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Package detail

webpack-bundle-size-analyzer

robertknight78.6kISC3.1.0TypeScript support: included

A utility to find how your dependencies are contributing to the size of your Webpack bundles

webpack

readme

Webpack Bundle Size Analyzer

Build Status

A small utility to help you find out what is contributing to the size of your Webpack bundles.

Webpack has a JSON output mode which produces detailed machine-readable information about everything that has been included in a generated bundle.

This output is produced by running webpack --json. This tool analyzes the resulting JSON output and displays a tree of packages that were included in the bundle, ordered by the size of all the used modules.

For further reading on reducing the size of Webpack bundles, see their optimization guide

Usage

There are 2 ways to use this tool:

  1. As a command line application
  2. As a webpack plugin

CLI Usage

Assuming you have the webpack CLI command installed locally in your project:

npm install -g webpack-bundle-size-analyzer
node_modules/.bin/webpack --json | webpack-bundle-size-analyzer

If you have webpack installed globally then the first part of this command will be just webpack --json instead.

When run on react-testing for example, it produces this output, where <self> refers to the size of the bundle's own code.

react: 641.95 kB (55.3%)
  <self>: 641.95 kB (100%)
chai: 125.8 kB (10.8%)
  deep-eql: 7.51 kB (5.97%)
    type-detect: 2.72 kB (36.2%)
      <self>: 2.72 kB (100%)
    <self>: 4.79 kB (63.8%)
  assertion-error: 2.29 kB (1.82%)
    <self>: 2.29 kB (100%)
  <self>: 116 kB (92.2%)
flummox: 73.46 kB (6.33%)
  flux: 9.01 kB (12.3%)
    <self>: 9.01 kB (100%)
  eventemitter3: 5.94 kB (8.08%)
    <self>: 5.94 kB (100%)
  uniqueid: 947 B (1.26%)
    <self>: 947 B (100%)
  object-assign: 484 B (0.643%)
    <self>: 484 B (100%)
  <self>: 57.12 kB (77.8%)
q: 58.84 kB (5.07%)
  <self>: 58.84 kB (100%)
...
<self>: 195.57 kB (16.9%)

Plugin Usage

Description

When using the plugin version of this library, a file will be written to a location of your choice (when you run your webpack build). The file contents will be a list of the packages in your bundle (sorted in descending order). Each line will contain the name of a package, along with it's file size, and the percentage of space it takes up in your bundle.

Plugin Installation

Install this library as a development dependency to your webpack project:

npm install --save-dev webpack-bundle-size-analyzer

Import your plugin at the top of your webpack.config.js file:

Old School:

var WebpackBundleSizeAnalyzerPlugin = require('webpack-bundle-size-analyzer').WebpackBundleSizeAnalyzerPlugin;

New School:

import { WebpackBundleSizeAnalyzerPlugin } from 'webpack-bundle-size-analyzer';

Now in your webpack's plugin section, start using this plugin:

{
  {...topOfConfig}
  plugins: [
    new WebpackBundleSizeAnalyzerPlugin('./reports/plain-report.txt')
  ]
  {...bottomOfConfig}
}

Example Plugin Output

Using the above plugin configuration, the following file will be written:

<webpack-output-path>/reports/plain-report.txt:

marked: 27.53 KB (14.9%)
lru-cache: 6.29 KB (3.40%)
style-loader: 717 B (0.379%)
<self>: 150.33 KB (81.3%)

Important Note About Minified Code

If you minify/compress your code using the approach recommended in the Webpack documentation, which is to use the UglifyJS plugin, be aware that this tool will report the sizes of modules before they are minified. This is because the statistics generated by webpack --json do not take account of plugins that operate on the bundle as a whole.

Knowing the sizes of dependencies before they are minified can still be useful to get an idea of how much different dependencies are responsible for size of your minified bundle, but be aware that it can be misleading. This is because some libraries compress better than others.

If instead you minify modules in your bundle individually using a loader (eg. the UglifyJS loader), the stats output by webpack --json will show minified sizes. If you want to get a better idea of the sizes of different dependencies after they are minified, you can temporarily remove the UglifyJS plugin and replace it with the UglifyJS loader instead before running webpack --json | webpack-bundle-size-analyzer.

The reason that using a plugin, rather than a loader, is the recommended approach in Webpack is that compression is better if applied to the whole bundle rather than to individual source files one at a time.

changelog

3.1.0

  • Include TypeScript types in the package (#53)

3.0.0

  • Use the recommended Webpack v4+ APIs for hooking into Webpack's compilation process. The plugin now requires Webpack v4+. The CLI utility should still work with earlier versions (#47).

2.7.0

  • Add note to text output about file sizes not taking into account minification (#41).

2.6.0

  • Enable the tool to be used as a Webpack plugin.

2.5.0

  • Print a more helpful error if the input is not valid JSON.
  • Fix --version output

2.4.0

  • Include package name for scoped packages (#31)

2.3.0

  • Added --no-share-stats command-line argument which disables output dependency sizes as a percentage (#27)

2.2.0

  • Added --json command-line argument which outputs the package size tree in JSON format (#20).

2.0.2

  • Fixed issue with package sizes not being output if a bundle had very small dependencies (#15).

2.0.0

  • Renamed the binary to webpack-bundle-size-analyzer to match the package and repository name.

1.3.0

  • Simplify output by not printing '<self>' lines for packages with no dependencies.

1.2.0

  • Support parsing the output of webpack --json generated on Windows.
  • Add support for processing stats for Webpack configurations which generate multiple bundles.

1.10

  • Initial release