Webpack plugin which allows you to mark certain files as entry points for dynamic imports which allows you to dynamically import components. It supports the production as well as the hot module reloading mode.
- Flawlessly integrates with Shopware 6.5
- Easy to use way to declare certain files of a plugin as a dynamically component
- Doesn't modify the default behavior of Shopware 6.5 building pipeline
- Browser library to load your dynamic component
- Hot module reloading support
npm install --save-dev @korodrogerie/webpack-shopware-dynamic-chunk-splitting-plugin
Install the NPM package and create a new file called app/storefront/build/webpack.config.js
and import webpack plugin from the NPM package:
const { WebpackShopwareDynamicChunkSplittingPlugin } = require('@korodrogerie/webpack-shopware-dynamic-chunk-splitting-plugin');
module.exports = ({ config }) => {
const dynamicChunkSplittingPlugin = new WebpackShopwareDynamicChunkSplittingPlugin({
plugins: [{
// Plugin name
'KoroProductOrigin': {
// Chunk name and absolute path to the file which should be its own
// entry point.
'koro-product-origin-map': resolve(
join(__dirname, '..', 'src/plugin/koro-product-origin-map.js')
)
}
}]
});
config.plugins.push(dynamicChunkSplittingPlugin);
}
Next up, we're having to include the browser library to load components dynamically in the webpack.config.js
. The plugin instance has a method called getConfiguration()
which provides the necessary configuration for the browser library to work:
module.exports = ({ config }) => {
return dynamicChunkSplittingPlugin.getConfiguration();
};
Within your Shopware 6 storefront JavaScript files you can import the component using your plugin name and the chunk name you defined in your Webpack config:
loadComponent(
'KoroProductOrigin',
'koro-product-origin-map',
require.resolveWeak('./plugin/koro-product-origin-map.js')
).then(({ default: KoroProductOriginMap, type }) => {
if (type === 'cache-hit') {
return;
}
PluginManager.register(
'KoroWorldMap',
KoroProductOriginMap,
element
);
PluginManager.initializePlugin(
'KoroWorldMap',
element
);
});
Last but not least, create a new template file views/storefront/base.html.twig
and populate the bundle loading path:
{% sw_extends '@Storefront/storefront/base.html.twig' %}
{% block base_body_script %}
<script type="text/javascript">
if (!window.hasOwnProperty('dynamicLoadingBundlePath')) {
window.dynamicLoadingBundlePath = '{{ asset('/bundles/14cdd85b63697b04af2302ece9ac3239') }}';
}
</script>
{{ parent() }}
{% endblock %}
The loadComponent
method is used to dynamically import custom entry points for plugins. It takes the following arguments:
pluginName
- Name of your pluginchunkName
- Chunk name which can be freely choosen in the webpack configcacheKey
- Chunk ID from WebpackbundleLoadingPath
- Base loading path. It points to yourpublic/bundles
directory.
The method returns a promise with the loaded plugin class and a type:
loadComponent(
'KoroProductOrigin',
'koro-product-origin-map'
require.resolveWeak('./plugin/koro-product-origin-map.js')
).then(({ default: KoroProductOriginMap, type }) => {});
Usign object destructring you're getting default
which is the plugin class and type
which represents the type of the operation. The following types can occur:
load
- First load of the componenttimeout
- Loading the component run into a 120 second timeout.cache-hit
- Component got loaded already and is in Webpack's global cache object e.g.webpackChunk
missing
- A 404 got returned from the HTTP request
The Webpack plugin injects a new entry point using the provided chunk name pointing to an absolute path to a file within your plugin. Usually it's a plugin class. Additionally the webpack plugin registeres a new instance of Shopware's WebpackCopyAfterBuild
plugin to copy over the new file for the defined entry point to the destination src/public/storefront/js
. This way the file isn't getting collected by Shopware's theme compilation process. Last but not least the plugin marks the entry point's chunk as non side effect free to disable tree-shaking of unused exports.
The browser library provides replicates Webpack's loadScript
method. Based on the provided arguments pluginName
and chunkName
the correct path to your newly built JavaScript file gets created and a script
element gets injected into the head
element of your document. A onload
handler does a lookup on the object webpackChunk
to make sure the chunk got loaded correctly. Next up, we're using Webpack's raw parser method __webpack_require__
which takes a moduleId
to wire up the loaded plugin into Webpack's dependency lookup tree.
In the hot module reloading mode, we had to work around the fact that all separated entries are getting collected within a single chunk file called storefront
. Therefore we're not actually dynamically loading the file, instead we're dynamically injected the file you wanna dynamically load inside the storefront
bundle and using the third argument cacheKey
of the method loadComponent
to look up the module you wanna load.
Licensed under MIT
Copyright (c) 2020-present Koro Handels GmbH