Anton Gilgur fd6f195834
test: add initial watch mode test suite (#386)
- test starting watch mode, changing a file, and adding a semantic error
  - put this in a separate file as it has its own complexity to deal with (see below)
    - initially put it inside `no-errors`, but it got pretty confusing; this structure is a good bit simpler
    - refactored this a couple times actually

- add two watch mode helpers
  - `watchBundle` is very similar to `genBundle` but with some watch mode nuances (like returning a watcher)
  - `watchEnd` is a bit complicated async wrapper around a listener interface to make imperative testing simpler
  - refactor: abstract out `createInput` and `createOutput` to be used in both `genBundle` and `watchBundle`
    - refactor: make sure `dist` output gets put into a temp test dir
      - the previous config made it output into rpt2's `dist` dir, since `cwd` is project root (when running tests from project root)
      - the Rollup API's `watch` func always writes out; can't just test in-memory like with `bundle.generate`
        - so the `dist` dir becomes relevant as such
      - refactor: pass in a temp `testDir` instead of the `cacheRoot`
        - we can derive the `cacheRoot` and the `dist` output from `testDir`
        - also improve test clean-up by removing `testDir` at the end, not just the `cacheRoot` dir inside it
        - `testDir` is the same var used in the unit tests to define a temp dir for testing

- change the `no-errors` fixture a tiny bit so that changing the import causes it to change too

- this ended up being fairly complex due to having to handle lots of async and parallelism
  - parallel testing means fixtures have to be immutable, but watch mode needs to modify files
    - ended up copying fixtures to a temp dir where I could modify them
  - async events are all over here
    - had to convert a callback listener interface to async too, which was pretty confusing
      - and make sure the listener and bundles got properly closed too so no leaky tests
    - apparently `expect.rejects.toThrow` can return a Promise too, so missed this error for a while
      - refactor: make sure the error spec awaits too (though I think the errors _happen_ to throw synchronously there)
  - and also found a number of bugs while attempting to test cache invalidation within watch mode
    - thought it was a natural place to test since watch mode testing needs to modify files anyway
    - had to trace a bunch to figure out why some code paths weren't being covered; will discuss this separately from this commit
  - testing Rollup watch within Jest watch also causes Jest to re-run a few times
    - I imagine double, overlapping watchers are confusing each other
    - might need to disable these tests when using Jest watch
  - high complexity async + parallel flows makes it pretty confusing to debug, so this code needs to be "handled with care"
    - also this high complexity was even harder to debug when I'm having migraines (which is most of the time, unfortunately)
      - hence why it took me a bit to finally make a PR for this small amount of code; the code was ok, the debugging was not too fun
2022-08-19 14:57:03 -06:00
2022-06-06 17:59:45 -06:00
2017-06-21 22:33:55 -06:00
2017-02-01 21:02:22 -07:00
2020-08-07 12:04:35 -06:00
2017-10-24 10:08:16 -06:00
2020-10-02 10:49:00 -06:00
2017-10-24 10:08:16 -06:00

rollup-plugin-typescript2

npm-version npm-monthly-downloads Node.js CI

Rollup plugin for typescript with compiler errors.

This is a rewrite of the original rollup-plugin-typescript, starting and borrowing from this fork.

This version is somewhat slower than the original, but it will print out TypeScript syntactic and semantic diagnostic messages (the main reason for using TypeScript after all).

Installation

# with npm
npm install rollup-plugin-typescript2 typescript tslib --save-dev
# with yarn
yarn add rollup-plugin-typescript2 typescript tslib --dev

Usage

// rollup.config.js
import typescript from 'rollup-plugin-typescript2';

export default {
	input: './main.ts',

	plugins: [
		typescript(/*{ plugin options }*/)
	]
}

This plugin inherits all compiler options and file lists from your tsconfig.json file. If your tsconfig has another name or another relative path from the root directory, see tsconfigDefaults, tsconfig, and tsconfigOverride options below. This also allows for passing in different tsconfig files depending on your build target.

Some compiler options are forced

  • noEmitHelpers: false
  • importHelpers: true
  • noResolve: false
  • noEmit: false (Rollup controls emit)
  • noEmitOnError: false (Rollup controls emit. See #254 and the abortOnError plugin option below)
  • inlineSourceMap: false (see #71)
  • outDir: ./placeholder in cache root (see #83 and Microsoft/TypeScript#24715)
  • declarationDir: Rollup's output.file or output.dir (unless useTsconfigDeclarationDir is true in the plugin options)
  • moduleResolution: node (classic is deprecated. It also breaks this plugin, see #12 and #14)
  • allowNonTsExtensions: true to let other plugins on the chain generate typescript; update plugin's include filter to pick them up (see #111)

Some compiler options have more than one compatible value

  • module: defaults to ES2015. Other valid values are ES2020 and ESNext (required for dynamic imports, see #54).

Some options need additional configuration on plugin side

  • allowJs: lets TypeScript process JS files as well. If you use it, modify this plugin's include option to add "*.js+(|x)", "**/*.js+(|x)" (might also want to exclude "**/node_modules/**/*", as it can slow down the build significantly).

Compatibility

@rollup/plugin-node-resolve

Must be before rollup-plugin-typescript2 in the plugin list, especially when the browser: true option is used (see #66).

@rollup/plugin-commonjs

See the explanation for rollupCommonJSResolveHack option below.

@rollup/plugin-babel

This plugin transpiles code, but doesn't change file extensions. @rollup/plugin-babel only looks at code with these extensions by default: .js,.jsx,.es6,.es,.mjs. To workaround this, add .ts and .tsx to its list of extensions.

// ...
import { DEFAULT_EXTENSIONS } from '@babel/core';
// ...
	babel({
		extensions: [
			...DEFAULT_EXTENSIONS,
			'.ts',
			'.tsx'
		]
	}),
// ...

See #108

Plugin options

  • cwd: string

    The current working directory. Defaults to process.cwd().

  • tsconfigDefaults: {}

    The object passed as tsconfigDefaults will be merged with the loaded tsconfig.json. The final config passed to TypeScript will be the result of values in tsconfigDefaults replaced by values in the loaded tsconfig.json, replaced by values in tsconfigOverride, and then replaced by forced compilerOptions overrides on top of that (see above).

    For simplicity and other tools' sake, try to minimize the usage of defaults and overrides and keep everything in a tsconfig.json file (tsconfigs can themselves be chained with extends, so save some turtles).

    let defaults = { compilerOptions: { declaration: true } };
    let override = { compilerOptions: { declaration: false } };
    
    // ...
    plugins: [
    	typescript({
    		tsconfigDefaults: defaults,
    		tsconfig: "tsconfig.json",
    		tsconfigOverride: override
    	})
    ]
    

    This is a deep merge: objects are merged, arrays are merged by index, primitives are replaced, etc. Increase verbosity to 3 and look for parsed tsconfig if you get something unexpected.

  • tsconfig: undefined

    Path to tsconfig.json. Set this if your tsconfig has another name or relative location from the project directory.

    By default, will try to load ./tsconfig.json, but will not fail if the file is missing, unless the value is explicitly set.

  • tsconfigOverride: {}

    See tsconfigDefaults.

  • check: true

    Set to false to avoid doing any diagnostic checks on the code. Setting to false is sometimes referred to as transpileOnly by other TypeScript integrations.

  • verbosity: 1

    • 0 -- Error
    • 1 -- Warning
    • 2 -- Info
    • 3 -- Debug
  • clean: false

    Set to true to disable the cache and do a clean build. This also wipes any existing cache.

  • cacheRoot: node_modules/.cache/rollup-plugin-typescript2

    Path to cache. Defaults to a folder in node_modules.

  • include: [ "*.ts+(|x)", "**/*.ts+(|x)" ]

    By default compiles all .ts and .tsx files with TypeScript.

  • exclude: [ "*.d.ts", "**/*.d.ts" ]

    But excludes type definitions.

  • abortOnError: true

    Bail out on first syntactic or semantic error. In some cases, setting this to false will result in an exception in Rollup itself (for example, unresolvable imports).

  • rollupCommonJSResolveHack: false

    Deprecated. OS native paths are now always used since 0.30.0 (see #251), so this no longer has any effect -- as if it is always true.

  • objectHashIgnoreUnknownHack: false

    The plugin uses your Rollup config as part of its cache key. object-hash is used to generate a hash, but it can have trouble with some uncommon types of elements. Setting this option to true will make object-hash ignore unknowns, at the cost of not invalidating the cache if ignored elements are changed.

    Only enable this option if you need it (e.g. if you get Error: Unknown object type "xxx") and make sure to run with clean: true once in a while and definitely before a release. (See #105 and #203)

  • useTsconfigDeclarationDir: false

    If true, declaration files will be emitted in the declarationDir given in the tsconfig. If false, declaration files will be placed inside the destination directory given in the Rollup configuration.

    Set to false if any other Rollup plugins need access to declaration files.

  • typescript: peerDependency

    If you'd like to use a different version of TS than the peerDependency, you can import a different TypeScript module and pass it in as typescript: require("path/to/other/typescript").

    You can also use an alternative TypeScript implementation, such as ttypescript, with this option.

    Must be TS 2.0+; things might break if the compiler interfaces changed enough from what the plugin was built against.

  • transformers: undefined

    experimental, TypeScript 2.4.1+

    Transformers will likely be available in tsconfig eventually, so this is not a stable interface (see Microsoft/TypeScript#14419).

    For example, integrating kimamula/ts-transformer-keys:

    const keysTransformer = require('ts-transformer-keys/transformer').default;
    const transformer = (service) => ({
    	before: [ keysTransformer(service.getProgram()) ],
    	after: []
    });
    
    // ...
    plugins: [
    	typescript({ transformers: [transformer] })
    ]
    

Declarations

This plugin respects declaration: true in your tsconfig.json file. When set, it will emit *.d.ts files for your bundle. The resulting file(s) can then be used with the types property in your package.json file as described here.
By default, the declaration files will be located in the same directory as the generated Rollup bundle. If you want to override this behavior and instead use declarationDir, set useTsconfigDeclarationDir: true in the plugin options.

The above also applies to declarationMap: true and *.d.ts.map files for your bundle.

This plugin also respects emitDeclarationOnly: true and will only emit declarations (and declaration maps, if enabled) if set in your tsconfig.json. If you use emitDeclarationOnly, you will need another plugin to compile any TypeScript sources, such as @rollup/plugin-babel, rollup-plugin-esbuild, rollup-plugin-swc, etc. When composing Rollup plugins this way, rollup-plugin-typescript2 will perform type-checking and declaration generation, while another plugin performs the TypeScript to JavaScript compilation.
Some scenarios where this can be particularly useful: you want to use Babel plugins on TypeScript source, or you want declarations and type-checking for your Vite builds (NOTE: this space has not been fully explored yet).

Watch mode

The way TypeScript handles type-only imports and ambient types effectively hides them from Rollup's watch mode, because import statements are not generated and changing them doesn't trigger a rebuild.

Otherwise the plugin should work in watch mode. Make sure to run a normal build after watch session to catch any type errors.

Requirements

  • TypeScript 2.4+
  • Rollup 1.26.3+
  • Node 6.4.0+ (basic ES6 support)

Reporting bugs and Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md

Description
Rollup plugin for typescript with compiler errors.
Readme MIT 21 MiB
Languages
TypeScript 96.9%
JavaScript 3.1%