Use HTML files as entry points in your rollup bundle.
HTML files and HTML imports will be traversed, then all scripts found will be combined.
Optionally, write HTML files cleaned of <script>
s.
This is particularly useful for web components and web applications in general.
<!-- 0.html -->
<script>export const zero = 0;</script>
<!-- 1.html -->
<script>export const one = 1;</script>
<!-- 2.html -->
<script src="2.js"></script>
// 2.js
export const two = 2;
<!-- all-imports.html -->
<link rel="import" href="0.html">
<link rel="import" href="1.html">
<link rel="import" href="2.html">
Using all-imports.html
as entry point will yield a bundle with exports for zero
, one
, and two
.
So, this plugin works like rollup-plugin-multi-entry does, but using <script>
s contained in HTML files as entry points.
$ npm install [--save-dev] rollup-plugin-html-entry
This plugin requires at least v0.48.0 of rollup. In rollup.config.js
:
import htmlEntry from 'rollup-plugin-html-entry';
export default {
input: 'test/**/*.html',
plugins: [htmlEntry()]
};
The input
above is the simplest form which simply takes a glob string.
You may pass an array of glob strings or an object with one or more of the following options:
export default {
input: {
// Arrays of globs to include
include: ['index.html', 'and/globs/**/*.html'],
// Arrays of globs to exclude
exclude: ['excluded-file.html', 'and/globs/*.to.be.excluded.html'],
// Arrays of globs that should remain external to the bundle
external: ['lazy-imports.html', 'and/globs/*.to.be.omitted.html']
}
// ...
};
By default HTML files will be not written. If output
option is present, HTML files stripped of <script>
s will be written into specified path.
export default {
input: 'index.html',
plugins: [htmlEntry({ output: "build" })]
// ...
};
Finally, you may not need to export anything from the rolled-up bundle for web applications. In
such cases, use the exports: false
option like so:
export default {
input: 'index.html',
plugins: [htmlEntry({ exports: false })]
};
MIT