$ npm install webpack -g
The webpack
command is now available globally.
webpack <entry> <output>
entry
Pass a file or a request string. You can pass multiple entries (every entry is loaded on startup).
If you pass a pair in the form <name>=<request>
you can create an additional entry point.
It will be mapped to the configuration option entry
.
output
Pass a path to a file.
It will be mapped to the configuration options output.path
and output.filename
.
Many configuration options are mapped from CLI options. I. e. --debug
maps to debug: true
, or --output-library-target
to output.libraryTarget
.
You will see a list of all options if you don’t pass any options.
Some plugins are mapped to CLI options. I. e. --define <string>=<string>
maps to the DefinePlugin
.
You will see a list of all options if you don’t pass any options.
-d
Equals to --debug
--devtool source-map
--output-pathinfo
-p
Equals to --optimize-minimize
--optimize-occurrence-order
--watch
Watches all dependencies and recompile on change.
--config example.config.js
Specifies a different configuration file to pick up. Use this if you want to specify something different than webpack.config.js
, which is the default.
--progress
Display a compilation progress to stderr.
--json
Write JSON to stdout instead of a human readable format.
Hint: Try to put the result into the analyse tool.
--no-color
Disable colors to display the statistics.
--sort-modules-by
, --sort-chunks-by
, --sort-assets-by
Sort the modules/chunks/assets list by a column.
--display-chunks
Display the separation of the modules into chunks.
--display-reasons
Show more information about the reasons why a module is included.
--display-error-details
Show more information about the errors. I. e. this shows which paths are tried while resolving a module.
--display-modules
Show hidden modules. Modules are hidden from output by default when they live inside directories called ["node_modules", "bower_components", "jam", "components"]
--display-exclude
Exclude modules in the output.
If you wish to have a more in-depth idea of what is taking how long, you can use the --profile
switch. This will cause WebPack to display more detailed timing information. Combine this with the switches above to get a very detailed message and information set, which will contain the timings of your modules.
factory
: The time it took to build the module information.building
: The time that was spent building the module (loaders, for example).dependencies
: The time that was spent gathering and connecting the dependencies.When using the CLI it’s possible to have the following options in the configuration file. They’re passed in other ways when using the node.js API.
watch
Enter watch mode, which rebuilds on file change.
watchOptions.aggregateTimeout
Delay the rebuild after the first change. Value is time in ms.
Default: 300
watchOptions.poll
true
: use polling
number: use polling with specified interval
Default:
undefined
stats
Display options. See node.js API Stats.toString()
for more details.
© 2012–2016 Tobias Koppers
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://webpack.github.io/docs/cli.html