/nuxt-vite-legacy-swc

Nuxt.js legacy build, with SWC

Primary LanguageTypeScriptMIT LicenseMIT

nuxt-vite-legacy-swc

Nuxt module to make your Nuxt3 app compatible with legacy browsers.

Uses vite-plugin-legacy-swc and applies a number of hacks that Nuxt.js team decided to avoid.

Tested on Nuxt 3.4 to 3.8, and also on Nuxt 3.13.

Quick Setup

Install:

npm install nuxt-vite-legacy-swc --save-dev

Add nuxt-vite-legacy-swc to the modules section of nuxt.config.ts:

export default defineNuxtConfig({
  modules: ["nuxt-vite-legacy-swc"],
  // Optionally, provide vite-plugin-legacy-swc options.
  // For example, for Chrome 49 you could use:
  legacy: {
    targets: ["chrome 49"],
    additionalLegacyPolyfills: [
      "mdn-polyfills/Element.prototype.getAttributeNames",
    ],
  },
});

Caveats

Upgrading

Nuxt and vite-plugin-legacy-swc are upgraded separately and the whole matrix is not well tested. The module may behave incorrectly with older Nuxt and newer vite-plugin-legacy-swc or vice versa.

Please report if you encounter issues; better yet, a PR adding the Github action testing matrix would be much appreciated.

Legacy browsers that had just begin to support modules

The legacy build will be used for browsers that don't support <script module> which is enough most of the time.

However, this leaves incompatibility window for legacy browsers that do support modules but don't support modern features such as async generators (based on caniuse that would be e.g. Chrome 61-62). Vanilla vite-plugin-legacy-swc injects special detection scripts into SSR HTML, which this Nuxt module doesn't. PR's welcome!

Development and Testing

Install Node 20, then:

corepack enable
pnpm i
pnpm dev:prepare
pnpm dev:build && pnpm dev:start

http://localhost:3000 will run a Chrome 49-compatible version.