You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
I'm using code splitting / lazy loading of components that are partly split based on which page you are at. However if I deploy a new version all the hashes changes and the old files are gone using this module. So then changing page just gives a 404 error when it requests that's page js.
But the import command itself doesn't seem to be try-catchable, even when done it still breaks the page.
What is the expected behavior?
Some way to keep old files for a defined time.
What is motivation or use case for adding/changing the behavior?
Sites not being broken during new deployments
How should this be implemented in your opinion?
Allow an option to only delete files after x amount of days. So it can for example only delete files that haven't changed for 30 days.
For now I have to stop using this plugin :'(
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Feature request
I'm using code splitting / lazy loading of components that are partly split based on which page you are at. However if I deploy a new version all the hashes changes and the old files are gone using this module. So then changing page just gives a 404 error when it requests that's page js.
https://webpack.js.org/guides/code-splitting/
I have tried webpack standard splitting:
And
loadable/component
But the
import
command itself doesn't seem to be try-catchable, even when done it still breaks the page.What is the expected behavior?
Some way to keep old files for a defined time.
What is motivation or use case for adding/changing the behavior?
Sites not being broken during new deployments
How should this be implemented in your opinion?
Allow an option to only delete files after x amount of days. So it can for example only delete files that haven't changed for 30 days.
For now I have to stop using this plugin :'(
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: