import path = require('path') import {build} from 'esbuild' const definedGlobals = { 'process.env.THEATRE_VERSION': JSON.stringify( require('../package.json').version, ), 'process.env.NODE_ENV': JSON.stringify('production'), } createBundles() async function createBundles() { createMainBundle() createExtensionBundle() async function createMainBundle() { const pathToEntry = path.join(__dirname, '../src/index.ts') const esbuildConfig: Parameters[0] = { entryPoints: [pathToEntry], target: ['es6'], loader: {'.svg': 'text', '.png': 'dataurl'}, bundle: true, sourcemap: true, define: {...definedGlobals}, external: [ '@theatre/core', '@theatre/dataverse', '@theatre/react', '@theatre/studio', 'react', 'react-dom', 'three', '@react-three/fiber', ], platform: 'browser', mainFields: ['browser', 'module', 'main'], conditions: ['browser', 'node'], outfile: path.join(__dirname, '../dist/index.js'), format: 'cjs', metafile: true, } const result = await Promise.all([ build(esbuildConfig), build({ ...esbuildConfig, outfile: path.join(__dirname, '../dist/index.esm.js'), format: 'esm', }), ]) } /** * We were initially externalizing react+fiber+drei+stdlib and having them as peer deps. Once we started to test this setup with different * versions of each, we realized that: * * 1. It can be confusing for npm users to satisfy the peer dep ranges. I (Aria) struggled to get the peer deps right in a sample project. * 2. More importantly, some permutations of these deps ended up not necessarily working together even though they satisfied the peer dep * ranges. * 3. Also, since react 17 and 18 have subtly different behaviors (useEffect, suspend, etc), we thought that us having to support both of * those behaviors in the snapshot editor is probably not that useful to the user. So we thought removing that surface area by bundling * react into the snapshot editor would reduce the chance of running into bugs caused by the differences between react 17 and 18. * * So we made the call to bundle all of these libraries in the `/extension` bundle. * * The downsides we thought about: * * 1. The bundle size of the snapshot editor increases, but since users don't ship the snapshot editor to their end users, we thought this * should be tolerable (let us know if it's not). * 2. Another downside we thought of is that having two versions of react and fiber on the same page may cause issues, but we haven't ran * into any yet, so don't know if those issues couldn't be worked around. */ async function createExtensionBundle() { const pathToEntry = path.join(__dirname, '../src/extension/index.ts') const esbuildConfig: Parameters[0] = { entryPoints: [pathToEntry], target: 'es6', loader: {'.svg': 'text', '.png': 'dataurl'}, bundle: true, sourcemap: true, define: {...definedGlobals}, external: [ '@theatre/core', '@theatre/studio', '@theatre/dataverse', '@theatre/r3f', 'three', // '@react-three/fiber', // '@react-three/drei', // 'three-stdlib', ], platform: 'browser', mainFields: ['browser', 'module', 'main'], conditions: ['browser'], outfile: path.join(__dirname, '../dist/extension/index.js'), format: 'cjs', metafile: true, } const result = await Promise.all([ build(esbuildConfig), build({ ...esbuildConfig, outfile: path.join(__dirname, '../dist/extension/index.esm.js'), format: 'esm', }), ]) } }