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build(deps): bump github.com/evanw/esbuild from 0.8.46 to 0.9.0 #3

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@dependabot dependabot bot commented on behalf of github Mar 12, 2021

Bumps github.com/evanw/esbuild from 0.8.46 to 0.9.0.

Release notes

Sourced from github.com/evanw/esbuild's releases.

v0.9.0

This release contains backwards-incompatible changes. Since esbuild is before version 1.0.0, these changes have been released as a new minor version to reflect this (as recommended by npm). You should either be pinning the exact version of esbuild in your package.json file or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as ^0.8.0. See the documentation about semver for more information.

  • Add support for node's exports field in package.json files (#187)

    This feature was recently added to node. It allows you to rewrite what import paths inside your package map to as well as to prevent people from importing certain files in your package. Adding support for this to esbuild is a breaking change (i.e. code that was working fine before can easily stop working) so adding support for it has been delayed until this breaking change release.

    One way to use this feature is to remap import paths for your package. For example, this would remap an import of your-pkg/esm/lib.js (the "public" import path) to your-pkg/dist/esm/lib.js (the "private" file system path):

    {
      "name": "your-pkg",
      "exports": {
        "./esm/*": "./dist/esm/*",
        "./cjs/*": "./dist/cjs/*"
      }
    }

    Another way to use this feature is to have conditional imports where the same import path can mean different things in different situations. For example, this would remap require('your-pkg') to your-pkg/required.cjs and import 'your-pkg' to your-pkg/imported.mjs:

    {
      "name": "your-pkg",
      "exports": {
        "import": "./imported.mjs",
        "require": "./required.cjs"
      }
    }

    There is built-in support for the import and require conditions depending on the kind of import and the browser and node conditions depending on the current platform. In addition, the default condition always applies regardless of the current configuration settings and can be used as a catch-all fallback condition.

    Note that when you use conditions, your package may end up in the bundle multiple times! This is a subtle issue that can cause bugs due to duplicate copies of your code's state in addition to bloating the resulting bundle. This is commonly known as the dual package hazard. The primary way of avoiding this is to put all of your code in the require condition and have the import condition just be a light wrapper that calls require on your package and re-exports the package using ESM syntax.

    There is also support for custom conditions with the --conditions= flag. The meaning of these is entirely up to package authors. For example, you could imagine a package that requires you to configure --conditions=test,en-US. Node has currently only endorsed the development and production custom conditions for recommended use.

  • Remove the esbuild.startService() API

    Due to #656, Calling service.stop() no longer does anything, so there is no longer a strong reason for keeping the esbuild.startService() API around. The primary thing it currently does is just make the API more complicated and harder to use. You can now just call esbuild.build() and esbuild.transform() directly instead of calling esbuild.startService().then(service => service.build()) or esbuild.startService().then(service => service.transform()).

    If you are using esbuild in the browser, you now need to call esbuild.initialize({ wasmURL }) and wait for the returned promise before calling esbuild.transform(). It takes the same options that esbuild.startService() used to take. Note that the esbuild.buildSync() and esbuild.transformSync() APIs still exist when using esbuild in node. Nothing has changed about the synchronous esbuild APIs.

  • Remove the metafile from outputFiles (#633)

    Previously using metafile with the API is unnecessarily cumbersome because you have to extract the JSON metadata from the output file yourself instead of it just being provided to you as a return value. This is especially a bummer if you are using write: false because then you need to use a for loop over the output files and do string comparisons with the file paths to try to find the one corresponding to the metafile. Returning the metadata directly is an important UX improvement for the API. It means you can now do this:

    const result = await esbuild.build({
      entryPoints: ['entry.js'],

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from github.com/evanw/esbuild's changelog.

0.9.0

This release contains backwards-incompatible changes. Since esbuild is before version 1.0.0, these changes have been released as a new minor version to reflect this (as recommended by npm). You should either be pinning the exact version of esbuild in your package.json file or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as ^0.8.0. See the documentation about semver for more information.

  • Add support for node's exports field in package.json files (#187)

    This feature was recently added to node. It allows you to rewrite what import paths inside your package map to as well as to prevent people from importing certain files in your package. Adding support for this to esbuild is a breaking change (i.e. code that was working fine before can easily stop working) so adding support for it has been delayed until this breaking change release.

    One way to use this feature is to remap import paths for your package. For example, this would remap an import of your-pkg/esm/lib.js (the "public" import path) to your-pkg/dist/esm/lib.js (the "private" file system path):

    {
      "name": "your-pkg",
      "exports": {
        "./esm/*": "./dist/esm/*",
        "./cjs/*": "./dist/cjs/*"
      }
    }

    Another way to use this feature is to have conditional imports where the same import path can mean different things in different situations. For example, this would remap require('your-pkg') to your-pkg/required.cjs and import 'your-pkg' to your-pkg/imported.mjs:

    {
      "name": "your-pkg",
      "exports": {
        "import": "./imported.mjs",
        "require": "./required.cjs"
      }
    }

    There is built-in support for the import and require conditions depending on the kind of import and the browser and node conditions depending on the current platform. In addition, the default condition always applies regardless of the current configuration settings and can be used as a catch-all fallback condition.

    Note that when you use conditions, your package may end up in the bundle multiple times! This is a subtle issue that can cause bugs due to duplicate copies of your code's state in addition to bloating the resulting bundle. This is commonly known as the dual package hazard. The primary way of avoiding this is to put all of your code in the require condition and have the import condition just be a light wrapper that calls require on your package and re-exports the package using ESM syntax.

    There is also support for custom conditions with the --conditions= flag. The meaning of these is entirely up to package authors. For example, you could imagine a package that requires you to configure --conditions=test,en-US. Node has currently only endorsed the development and production custom conditions for recommended use.

  • Remove the esbuild.startService() API

    Due to #656, Calling service.stop() no longer does anything, so there is no longer a strong reason for keeping the esbuild.startService() API around. The primary thing it currently does is just make the API more complicated and harder to use. You can now just call esbuild.build() and esbuild.transform() directly instead of calling esbuild.startService().then(service => service.build()) or esbuild.startService().then(service => service.transform()).

    If you are using esbuild in the browser, you now need to call esbuild.initialize({ wasmURL }) and wait for the returned promise before calling esbuild.transform(). It takes the same options that esbuild.startService() used to take. Note that the esbuild.buildSync() and esbuild.transformSync() APIs still exist when using esbuild in node. Nothing has changed about the synchronous esbuild APIs.

  • Remove the metafile from outputFiles (#633)

    Previously using metafile with the API is unnecessarily cumbersome because you have to extract the JSON metadata from the output file yourself instead of it just being provided to you as a return value. This is especially a bummer if you are using write: false because then you need to use a for loop over the output files and do string comparisons with the file paths to try to find the one corresponding to the metafile. Returning the metadata directly is an important UX improvement for the API. It means you can now do this:

    const result = await esbuild.build({

... (truncated)

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@dependabot dependabot bot added the dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file label Mar 12, 2021
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dependabot bot commented on behalf of github Mar 15, 2021

Superseded by #6.

@dependabot dependabot bot closed this Mar 15, 2021
@dependabot dependabot bot deleted the dependabot/go_modules/github.com/evanw/esbuild-0.9.0 branch March 15, 2021 09:11
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