Sunday, 23 September 2018

ts-loader Project References: First Blood

So project references eh? They shipped with TypeScript 3. We've just shipped initial support for project references in ts-loader v5.2.0. All the hard work was done by the amazing Andrew Branch. In fact I'd recommend taking a gander at the PR. Yay Andrew!

This post will take us through the nature of the support for project references in ts-loader now and what we hope the future will bring. It rips off shamelessly borrows from the README.md documentation that Andrew wrote as part of the PR. Because I am not above stealing.

TL;DR

Using project references currently requires building referenced projects outside of ts-loader. We don’t want to keep it that way, but we’re releasing what we’ve got now. To try it out, you’ll need to pass projectReferences: true to loaderOptions.

Like tsc, but not like tsc --build

ts-loader has partial support for project references in that it will load dependent composite projects that are already built, but will not currently build/rebuild those upstream projects. The best way to explain exactly what this means is through an example. Say you have a project with a project reference pointing to the lib/ directory:


tsconfig.json
app.ts
lib/
  tsconfig.json
  niftyUtil.ts

And we’ll assume that the root tsconfig.json has { "references": { "path": "lib" } }, which means that any import of a file that’s part of the lib sub-project is treated as a reference to another project, not just a reference to a TypeScript file. Before discussing how ts-loader handles this, it’s helpful to review at a really basic level what tsc itself does here. If you were to run tsc on this tiny example project, the build would fail with the error:


error TS6305: Output file 'lib/niftyUtil.d.ts' has not been built from source file 'lib/niftyUtil.ts'.

Using project references actually instructs tsc not to build anything that’s part of another project from source, but rather to look for any .d.ts and .js files that have already been generated from a previous build. Since we’ve never built the project in lib before, those files don’t exist, so building the root project fails. Still just thinking about how tsc works, there are two options to make the build succeed: either run tsc -p lib/tsconfig.json first, or simply run tsc --build, which will figure out that lib hasn’t been built and build it first for you.

Ok, so how is that relevant to ts-loader? Because the best way to think about what ts-loader does with project references is that it acts like tsc, but not like tsc --build. If you run ts-loader on a project that’s using project references, and any upstream project hasn’t been built, you’ll get the exact same error TS6305 that you would get with tsc. If you modify a source file in an upstream project and don’t rebuild that project, ts-loader won’t have any idea that you’ve changed anything—it will still be looking at the output from the last time you built that file.

“Hey, don’t you think that sounds kind of useless and terrible?”

Well, sort of. You can consider it a work-in-progress. It’s true that on its own, as of today, ts-loader doesn’t have everything you need to take advantage of project references in webpack. In practice, though, consuming upstream projects and building upstream projects are somewhat separate concerns. Building them will likely come in a future release. For background, see the original issue.

outDir Windows problemo.

At the moment, composite projects built using the outDir compiler option cannot be consumed using ts-loader on Windows. If you try to, ts-loader throws a "has not been built from source file" error. You can see Andrew and I puzzling over it in the PR. We don't know why yet; it's possible there's a bug in tsc. It's more likely there's a bug in ts-loader. Hopefully it's going to get solved at some point. (Hey, maybe you're the one to solve it!) Either way, we didn't want to hold back from releasing. So if you're building on Windows then avoid building composite projects using outDir.