This project is deprecated in favor of official Webpack plugin webpack-contrib/closure-webpack-plugin
Google Closure Compiler plugin for Webpack
Closure Compiler is the most advanced JavaScript optimization tool. It generates smallest bundle and emits efficient JavaScript code by doing whole program analysis and optimization, removing closures and inlining function calls, as well as tree-shaking for AMD, CommonJS and ES2015 modules.
npm i -D webpack-closure-compiler
While there's JavaScript version of Closure Compiler, the original compiler is written in Java and thus Java version is more complete and performs better in terms of JavaScript code optimizations and compilation speed. If you want to use Java-based compiler, make sure you have installed Java SDK.
A hash of options to pass to google-closure-compiler.
You can optionally specify a path to your own version of the compiler.jar if the version provided by the plugin isn't working for you. See example below for optional parameter.
Use pure JavaScript version of Closure Compiler (no Java dependency). Note that compilation time will be around 2x slower. Default is false
. concurrency
and jsCompiler
options are mutually exclusive.
The maximum number of compiler instances to run in parallel, defaults to 1
. concurrency
and jsCompiler
options are mutually exclusive.
Process only files which filename satisfies specified RegExp, defaults to /\.js($|\?)/i
.
const path = require('path');
const ClosureCompilerPlugin = require('webpack-closure-compiler');
module.exports = {
entry: [
path.join(__dirname, 'app.js')
],
output: {
path: path.join(__dirname, '/'),
filename: 'app.min.js'
},
plugins: [
new ClosureCompilerPlugin({
compiler: {
jar: 'path/to/your/custom/compiler.jar', //optional
language_in: 'ECMASCRIPT6',
language_out: 'ECMASCRIPT5',
compilation_level: 'ADVANCED'
},
concurrency: 3,
})
]
};
Read Closure Compiler Handbook to you understand how to use Closure Compiler and learn its features.
If you've spotted a bug, please, open an issue, and after discussion submit a pull request with a bug fix. If you would like to add a feature or change existing behaviour, open an issue and tell about what exactly you want to change/add.
MIT