/rollup-plugin-web-worker-loader

Rollup plugin to load Workers. Supports inlining, dependencies, source maps, NodeJS and browsers.

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

rollup-plugin-web-worker-loader

Rollup plugin to handle Web Workers.

Can inline the worker code or emit a script file using code-splitting. Handles Worker dependencies and can emit source maps. Worker dependencies are added to Rollup's watch list. Supports bundling workers for Node.js environments

Getting started

yarn add rollup-plugin-web-worker-loader --dev

Add the plugin to your rollup configuration:

import webWorkerLoader from 'rollup-plugin-web-worker-loader';

export default {
    entry: 'src/index.js',
    plugins: [
        webWorkerLoader(/* configuration */),
    ],
    format: 'esm',
};

Bundle the worker code using the RegEx pattern specified in the plugin's configuration. By default you can add the prefix web-worker: to your imports:

// here we use the default pattern but any RegEx can be configured
import DataWorker from 'web-worker:./DataWorker';

const dataWorker = new DataWorker();
dataWorker.postMessage('Hello World!');

Configuration

The plugin responds to the following configuration options:

webWorkerLoader({
    targetPlatform?: string,        // The platform workers should be built for, can be 'auto', 'browser' or 'node'.
                                    // specifying either 'browser' or 'node' reduces the amount of loader code.
                                    // Default: 'auto'

    pattern?: RegEx,                // A RegEx instance describing the pattern that matches the files to import as
                                    // web workers. If capturing groups are present, the plugin uses the contents of the
                                    // last capturing group as the path to the worker script. Default: /web-worker:(.+)/

    sourcemap?: boolean,            // When inlined, should a source map be included in the final output. Default: false

    inline?: boolean,               // Should the worker code be inlined (Base64). Default: true

    forceInline?: boolean,          // *EXPERIMENTAL* when inlined, forces the code to be included every time it is imported
                                    // useful when using code splitting: Default: false

    preserveSource?: boolean,       // When inlined and this option is enabled, the full source code is included in the
                                    // built file, otherwise it's embedded as a base64 string. Default: false

    enableUnicodeSupport?: boolean, // When inlined in Base64 format, this option enables unicode support (UTF16). This
                                    // flag is disabled by default because supporting UTF16 doubles the size of the final
                                    // payload. Default: false

    loadPath?: string,              // This option is useful when the worker scripts need to be loaded from another folder.
                                    // Default: ''

    skipPlugins?: Array             // Plugin names to skip for web worker build
                                    // Default: [ 'liveServer', 'serve', 'livereload' ]
})

TypeScript

An example project that uses this plugin with TypeScript can be found here

Notes

WARNING: To use code-splitting for the worker scripts, Rollup v1.9.2 or higher is required. See rollup/rollup#2801 for more details.

The sourcemap configuration option is ignored when inline is set to false, in that case the project's sourcemap configuration is inherited.

loadPath is meant to be used in situations where code-splitting is used (inline = false) and the entry script is hosted in a different folder than the worker code.

Roadmap

  • Bundle file as web worker blob
  • Support for dependencies using import
  • Include source map
  • Configuration options to inline or code-split workers
  • Provide capability checks and fallbacks DROPPED (all modern environments support workers)
  • Avoid code duplication DROPPED (there are better solutions for this purpose)