Transpile modules from node_modules
using the Next.js Babel configuration.
Makes it easy to have local libraries and keep a slick, manageable dev experience.
- Supports transpilation of all extensions supported by Next.js:
.js
,.jsx
,.ts
,.tsx
,.mjs
,.css
,.scss
and.sass
- Enable hot-reloading on local packages
- Most setups should work out of the box (npm, yarn, pnpm, ...)
This plugin aims to solve the following challenges:
- code transpilation from local packages (think: a monorepo with a
styleguide
package) - code transpilation from NPM modules using ES6 imports (e.g
lodash-es
)
What this plugin does not aim to solve:
- any-package IE11-compatible maker
Next.js version | Plugin version |
---|---|
Next.js 9.5+ / 10 | 4.x, 5.x, 6.x |
Next.js 9.2 | 3.x |
Next.js 8 / 9 | 2.x |
Next.js 6 / 7 | 1.x |
Latest Next.js version tested: 10.0.6.
npm install --save next-transpile-modules
or
yarn add next-transpile-modules
transpileModules
String[]: modules to be transpiledoptions
Object (optional)resolveSymlinks
Boolean: Enable symlinks resolution to their real path by Webpack (most of the time, you won't want that) (default tofalse
)debug
Boolean: Display some informative logs in the console (can get noisy!) (default tofalse
)__unstable_matcher
(path) => boolean: Custom matcher that will override the default one. Don't use it.
Since 6.2.0
(with next@10.0.6
), Webpack 5 support is automatically enabled via the future.webpack5
flag, but is experimental and may break in any patch or minor release (from both next
or next-transpile-modules
) without any warning, be careful!
// next.config.js
const withTM = require('next-transpile-modules')(['somemodule', 'and-another']); // pass the modules you would like to see transpiled
module.exports = withTM();
// next.config.js
const withTM = require('next-transpile-modules')(['somemodule', 'and-another'], { unstable_webpack5: true });
module.exports = withTM();
Notes:
- please declare
withTM
as your last plugin (the "most nested" one). - make sure all your packages have a valid
main
field. - there is currently no way to transpile only parts of a package, it's all or nothing
You can include scoped packages or nested ones:
const withTM = require('next-transpile-modules')(['@shared/ui', '@shared/utils']);
// ...
const withTM = require('next-transpile-modules')(['styleguide/node_modules/lodash-es']);
// ...
const withPlugins = require('next-compose-plugins');
const withTM = require('next-transpile-modules')(['some-module', 'and-another']);
module.exports = withPlugins([withTM], {
// ...
});
Since next-transpile-modules@3
and next@>9.2
, this plugin can also transpile CSS included in your transpiled packages. SCSS/SASS is also supported since next-transpile-modules@3.1.0
.
In your transpiled package:
// shared-ui/components/Button.js
import styles from './Button.module.css';
function Button(props) {
return (
<button type='button' className={styles.error}>
{props.children}
</button>
);
}
export default Button;
/* shared-ui/components/Button.module.css */
.error {
color: white;
background-color: red;
}
In your app:
// next.config.js
const withTM = require('next-transpile-modules')(['shared-ui']);
// ...
// pages/home.jsx
import React from 'react';
import Button from 'shared-ui/components/Button';
const HomePage = () => {
return (
<main>
{/* will output <button class="Button_error__xxxxx"> */}
<Button>Styled button</Button>
</main>
);
};
export default HomePage;
It also supports global CSS import packages located in node_modules
:
// pages/_app.js
import 'shared-ui/styles/global.css'; // will be imported globally
export default function MyApp({ Component, pageProps }) {
return <Component {...pageProps} />;
}
- it is maintained,
@weco
's seems dead - it supports TypeScript
- it supports CSS modules (since Next.js 9.2)
- it supports
.mjs
A new version of Next.js is available/I just setup my project, and my build is breaking because of this plugin
It is important to understand that this plugin is a big hack of the Next.js Webpack configuration. When the Next.js team pushes an update to their build configuration, the changes next-transpile-modules
bring may be outdated, and the plugin needs to be updated (which is a breaking change for this plugin, as the updated plugin is usually not retro-compatible with the previous versions of Next.js).
Now, this build problem can happen when you install your dependencies with npm install
/yarn install
(in your CI pipeline for example). Those commands may re-resolve your next
dependency of your package.json
to a newer one, and this newer one may have critical Webpack changes, hence breaking your build.
The way to fix it is easy, and it is what you should always do: install your dependencies with npm ci
("clean install") or yarn --frozen-lockfile
. This will force npm
or yarn
to use the version of Next.js declared in your lock file, instead of downloading the latest one compatible with the version accepted by your package.json
.
So basically: use your lock files right, and understand what problems they are solving ;)
more:
- check the compatibility table of this plugin
- read more about semver and version resolutions: https://docs.npmjs.com/misc/semver
Please make sure to read the changelog.
If you get a transpilation error when using a custom Babel configuration, make sure you are using a babel.config.js
and not a .babelrc
.
The former is a project-wide Babel configuration, when the latter works for relative paths only (and may not work for Yarn for example, as it installs dependencies in a parent directory).
If you add a local library (let's say with yarn add ../some-shared-module
), Yarn will copy those files by default, instead of symlinking them. So your changes to the initial folder won't be copied to your Next.js node_modules
directory.
You can go back to npm
, or use Yarn workspaces. See an example in the official Next.js repo.
Lerna's purpose is to publish different packages from a monorepo, it does not help for and does not intend to help local development with local modules (<- this, IN CAPS).
This is not coming from me, but from Lerna's maintainer.
So you are probably using it wrong, and I advice you to use npm
or Yarn workspaces instead.
Again, most probably a bad idea. You may need to tell your Webpack configuration how to properly resolve your scoped packages, as they won't be installed in your Next.js directory, but the root of your Lerna setup.
const withTM = require('next-transpile-modules')(['@your-project/shared', '@your-project/styleguide']);
module.exports = withTM({
webpack: (config, options) => {
config.resolve.alias = {
...config.resolve.alias,
// Will make webpack look for these modules in parent directories
'@your-project/shared': require.resolve('@your-project/shared'),
'@your-project/styleguide': require.resolve('@your-project/styleguide'),
// ...
};
return config;
},
});
It can happen that when using next-transpile-modules
with a local package and npm
, you end up with duplicated dependencies in your final Next.js build. It is important to understand why it happens.
Let's take the following setup: one Next.js app ("Consumer"), and one Styleguide library.
You will probably have react
as a peerDependencies
and as a devDependecy
of the Styleguide. If you use npm i
, it will create a symlink to your Styleguide package in your "Consumer" node_modules
.
The thing is in this shared package, you also have a node_modules
. So when your shared modules requires, let's say react
, Webpack will resolve it to the version in your Styleguide's node_modules
, and not your Consumer's node_modules
. Hence the duplicated react
in your final bundles.
You can tell Webpack how to resolve the react
of your Styleguide to use the version in your Next.js app like that:
const withTM = require('next-transpile-modules')(['styleguide']);
module.exports = withTM({
webpack: (config) => {
+ config.resolve.alias['react'] = path.resolve(__dirname, '.', 'node_modules', 'react');
return config
},
});
Please note, the above will only work if react
is properly declared as peerDependencies
or devDependencies
in your referenced package.
It is not a great solution, but it works. Any help to find a more future-proof solution is welcome.
All the honor goes to James Gorrie who created the first version of this plugin.