Webpack loader that loads browser tailored manifest.json. It also imports all importable properties, allowing you to have 'manifest.json' as your only webpack entry point.
Use it together with inert-entry-webpack-plugin, spawn-loader, and maybe html-loader, more info below.
To begin, you'll need to install webextension-manifest-loader:
npm install --save-dev webextension-manifest-loader
Then add the loader to your webpack config. For example:
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
// Prevent json-loader from loading the file
type: 'javascript/auto',
test: /manifest\.json$/,
use: [
// webextension-manifest-loader returns a function for importing in a .js file,
// convert it to a plain string and resolve imports using extract-loader
'extract-loader',
{
loader: 'webextension-manifest-loader',
options: {
// Use the environment variable TARGET_VENDOR as the target vendor
targetVendor: process.env.TARGET_VENDOR,
// Merge some properties into the finished manifest.json
merge: {
// This could easily come from an import of your package.json
version: '1.3.0',
},
},
},
],
},
],
},
};
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
targetVendor |
string |
undefined |
Specify the target vendor, should be one of firefox ,chrome ,edge ,opera |
merge |
Object |
{} |
Allows merging properties into the finished manifest.json |
See jsmnbom/ao3-enhancements (manifest.json, webpack.config.ts) for a fully featured example of using this loader together with typescript, vue (+vuetify) and pug.
Make sure you're using inert-entry-webpack-plugin, otherwise webpack will try to output manifest.json as a javascript file, and that will obviously fail!
module.exports = {
entry: {
manifest: './manifest.json',
},
module: {
rules: [
{
// Prevent json-loader from loading the file
type: 'javascript/auto',
test: /manifest\.json$/,
use: [
// webextension-manifest-loader returns a function for importing in a .js file,
// convert it to a plain string and resolve imports using extract-loader
'extract-loader',
{
loader: 'webextension-manifest-loader',
options: {
// Use the environment variable TARGET_VENDOR as the target vendor
targetVendor: process.env.TARGET_VENDOR,
// Merge some properties into the finished manifest.json
merge: {
// This could easily come from an import of your package.json
version: '1.3.0',
},
},
},
],
},
{
test: /\.html$/,
use: [
'file-loader?name=[path][name].html',
'extract-loader',
'html-loader',
],
},
],
},
plugins: [new InertEntryPlugin()],
};
Now you'll be able to specify vendors in your manifest.json keys and to import files.
{
"manifest_version": 2,
"version": "",
"__firefox_icons__": {
"48": "./icon.svg",
"96": "./icon.svg"
},
"__chrome_icons__": {
"48": "./icon-48.png",
"96": "./icon-96.png"
},
"options_ui": {
"page": "~spawn-loader?name=options_ui/index.html!./options_ui/index.html",
"__firefox_browser_style__": false,
"__chrome_chrome_style__": false
},
"content_scripts": [
{
"matches": [...],
"__firefox_js__": [
"~spawn-loader?name=content_script/index.js!./content_script/index.js"
],
"__chrome_js__": [
"~file-loader?name=[name].[ext]!webextension-polyfill/dist/browser-polyfill.min.js",
"~spawn-loader?name=content_script/index.js!./content_script/index.js"
],
"css": ["./content_script/style.css"]
}
]
}
Here we import .svg
if compiling for firefox, but .png
s if compiling for chrome since chrome doesn't support svgs in the icons property. We also add the webextension-polyfill on chrome but not on firefox as it's not needed there.
Use a loader like spawn-loader to add a new entry point. Remember to add a tilde in front of the loader or it will be resolved as a relative path.
Here's the output of the above configuration when run through webpack.
And because we are using html-loader which can also resolve imports in <script>
tags, again using spawn-loader we could include javascript files in our options_ui/index.html
.
{
"manifest_version": 2,
"version": "0.3.0",
"icons": {
"48": "/icon-48.png",
"96": "/icon-96.png"
},
"options_ui": {
"page": "/options_ui/index.html",
"chrome_style": false,
"open_in_tab": true
},
"content_scripts": [
{
"matches": [...],
"js": [
"/browser-polyfill.min.js",
"/content_script/index.js"
],
"css": [
"/content_script/style.css"
],
"run_at": "document_start"
}
],
}
All properties can use the target vendor feature, but only some properties will be resolved by webpack. These are currently: (if you need more please open an issue or PR)
Please see the src/interfaces.ts -> Manifest interface for these currently supported properties.
- Does not resolve imports in localizable property values (ones starting with __MSG_).
- Does not work with webpack's [hash], this should be okay as it's not really needed for webextensions.
- Webpack doesn't display progress for child compilers (like spawn-loader) correctly.
I wrote this loader mostly as a challange to myself to see if it could be done. It is heavily inspired by wext-manifest-loader, and uses parts from html-loader for the import mechanism.