This section describes webpack internals and can be useful for plugin developers
The bundling is a function that takes some files and emits others.
But between input and output, it also has modules, entry points, chunks, chunk groups, and many other intermediate parts.
Every file used in your project is a Module
./index.js
import app from './app.js';
./app.js
export default 'the app';
By using each other, the modules form a graph (ModuleGraph
).
During the bundling process, modules are combined into chunks. Chunks combine into chunk groups and form a graph (ChunkGraph
) interconnected through modules. When you describe an entry point - under the hood, you create a chunk group with one chunk.
./webpack.config.js
module.exports = { entry: './index.js', };
One chunk group with the main
name created (main
is the default name for an entry point). This chunk group contains ./index.js
module. As the parser handles imports inside ./index.js
new modules are added into this chunk.
Another example:
./webpack.config.js
module.exports = { entry: { home: './home.js', about: './about.js', }, };
Two chunk groups with names home
and about
are created. Each of them has a chunk with a module - ./home.js
for home
and ./about.js
for about
There might be more than one chunk in a chunk group. For example SplitChunksPlugin splits a chunk into one or more chunks.
Chunks come in two forms:
initial
is the main chunk for the entry point. This chunk contains all the modules and their dependencies that you specify for an entry point.non-initial
is a chunk that may be lazy-loaded. It may appear when dynamic import or SplitChunksPlugin is being used.Each chunk has a corresponding asset. The assets are the output files - the result of bundling.
webpack.config.js
module.exports = { entry: './src/index.jsx', };
./src/index.jsx
import React from 'react'; import ReactDOM from 'react-dom'; import('./app.jsx').then((App) => { ReactDOM.render(<App />, root); });
Initial chunk with name main
is created. It contains:
./src/index.jsx
react
react-dom
and all their dependencies, except ./app.jsx
Non-initial chunk for ./app.jsx
is created as this module is imported dynamically.
Output:
/dist/main.js
- an initial
chunk/dist/394.js
- non-initial
chunkBy default, there is no name for non-initial
chunks so that a unique ID is used instead of a name. When using dynamic import we may specify a chunk name explicitly by using a "magic" comment:
import( /* webpackChunkName: "app" */ './app.jsx' ).then((App) => { ReactDOM.render(<App />, root); });
Output:
/dist/main.js
- an initial
chunk/dist/app.js
- non-initial
chunkThe names of the output files are affected by the two fields in the config:
output.filename
- for initial
chunk filesoutput.chunkFilename
- for non-initial
chunk filesinitial
and non-initial
. In those cases output.filename
is used.A few placeholders are available in these fields. Most often:
[id]
- chunk id (e.g. [id].js
-> 485.js
)[name]
- chunk name (e.g. [name].js
-> app.js
). If a chunk has no name, then its id will be used[contenthash]
- md4-hash of the output file content (e.g. [contenthash].js
-> 4ea6ff1de66c537eb9b2.js
)
© JS Foundation and other contributors
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0.
https://webpack.js.org/concepts/under-the-hood