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Fix browser bundle for AMD (#8374)
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* Fix browser bundle for AMD

* Final fix for standalone browser build.

Much more scientific than the rest so it should stick.

* Throw when we can't find code we need to replace.
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zpao authored and sophiebits committed Nov 23, 2016
1 parent 6beb87e commit a3ba48b
Showing 1 changed file with 27 additions and 8 deletions.
35 changes: 27 additions & 8 deletions grunt/config/browserify.js
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -63,27 +63,46 @@ function simpleBannerify(src) {
}

// What is happening here???
// I'm glad you asked. It became really to make our bundle splitting work.
// I'm glad you asked. It became really hard to make our bundle splitting work.
// Everything is fine in node and when bundling with those packages, but when
// using our pre-packaged files, the splitting didn't work. Specifically due to
// the UMD wrappers defining their own require and creating their own encapsulated
// "registry" scope, we couldn't require across the boundaries. Webpack tries to
// be smart and looks for top-level requires (even when aliasing to a bundle),
// but since we didn't have those, we couldn't require 'react' from 'react-dom'.
// But we are already shimming in some modules that look for a global React
// variable. So we write a wrapper around the UMD bundle that browserify creates,
// and define a React variable that will require across Webpack-boundaries or fall
// back to the global, just like it would previously.
// variable. So we replace the UMD wrapper that browserify creates with out own,
// in 2 steps.
// 1. We swap out the browserify UMD with a plain function call. This ensures
// that the internal wrapper doesn't interact with the external state. By the
// time we're in the internal wrapper it doesn't matter what the external wrapper
// detected. Browserify insulates its CommonJS system inside closures so can just
// call that function and return it.
// 2. We put our own UMD wrapper around that fixed internal function, ensuring
// React is in scope. This outer wrapper is essentially the same UMD wrapper
// browserify would create, just handling the scope issue.
// Is this insane? Yes.
// Does it work? Yes.
// Should it go away ASAP? Yes.
function wrapperify(src) {
var toReplace =
`function(f){if(typeof exports==="object"&&typeof module!=="undefined"){module.exports=f()}else if(typeof define==="function"&&define.amd){define([],f)}else{var g;if(typeof window!=="undefined"){g=window}else if(typeof global!=="undefined"){g=global}else if(typeof self!=="undefined"){g=self}else{g=this}g.${this.data.standalone} = f()}}`;
if (src.indexOf(toReplace) === -1) {
throw new Error('wrapperify failed to find code to replace');
}
src = src.replace(
toReplace,
`function(f){return f()}`
);
return `
;(function(f) {
// CommonJS
if (typeof exports === "object" && typeof module !== "undefined") {
f(require('react'));
module.exports = f(require('react'));
// RequireJS
} else if (typeof define === "function" && define.amd) {
require(['react'], f);
define(['react'], f);
// <script>
} else {
Expand All @@ -100,10 +119,10 @@ function wrapperify(src) {
// see https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/3037
g = this;
}
f(g.React)
g.${this.data.standalone} = f(g.React);
}
})(function(React) {
${src}
return ${src}
});
`;
}
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