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rolldown-plugin-module-replace

v0.1.1

Published

Replace aliases for bundle dependencies

Readme

rolldown-plugin-module-replace

npm

Replace aliases for bundle dependencies.

Installation

pnpm add -D rolldown-plugin-module-replace

Usage

import moduleReplace from 'rolldown-plugin-module-replace'

export default defineConfig({
  plugins: [
    moduleReplace({
      entries: [
        { find: 'foo', replacement: 'bar' },
        // For files with specific source type
        { find: /^baz-es(?=$|\/)/, replacement: 'baz-cjs', sourceType: 'commonjs' },
      ],
    }),
  ],
})

Why is this plugin needed?

Rolldown itself supports resolve.alias. However, it will be called at the resolveId stage. This means that resolve.alias actually affects imports of source code, not imports of bundles. It has no effect for generated code, such as .d.ts files.

A perhaps less common use case is that, you might declare your dependencies like the following to properly handle version compatibility logics:

{
  "devDependencies": {
    "my-module": "^2.0.0",
    "my-module-v1": "npm:my-module@^1.0.0"
  },
  "peerDependencies": {
    "my-module": ">=1.0.0"
  }
}

And you may use these two modules at multiple entry points in your code. At this point, you might encounter the following situations:

  • If you leave them unhandled, both my-module and my-module-v1 will be added in the bundles. Therefore, my-module must be declared as an external module.

  • If you transform my-module-v1 into my-module with resolve.alias, the bundles will contain a local path of my-module@^2.0.0 since the processing time for external modules has passed.

  • If my-module-v1 is treated as an external module, the bundles will retain the import of my-module-v1, while this dependency does not exist at runtime.

Another example is that you might need to use different dependencies in certain environments, such as lodash and lodash-es.

To solve these problems, this plugin re-parses the bundle code and performs module replacement after the chunk is built. This is essentially what typescript-transform-aliases does.