workerize-loader
A webpack loader that moves a module and its dependencies into a Web Worker, automatically reflecting exported functions as asynchronous proxies.
- Bundles a tiny, purpose-built RPC implementation into your app
- If exported module methods are already async, signature is unchanged
- Supports synchronous and asynchronous worker functions
- Works beautifully with async/await
- Imported value is instantiable, just a decorated
Worker
Install
npm install -D workerize-loader
Usage
worker.js:
// block for `time` ms, then return the number of loops we could run in that time:
export function expensive(time) {
let start = Date.now(),
count = 0
while (Date.now() - start < time) count++
return count
}
index.js: (our demo)
import worker from 'workerize-loader!./worker'
let instance = worker() // `new` is optional
instance.expensive(1000).then( count => {
console.log(`Ran ${count} loops`)
})
Options
inline
Type: Boolean
Default: false
You can also inline the worker as a BLOB with the inline
parameter
// webpack.config.js
{
loader: 'workerize-loader',
options: { inline: true }
}
or
import worker from 'workerize-loader?inline!./worker'
Babel
AboutIf you're using Babel in your build, make sure you disabled commonJS transform. Otherwize, workerize-loader won't be able to retrieve the list of exported function from your worker script :
{
test: /\.js$/,
loader: "babel-loader",
options: {
presets: [
[
"env",
{
modules: false,
},
],
]
}
}
Credit
The inner workings here are heavily inspired by worker-loader. It's worth a read!