This build system uses TypeScript, Module Unification RFC and fastboot by default. It also runs JS transpilation, bundling and linting in a multithreaded context with a thread pool in order to utilize all your CPU cores. I've recently rewrote ember-cli, because it uses a not-so-ideal broccoli build system that does too much counter-intuitive magic. One day after reading ember-cli source code, I've realized rewriting this from scratch is the only way to move forward for me personally.
Mber is a very minimal, fast and strict alternative for ember-cli. Mber does pretty much everything ember-cli does unless you want to create your own addon. You can use most of the ember addons, as long as the addon itself doesn't inject things to your broccoli/ember-cli runtime. In future I might support addon creation/testing as well.
Lots of thought and effort went into designing this replacement. Mber has a full test suite. Currently mber has 54 less dependencies than ember-cli as of this writing, this is without counting the massive sub-dependencies. It is highly suggested to read the source code, it is very simple, readable and written with ES modules and async/await. Contributions are always welcome. Mber never blocks the nodejs event loop.
WARNING: No guarantee is given for backward compatibility with ember-cli.
I've never benchmarked this against ember-cli, but my observation is, mber is at least 5 times faster than ember-cli. The difference is probably more(can get to 20x+) for complex builds and big apps. Also no more zombie processes that consume your default port, massive tmp folders or immortal/kill-resistant build processes.
Make sure you have node.js v15+ installed. mber
uses the latest native nodejs worker_thread
to achive multithreading
and the latest node.js native fs/promises
module. Then install mber CLI:
npm install -g mber
Check mber CLI commands:
mber
Create an mber application:
mber new [your-app-name]
run mber server:
mber s
Now your development server is running on http://localhost:1234
Running your application test suite is same as before:
mber test --server
You can now view your tests in your browser afterwards.
If you are running your tests in the terminal and CI servers you can use the following:
mber test
If you want to view/debug the browser output:
mber test --debug=true
Currently tests only run on the actual google chrome for CI. In future I might implement CI mode support for other browsers.
Instead of ember-cli-build.js
you now have index.js
in your project root which allows you to add 3rd party code to your application and build your application. The syntax is very similar to ember-cli. However here we are slightly more explicit and respect node.js conventions. In far future this design decision will allow node.js imports of your frontend code:
// in your index.js
/* eslint-env node */
const app = require('mber');
module.exports = function(ENV) {
const { environment } = ENV;
if (environment !== 'somecustomenvironment') {
app.import('node_modules/yourlibrary/dist/', { type: 'vendor '});
app.import('node_modules/chart.js/dist/Chart.min.js', {
type: 'application', prepend: true, using: [{
transformation: 'fastbootShim'
}]
}); // NOTE: same sytax as documented in ember-cli docs
}
// NOTE: Your addons are now not magically imported for the sake of explicitness and control.
// Instead, for example you can import your code via:
app.importAddon('ember-cli-moment', {
type: 'vendor', using: [{ transformation: 'fastbootShim' }]
});
return app.build(environment);
}
Mber supports importing npm modules or browser javascript as AMD modules. However you need to explicitly state these imports in your build config(index.js). The reason why this is needed is explained here:
// in your index.js
/* eslint-env node */
const app = require('mber');
module.exports = function(ENV) {
const { environment } = ENV;
app.importAsAMDModule('moment', 'node_modules/moment/min/moment.min.js', {
type: 'vendor'
});
app.importAsAMDModule('bip39', {
type: 'vendor', using: [{ transformation: 'fastbootShim' }]
});
return app.build(environment);
}
// then in your application code you can simply import these modules
import Component from '@ember/component';
import moment from 'moment';
import bip39 from 'bip39';
export default Component.extend({
phrase: bip39.generateMnemonic()
});
./index.html supports dynamic inline-content based on your environment configuration:
<!-- in your index.html -->
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge">
<meta charset="utf-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1, shrink-to-fit=no">
<meta name="description" content="">
<!-- EMBER_CLI_FASTBOOT_TITLE --><!-- EMBER_CLI_FASTBOOT_HEAD -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/assets/application.css">
</head>
<body>
<!-- EMBER_CLI_FASTBOOT_BODY -->
<script src="/assets/vendor.js"></script>
<script src="/assets/application.js"></script>
{{google-analytics}}
{{sentry}}
</body>
</html>
// in your index.js
/* eslint-env node */
const app = require('mber');
module.exports = function(ENV) {
const { environment } = ENV;
if (environment === 'production') {
app.injectInlineContent('googleAnalytics', `
<script>
window.ga=window.ga||function(){(ga.q=ga.q||[]).push(arguments)};ga.l=+new Date;
ga('create', '${ENV.googleAnalyticsId}', 'auto');
</script>
<script async src='https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js'></script>
`);
}
if (ENV.sentry.url) {
app.injectInlineContent('sentry', `
<script>
Raven.config('${ENV.sentry.url}', {
ignoreUrls: [${ENV.sentry.ignoreUrls}],
ignoreErrors: ${JSON.stringify(ENV.sentry.ignoreErrors)}
}).addPlugin(Raven.Plugins.Ember).install();
</script>
`);
}
return app.build(environment);
}
By default mber builds an ember application without jQuery. If want jquery in your application do this:
const app = require('mber');
module.exports = function(ENV) {
const { environment } = ENV;
// your other configuration ..
app.import('node_modules/jquery/dist/jquery.min.js', {
type: 'vendor', prepend: true
});
return app.build(environment);
}
If you want to exclude EmberData from your application. Add excludeEmberData to your config/environment.js:
'use strict';
module.exports = function(environment) {
let ENV = {
modulePrefix: '{{applicationName}}',
environment,
excludeEmberData: true // to exclude ember-data
}
// .. remaining code
return ENV;
}
mber console
Yep, now you can.
Currently ember-i18n has legacy folder/code under addon directory that gets filtered during ember-cli builds. Until that issue gets resolved you can use mber-i18n instead. Example:
// in your index.js
/* eslint-env node */
const app = require('mber');
module.exports = function(ENV) {
const { environment } = ENV;
app.importAddon('ember-i18n', 'mber-i18n', { type: 'vendor' }); // here we are telling mber to inject addon code of mber-i18n npm module, however use ember-i18n module name during AMD transpilation
}
Sinon is a very large javascript project with 10k+ lines of code, this can make your initial build noticibly slow for tests. When you importAsAMDModule(file)
, mber by default runs the target javascript file through babel and browserify. In order to disable this transpilation you can use: { transpile: false } option, therefore maintain the exceptional initial build speed:
/* eslint-env node */
const app = require('mber');
module.exports = function(ENV) {
const { environment } = ENV;
if (environment === 'test') {
app.importAsAMDModule('sinon', 'node_modules/sinon/pkg/sinon-no-sourcemaps.js', {
type: 'test', prepend: true, transpile: false
});
}
return app.build(environment);
}
Currently ember-source builds toggle two features based on environment configurations. You can toggle them in your environment.js
:
module.exports = function(environment) {
let ENV = {
_APPLICATION_TEMPLATE_WRAPPER: false, // NOTE: true by default
_TEMPLATE_ONLY_GLIMMER_COMPONENTS: true // NOTE: false by default
}
};
This would have been impossible without the great interop libraries, structures, conventions and the framework source code itself which is mainly developed by the ember core team and the community by large.
This library is also a message to inspire and demonstrate Embers superiority in design and community to other frontend developers who are not yet fully knowledgeable of Ember.js framework.
The software is currently in beta stage, expect it to become stable shortly with no backward-compatibility promises.