Helper scripts to get Ionic apps up and running quickly (minus the config overload).
To get the latest @ionic/app-scripts
, please run:
npm install @ionic/app-scripts@latest --save-dev
Out of the box, Ionic starters have been preconfigured with great defaults for building fast apps, including:
- Multi-core processing tasks in parallel for faster builds
- In-memory file transpiling and bundling
- Transpiling source code to ES5 JavaScript
- Ahead of Time (AoT) template compiling
- Just in Time (JiT) template compiling
- Template inlining for JiT builds
- Bundling modules for faster runtime execution
- Treeshaking unused components and dead-code removal
- Generating CSS from bundled component Sass files
- Autoprefixing vendor CSS prefixes
- Minifying JavaScript files
- Compressing CSS files
- Copying
src
static assets towww
- Linting source files
- Watching source files for live-reloading
Just the bullet list above is a little overwhelming, and each task requires quite a bit of development time just to get started. Ionic App Script's intention is to make it easier to complete common tasks so developers can focus on building their app, rather than building build scripts.
Note that the Ionic Framework's source is made up of modules and can be packaged by any bundler or build process. However, this project's goal is provide simple scripts to make building Ionic apps easier, while also allowing developers to further configure their build process.
Instead of depending on external task runners, Ionic App Scripts now prefers being executed from NPM scripts. Ionic's NPM scripts come preconfigured within the project's package.json
file. For example, this is the default setup for npm scripts within each starters:
"scripts": {
"ionic:build": "ionic-app-scripts build",
"ionic:serve": "ionic-app-scripts serve"
},
To run the build
script found in the package.json
scripts
property, execute:
npm run build
In many cases, the defaults which Ionic provides covers most of the scenarios required by developers. However, Ionic App Scripts does provide multiple ways to configure and override the defaults for each of the various tasks. Note that Ionic will always apply its defaults for any property that was not provided by custom configuration.
Ionic projects use the package.json
file for configuration. There's a handy config property which can be used. Below is an example of setting a custom config file using the config
property in a project's package.json
.
"config": {
"ionic_bundler": "rollup",
"ionic_source_map": "source-map",
"ionic_cleancss": "./config/cleancss.config.js"
},
Remember how we're actually running ionic-app-scripts
from the scripts
property of project's package.json
file? Well we can also add command-line flags to each script, or make new scripts with these custom flags. For example:
"scripts": {
"build": "ionic-app-scripts build --rollup ./config/rollup.config.js",
"minify": "ionic-app-scripts minify --cleancss ./config/cleancss.config.js",
},
The same command-line flags can be also applied to npm run
commands too, such as:
npm run build --rollup ./config/rollup.config.js
Config File | package.json Config | Cmd-line Flag |
---|---|---|
CleanCss | ionic_cleancss |
--cleancss or -e |
Copy | ionic_copy |
--copy or -y |
Generator | ionic_generator |
--generator or -g |
NGC | ionic_ngc |
--ngc or -n |
Rollup | ionic_rollup |
--rollup or -r |
Sass | ionic_sass |
--sass or -s |
TSLint | ionic_tslint |
--tslint or -i |
UglifyJS | ionic_uglifyjs |
--uglifyjs or -u |
Watch | ionic_watch |
--watch |
Webpack | ionic_webpack |
--webpack or -w |
Config Values | package.json Config | Cmd-line Flag | Defaults | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|
bundler | ionic_bundler |
--bundler |
webpack |
Chooses which bundler to use: webpack or rollup |
source map type | ionic_source_map |
--sourceMap |
eval |
Chooses the webpack devtool option. We only support eval or source-map for now |
root directory | ionic_root_dir |
--rootDir |
process.cwd() |
The directory path of the Ionic app |
tmp directory | ionic_tmp_dir |
--tmpDir |
.tmp |
A temporary directory for codegen'd files using the Angular ngc AoT compiler |
src directory | ionic_src_dir |
--srcDir |
src |
The directory holding the Ionic src code |
www directory | ionic_www_dir |
--wwwDir |
www |
The deployable directory containing everything needed to run the app |
build directory | ionic_build_dir |
--buildDir |
build |
The build process uses this directory to store generated files, etc |
These environment variables are automatically set to Node's process.env
property. These variables can be useful from within custom configuration files, such as custom webpack.config.js
file.
Environment Variable | Description |
---|---|
IONIC_ENV |
Value can be either prod or dev . |
IONIC_ROOT_DIR |
The absolute path to the project's root directory. |
IONIC_TMP_DIR |
The absolute path to the project's temporary directory. |
IONIC_SRC_DIR |
The absolute path to the app's source directory. |
IONIC_WWW_DIR |
The absolute path to the app's public distribution directory. |
IONIC_BUILD_DIR |
The absolute path to the app's bundled js and css files. |
IONIC_APP_SCRIPTS_DIR |
The absolute path to the @ionic/app-scripts node_module directory. |
IONIC_SOURCE_MAP |
The Webpack devtool setting. We recommend eval or source-map . |
The process.env.IONIC_ENV
environment variable can be used to test whether it is a prod
or dev
build, which automatically gets set by any command. By default the build
task is prod
, and the watch
and serve
tasks are dev
. Additionally, using the --dev
command line flag will force the build to use dev
.
Please take a look at the bottom of the default Rollup config file to see how the IONIC_ENV
environment variable is being used to conditionally change config values for production builds.
These tasks are available within ionic-app-scripts
and can be added to NPM scripts or any Node command.
Task | Description |
---|---|
build |
Full production build. Use --dev flag for dev build. |
bundle |
Bundle JS modules. |
clean |
Empty the www directory. |
cleancss |
Compress the output CSS with CleanCss |
copy |
Run the copy tasks, which by defaults copies the src/assets/ and src/index.html files to www . |
lint |
Run the linter against the source .ts files, using the tslint.json config file at the root. |
minify |
Minifies the output JS bundle and compresses the compiled CSS. |
ngc |
Runs just the ngc portion of the production build. |
sass |
Sass compilation of used modules. Bundling must have as least ran once before Sass compilation. |
transpile |
Runs just the tsc portion of the dev build. |
watch |
Runs watch for dev builds. |
Example NPM Script:
"scripts": {
"minify": "ionic-app-scripts minify"
},
- The Webpack
devtool
setting is driven by theionic_source_map
variable. It defaults toeval
for fast builds, but can provide the original source map by changing the value tosource-map
. There are additional values that Webpack supports, but we only supporteval
andsource-maps
for now.
- Ionic Framework
- TypeScript Compiler
- Angular Compiler (NGC)
- Rollup Module Bundler
- Ionic Component Sass
- Node Sass
- Autoprefixer
- UglifyJS
- CleanCss
- TSLint
We welcome any PRs, issues, and feedback! Please be respectful and follow the Code of Conduct.
Execute the following steps to publish a release:
- Run
npm run build
to generate thedist
directory - Run
npm run test
to validate thedist
works - Temporarily tick the
package.json
version - Run
npm run changelog
to append the latest additions to the changelog - Manually verify and commit the changelog changes. Often times you'll want to manually add content/instructions
- Revert the
package.json
version to the original version - Run
npm version patch
to tick the version and generate a git tag - Run
npm run github-release
to create the github release entry - Run
npm publish
to publish the package to npm