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postcss-loader

A loader to process CSS using PostCSS.

Getting Started

You need webpack v5 to use the latest version. For Webpack v4, you have to install postcss-loader v4.

To begin, you'll need to install postcss-loader and postcss:

npm install --save-dev postcss-loader postcss

or

yarn add -D postcss-loader postcss

or

pnpm add -D postcss-loader postcss

Then add the loader to your webpack configuration. For example:

In the following configuration the plugin postcss-preset-env is used, which is not installed by default.

file.js

import css from "file.css";

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          "css-loader",
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: {
              postcssOptions: {
                plugins: [
                  [
                    "postcss-preset-env",
                    {
                      // Options
                    },
                  ],
                ],
              },
            },
          },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

Alternative use with config files:

postcss.config.js

module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    [
      "postcss-preset-env",
      {
        // Options
      },
    ],
  ],
};

The loader automatically searches for configuration files.

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: ["style-loader", "css-loader", "postcss-loader"],
      },
    ],
  },
};

Finally, run webpack using the method you normally use (e.g., via CLI or an npm script).

Options

execute

Type:

type execute = boolean;

Default: undefined

Enable PostCSS parser support for CSS-in-JS. If you use JS styles the postcss-js parser, add the execute option.

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.style.js$/,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          {
            loader: "css-loader",
          },
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: {
              postcssOptions: {
                parser: "postcss-js",
              },
              execute: true,
            },
          },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

postcssOptions

See the file ./src/config.d.ts.

Type:

import type { Config as PostCSSConfig } from "postcss-load-config";
import type { LoaderContext } from "webpack";

type PostCSSLoaderContext = LoaderContext<PostCSSConfig>;

interface PostCSSLoaderAPI {
  mode: PostCSSLoaderContext["mode"];
  file: PostCSSLoaderContext["resourcePath"];
  webpackLoaderContext: PostCSSLoaderContext;
  env: PostCSSLoaderContext["mode"];
  options: PostCSSConfig;
}

export type PostCSSLoaderOptions =
  | PostCSSConfig
  | ((api: PostCSSLoaderAPI) => PostCSSConfig);

Default: undefined

Allows you to set PostCSS options and plugins.

All PostCSS options are supported. There is the special config option for config files. How it works and how it can be configured is described below.

We recommend do not specify from, to and map options, because this can lead to wrong path in source maps. If you need source maps please use the sourcemap option instead.

For large projects, to optimize performance of the loader, it is better to provide postcssOptions in loader config and specify config: false. This approach removes the need to lookup and load external config files multiple times during compilation.

object

Setup plugins:

webpack.config.js (recommended)

const myOtherPostcssPlugin = require("postcss-my-plugin");

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.sss$/i,
        loader: "postcss-loader",
        options: {
          postcssOptions: {
            plugins: [
              "postcss-import",
              ["postcss-short", { prefix: "x" }],
              require.resolve("my-postcss-plugin"),
              myOtherPostcssPlugin({ myOption: true }),
              // Deprecated and will be removed in the next major release
              { "postcss-nested": { preserveEmpty: true } },
            ],
          },
        },
      },
    ],
  },
};

webpack.config.js (deprecated, will be removed in the next major release)

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.sss$/i,
        loader: "postcss-loader",
        options: {
          postcssOptions: {
            plugins: {
              "postcss-import": {},
              "postcss-short": { prefix: "x" },
            },
          },
        },
      },
    ],
  },
};

Setup syntax:

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.sss$/i,
        loader: "postcss-loader",
        options: {
          postcssOptions: {
            // Can be `string`
            syntax: "sugarss",
            // Can be `object`
            syntax: require("sugarss"),
          },
        },
      },
    ],
  },
};

Setup parser:

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.sss$/i,
        loader: "postcss-loader",
        options: {
          postcssOptions: {
            // Can be `string`
            parser: "sugarss",
            // Can be `object`
            parser: require("sugarss"),
            // Can be `function`
            parser: require("sugarss").parse,
          },
        },
      },
    ],
  },
};

Setup stringifier:

webpack.config.js

const Midas = require("midas");
const midas = new Midas();

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.sss$/i,
        loader: "postcss-loader",
        options: {
          postcssOptions: {
            // Can be `string`
            stringifier: "sugarss",
            // Can be `object`
            stringifier: require("sugarss"),
            // Can be `function`
            stringifier: midas.stringifier,
          },
        },
      },
    ],
  },
};

function

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.(css|sss)$/i,
        loader: "postcss-loader",
        options: {
          postcssOptions: (loaderContext) => {
            if (/\.sss$/.test(loaderContext.resourcePath)) {
              return {
                parser: "sugarss",
                plugins: [
                  ["postcss-short", { prefix: "x" }],
                  "postcss-preset-env",
                ],
              };
            }

            return {
              plugins: [
                ["postcss-short", { prefix: "x" }],
                "postcss-preset-env",
              ],
            };
          },
        },
      },
    ],
  },
};

config

Type:

type config = boolean | string;

Default: true

Allows you to set options using config files. Options specified in the config file are combined with options passed to the loader, the loader options overwrite options from config.

Config Files

The loader will search up the directory tree for configuration in the following places:

  • A postcss property in package.json
  • A .postcssrc file in JSON or YAML format
  • A .postcssrc.json, .postcssrc.yaml, .postcssrc.yml, .postcssrc.js, or .postcssrc.cjs file
  • A postcss.config.js or postcss.config.cjs CommonJS module exporting an object (recommended)
Examples of Config Files

Using object notation:

postcss.config.js (recommend)

module.exports = {
  // You can specify any options from https://postcss.org/api/#processoptions here
  // parser: 'sugarss',
  plugins: [
    // Plugins for PostCSS
    ["postcss-short", { prefix: "x" }],
    "postcss-preset-env",
  ],
};

Using function notation:

postcss.config.js (recommend)

module.exports = (api) => {
  // `api.file` - path to the file
  // `api.mode` - `mode` value of webpack, please read https://webpack.js.org/configuration/mode/
  // `api.webpackLoaderContext` - loader context for complex use cases
  // `api.env` - alias `api.mode` for compatibility with `postcss-cli`
  // `api.options` - the `postcssOptions` options

  if (/\.sss$/.test(api.file)) {
    return {
      // You can specify any options from https://postcss.org/api/#processoptions here
      parser: "sugarss",
      plugins: [
        // Plugins for PostCSS
        ["postcss-short", { prefix: "x" }],
        "postcss-preset-env",
      ],
    };
  }

  return {
    // You can specify any options from https://postcss.org/api/#processoptions here
    plugins: [
      // Plugins for PostCSS
      ["postcss-short", { prefix: "x" }],
      "postcss-preset-env",
    ],
  };
};

postcss.config.js (deprecated, will be removed in the next major release)

module.exports = {
  // You can specify any options from https://postcss.org/api/#processoptions here
  // parser: 'sugarss',
  plugins: {
    // Plugins for PostCSS
    "postcss-short": { prefix: "x" },
    "postcss-preset-env": {},
  },
};
Config Cascade

You can use different postcss.config.js files in different directories. Config lookup starts from path.dirname(file) and walks the file tree upwards until a config file is found.

|– components
| |– component
| | |– index.js
| | |– index.png
| | |– style.css (1)
| | |– postcss.config.js (1)
| |– component
| | |– index.js
| | |– image.png
| | |– style.css (2)
|
|– postcss.config.js (1 && 2 (recommended))
|– webpack.config.js
|
|– package.json

After setting up your postcss.config.js, add postcss-loader to your webpack.config.js. You can use it standalone or in conjunction with css-loader (recommended).

Use postcss-loader before css-loader and style-loader, but after other preprocessor loaders like e.g sass|less|stylus-loader, if you use any (since webpack loaders evaluate right to left/bottom to top).

webpack.config.js (recommended)

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          {
            loader: "css-loader",
            options: {
              importLoaders: 1,
            },
          },
          "postcss-loader",
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

boolean

Enables/Disables autoloading config.

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        loader: "postcss-loader",
        options: {
          postcssOptions: {
            config: false,
          },
        },
      },
    ],
  },
};

String

Allows to specify the path to the config file.

webpack.config.js

const path = require("path");

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        loader: "postcss-loader",
        options: {
          postcssOptions: {
            config: path.resolve(__dirname, "custom.config.js"),
          },
        },
      },
    ],
  },
};

sourceMap

Type:

type sourceMap = boolean;

Default: depends on the compiler.devtool value

By default generation of source maps depends on the devtool option. All values enable source map generation except eval and false value.

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          { loader: "style-loader" },
          { loader: "css-loader", options: { sourceMap: true } },
          { loader: "postcss-loader", options: { sourceMap: true } },
          { loader: "sass-loader", options: { sourceMap: true } },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

Alternative setup:

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  devtool: "source-map",
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          { loader: "style-loader" },
          { loader: "css-loader" },
          { loader: "postcss-loader" },
          { loader: "sass-loader" },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

implementation

Type:

type implementation = object;

type of implementation should be the same as postcss.d.ts

Default: postcss

The special implementation option determines which implementation of PostCSS to use. Overrides the locally installed peerDependency version of postcss.

This option is only really useful for downstream tooling authors to ease the PostCSS 7-to-8 transition.

function

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          { loader: "style-loader" },
          { loader: "css-loader" },
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: { implementation: require("postcss") },
          },
          { loader: "sass-loader" },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

String

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          { loader: "style-loader" },
          { loader: "css-loader" },
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: { implementation: require.resolve("postcss") },
          },
          { loader: "sass-loader" },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

Examples

SugarSS

SugarSS is a whitespace-based syntax for PostCSS.

You'll need to install sugarss:

npm install --save-dev sugarss

Using SugarSS syntax.

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.sss$/i,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          {
            loader: "css-loader",
            options: { importLoaders: 1 },
          },
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: {
              postcssOptions: {
                parser: "sugarss",
              },
            },
          },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

Autoprefixer

You'll need to install autoprefixer:

npm install --save-dev autoprefixer

Automatically add vendor prefixes to CSS rules using autoprefixer.

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          {
            loader: "css-loader",
            options: { importLoaders: 1 },
          },
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: {
              postcssOptions: {
                plugins: [
                  [
                    "autoprefixer",
                    {
                      // Autoprefixer options (optional)
                    },
                  ],
                ],
              },
            },
          },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

Warning

postcss-preset-env includes autoprefixer, so adding it separately is not necessary if you already use the preset. More information

PostCSS Preset Env

You'll need to install postcss-preset-env:

npm install --save-dev postcss-preset-env

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          {
            loader: "css-loader",
            options: { importLoaders: 1 },
          },
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: {
              postcssOptions: {
                plugins: [
                  [
                    "postcss-preset-env",
                    {
                      // Options
                    },
                  ],
                ],
              },
            },
          },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

CSS Modules

What are CSS Modules? Please read here.

No additional options required on the postcss-loader side to support CSS Modules. To make them work properly, either add the css-loader’s importLoaders option.

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          {
            loader: "css-loader",
            options: {
              modules: true,
              importLoaders: 1,
            },
          },
          "postcss-loader",
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

CSS-in-JS and postcss-js

To process styles written in JavaScript, you can use postcss-js as the parser.

You'll need to install postcss-js:

npm install --save-dev postcss-js

If you want to process styles written in JavaScript, use the postcss-js parser.

webpack.config.js

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.style.js$/,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          {
            loader: "css-loader",
            options: {
              importLoaders: 2,
            },
          },
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: {
              postcssOptions: {
                parser: "postcss-js",
              },
              execute: true,
            },
          },
          "babel-loader",
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

As result you will be able to write styles in the following way:

import colors from "./styles/colors";

export default {
  ".menu": {
    color: colors.main,
    height: 25,
    "&_link": {
      color: "white",
    },
  },
};

Warning

If you are using Babel you need to do the following in order for the setup to work

  1. Add babel-plugin-add-module-exports to your configuration.
  2. You need to have only one default export per style module.

Extract CSS

To extract CSS into separate files, use mini-css-extract-plugin.

webpack.config.js

const isProductionMode = process.env.NODE_ENV === "production";

const MiniCssExtractPlugin = require("mini-css-extract-plugin");

module.exports = {
  mode: isProductionMode ? "production" : "development",
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/,
        use: [
          isProductionMode ? MiniCssExtractPlugin.loader : "style-loader",
          "css-loader",
          "postcss-loader",
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
  plugins: [
    new MiniCssExtractPlugin({
      filename: isProductionMode ? "[name].[contenthash].css" : "[name].css",
    }),
  ],
};

💡 Use this setup to extract and cache CSS in production while keeping fast style injection during development.

Emit assets

To emit an asset from PostCSS plugin to the webpack, need to add a message in result.messages.

The message should contain the following fields:

  • type = asset - Message type (require, should be equal asset)
  • file - file name (require)
  • content - file content (require)
  • sourceMap - sourceMap
  • info - asset info

webpack.config.js

const postcssCustomPlugin = (opts = {}) => {
  return {
    postcssPlugin: "postcss-custom-plugin",
    Once: (root, { result }) => {
      result.messages.push({
        type: "asset",
        file: "sprite.svg",
        content: "<svg>...</svg>",
      });
    },
  };
};

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          "css-loader",
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: {
              postcssOptions: {
                plugins: [postcssCustomPlugin()],
              },
            },
          },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

ℹ️ This allows your plugin to generate additional files as part of the build process, and Webpack will handle them like any other emitted asset.

Add dependencies, contextDependencies, buildDependencies, missingDependencies

The dependencies are necessary for webpack to understand when it needs to run recompilation on the changed files.

There are two way to add dependencies:

  1. (Recommended). The plugin may emit messages in result.messages.

The message should contain the following fields:

  • type = dependency - Message type (require, should be equal dependency, context-dependency, build-dependency or missing-dependency)
  • file - absolute file path (require)

webpack.config.js

const path = require("path");

const postcssCustomPlugin = (opts = {}) => {
  return {
    postcssPlugin: "postcss-custom-plugin",
    Once: (root, { result }) => {
      result.messages.push({
        type: "dependency",
        file: path.resolve(__dirname, "path", "to", "file"),
      });
    },
  };
};

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          "css-loader",
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: {
              postcssOptions: {
                plugins: [postcssCustomPlugin()],
              },
            },
          },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

💡 You can use ready-made plugin postcss-add-dependencies to simplify this process.

  1. Pass loaderContext in plugin (for advanced setups).

webpack.config.js

const path = require("path");

module.exports = {
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.css$/i,
        use: [
          "style-loader",
          "css-loader",
          {
            loader: "postcss-loader",
            options: {
              postcssOptions: {
                config: path.resolve(__dirname, "path/to/postcss.config.js"),
              },
            },
          },
        ],
      },
    ],
  },
};

⚠️ Use this approach only when managing dependencies via custom PostCSS configurations with dynamic imports or external files.

postcss.config.js

Pass the webpackLoaderContext through the PostCSS api object:

module.exports = (api) => ({
  plugins: [
    require("path/to/postcssCustomPlugin.js")({
      loaderContext: api.webpackLoaderContext,
    }),
  ],
});

postcssCustomPlugin.js

Register a file dependency using loaderContext.addDependency:

const path = require("path");

const postcssCustomPlugin = (opts = {}) => {
  return {
    postcssPlugin: "postcss-custom-plugin",
    Once: (root, { result }) => {
      opts.loaderContext.addDependency(
        path.resolve(__dirname, "path", "to", "file"),
      );
    },
  };
};

postcssCustomPlugin.postcss = true;
module.exports = postcssCustomPlugin;

✅ This method is ideal when you want to dynamically declare dependencies without relying on result.messages, especially in more complex setups or shared plugin configurations.

Contributing

We welcome all contributions! If you're new here, please take a moment to review our contributing guidelines before submitting issues or pull requests.

CONTRIBUTING

License

MIT