persistify

2.0.1 • Public • Published

NPM Version

persistify

persistify is a wrapper over watchify and browserify to make it easy to make incremental builds without having to rely on the watch mode for scenarios where a watch mode is not available. It reduces the build time from several seconds to milliseconds, without relying on a watch mode :)

Motivation

Just wanted to have a good wrapper over browserify/watchify that allow me to make incremental builds even when not using the watch mode.

DISCLAIMER: this is done persisting the watchify arguments to disk using the flat-cache and file-entry-cache modules. The best results happen when only a few files were modified. Worse case scenario is when all the files are modified. In average you should experience a very noticeable reduction. As always keep in mind that your mileage may vary.

TODO

Add unit tests

Install

npm i persistify watchify browserify

Important persistify used to bundle watchify and browserify. Starting from version 2.0.0 they are declared as peer dependencies and should be installed separatedly

CLI options

Apart from all the browserify and watchify options the following are also available:

Standard Options:
 
  --outfile=FILE, -o FILE
 
    This option is required. Write the browserify bundle to this file. If
    the file contains the operators `|` or `>`, it will be treated as a
    shell command, and the output will be piped to it (not available on
    Windows).
 
  --verbose, -v                    [default: false]
 
    Show when a file was written and how long the bundling took (in
    seconds).
 
  --version
 
    Show the persistify, watchify and browserify versions with their module paths.
 
  --watch                          [default: false]
 
    if true will use watchify instead of browserify
 
  --recreate                       [default: false]
 
    if set will recreate the cache. Useful when transforms and cached files refuse to cooperate
 
  --never-cache, -n                [default: null]
 
    a string that will be converted to a regula expression. If a file matches the returned regExp
    will never be saved in the cache. Even if the file is in the cache already it will be ignored.
 
    More than one pattern to be ignored can be specified by repeating this option with other regex
    value to ignore
 
  --cache-id                       [default: null]
 
    If you're running multiple persistify instances from the same directory, use this to
    differentiate them.
 
  --cache-dir                      [default: node_modules/flat-cache/.cache]
 
    By default, the cache is saved to the default directory that flat-cache sets. This sets a custom directory for the cache files.
 

Examples

# this will browserify src/foo.js and move it to dist/foo.js 
# the cache is constructed the first time the command is run so this might take a few 
# seconds depending on the complexity of the files you want to browserify 
./node_modules/.bin/persistify src/foo.js -o dist/foo.js
 
# next builds will be benefited by the cache 
# noticeable reducing the building time 
./node_modules/.bin/persistify src/foo.js -o dist/foo.js
 
# reconstruct the cache, this useful when a transform file has changed or 
# the cache just started to behave like a spoiled child 
./node_modules/.bin/persistify src/foo.js -o dist/foo.js --recreate
 
# this will use the cache and watchify to provide faster startup times on watch mode 
./node_modules/.bin/persistify src/foo.js -o dist/foo.js --watch
 
# this will just use the cache and use a transform 
# (all the parameters are just passed to browserify 
# so it should work with any transform) 
./node_modules/.bin/persistify src/foo.js -t babelify -o dist/foo.js --watch
 
# this will just use the cache and use two transforms 
# but will never add to the cache any files that match the `m.less` extension 
# since those files can also require files and those files won't be cached 
# this is the safer way to prevent those changes to be skipped because of the cache 
./node_modules/.bin/persistify src/foo.js -t babelify -t simpless -o dist/foo.js -n '\.less$'

As a node module

var persistify = require( 'persistify' );
 
var b = persistify( {
  //browserify options here. e.g
  // debug: true
  }, { watch: true } );
 
b.add( './demo/dep1.js' );
 
b.on( 'bundle:done', function ( time ) {
  console.log( 'time', time );
} );
 
b.on( 'error', function ( err ) {
  console.log( 'error', err );
} );
 
function doBundle() {
  b.bundle( function ( err, buff ) {
    if ( err ) {
      throw err;
    }
    require( 'fs' ).writeFileSync( './dist/bundle.js', buff.toString() );
  } );
 
}
 
doBundle();
 
b.on( 'update', function () {
  doBundle();
} );
 

FAQ

My less files are not detected as changed when using a transformation like lessify. Why?

Because those files are not loaded thru browserify so the cache will ignore them. use -n, --never-cache to specify certain files (or file types) to never be cached.

Example: Using the cli

# the following will exclude files ending in `.less` from being kept in the cache 
./node_modules/.bin/persistify src/foo.js -t lessify -o dist/foo.js -n '\.less$'

Example: Using the node api

var persistify = require( 'persistify' );
 
var b = persistify( {
  //browserify options here. e.g
  // debug: true
  }, {
    neverCache: [/\.less$/] // using the node api
  } );
 
b.add( './demo/dep1.js' );
 
// when a file is ignored from the cache
// a skip:cache event is fired on the bundle instance
b.on('skip:cache', function (file) {
  console.log( 'skipping the cache for', file);
});
 
b.on( 'error', function ( err ) {
  console.log( 'error', err );
} );
 
function doBundle() {
  b.bundle( function ( err, buff ) {
    if ( err ) {
      throw err;
    }
    require( 'fs' ).writeFileSync( './dist/bundle.js', buff.toString() );
  } );
}
 
doBundle();

My build does not include the latest changes to my files! not detecting changed files?

Mmm... that's weird, but the option --recreate should destroy the cache and create it again which most of the times should fix your issue.

I have added a new transform and the build is not using its magic!

~Since persistify will only work on the files that have changed, and adding a transform does not cause a file change it is better to just use --recreate after adding a new trasform or plugin~

Latest version of persistify will ignore the cache if the command used to execute it changes.

Changelog

Changelog

License

MIT

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Install

npm i persistify

Weekly Downloads

196

Version

2.0.1

License

MIT

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  • royriojas