are completely different:
- esbuild is highly optimized, written in Go, and compiled to native code. Read more about it here.
- esbuild-loader is handled by Webpack in a JS runtime, which applies esbuild transforms per file. On top of that, there's likely other loaders & plugins in a Webpack config that slow it down.
Using any JS bundler introduces a bottleneck that makes reaching those speeds impossible. However, esbuild-loader can still speed up your build by removing the bottlenecks created by babel-loader
, ts-loader
, Terser, etc.
According to the esbuild FAQ, it will not be supported.
Consider these type-checking alternatives:
- Using an IDEs like VSCode or WebStorm that has live type-checking built in
- Running
tsc --noEmit
to type check - Integrating type-checking to your Webpack build as a separate process using
fork-ts-checker-webpack-plugin
Node.js enhanced with esbuild to run TypeScript and ESM.
Webpack-integrated Mocha test-runner with Webpack 5 support.
Localize/i18nalize your Webpack build. Optimized for multiple locales!