Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Damien Elmes
a3d9f90af5 update to latest rules_nodejs & switch to ts_project
ts_library() is deprecated and will presumably be dropped from a
future rules_nodejs, and it wasn't working with the jest tests
after updating, so we switch over to ts_project().

There are some downsides:

- It's a bit slower, as the worker mode doesn't appear to function
at the moment.
- Getting it working with a mix of source files and generated files
was quite tricky, especially as things behave differently on Windows,
and differently when editing with VS Code. Solved with a small patch
to the rules, and a wrapper script that copies everything into the
bin folder first. To keep VS Code working correctly as well, the built
files are symlinked into the source folder.
- TS libraries are not implicitly linked to node_modules, so they
can't be imported with an absolute name like "lib/proto" - we need
to use relative paths like "../lib/proto" instead. Adjusting "paths"
in tsconfig.json makes it work for TS compilation, but then it fails
at the esbuild stage. We could resolve it by wrapping the TS
libraries in a subsequent js_library() call, but that has the downside
of losing the transient dependencies, meaning they need to be listed
again.  Alternatively we might be able to solve it in the future by
adjusting esbuild, but for now the paths have been made relative to
keep things simple.

Upsides:

- Along with updates to the Svelte tooling, Svelte typing has improved.
All exports made in a Svelte file are now visible to other files that
import them, and we no longer rebuild the Svelte files when TS files
are updated, as the Svelte files do no type checking themselves, and
are just a simple transpilation. Svelte-check now works on Windows again,
and there should be no errors when editing in VS Code after you've
built the project. The only downside seems to be that cmd+clicking
on a Svelte imports jumps to the .d.ts file instead of the original now;
presumably they'll fix that in a future plugin update.
- Each subfolder now has its own tsconfig.json, and tsc can be called
directly for testing purposes (but beware it will place build products
in the source tree): ts/node_modules/.bin/tsc -b ts
- We can drop the custom esbuild_toolchain, as it's included in the
latest rules_nodejs.

Other changes:

- "image_module_support" is moved into lib/, and imported with
<reference types=...>
- Images are now imported directly from their npm package; the
extra copy step has been removed.

Windows users may need to use "bazel clean" before building this,
due to old files lying around in the build folder.
2021-10-01 12:52:53 +10:00
Damien Elmes
13d415f8e3 move esbuild into separate repo
Most of our changes have been upstreamed, but the toolchain change
probably won't be merged soon, and a separate git repo will make it
easier to track upstream changes.

@hgiesel output_css=True will need to be changed to output_css="foo.css"
instead
2021-04-15 10:53:49 +10:00
Damien Elmes
c1c14419a2 switch esbuild to a toolchain 2021-04-07 15:19:23 +10:00
Damien Elmes
dbe5d43ba0 bundle all Svelte css into separate file
- svelte compilation outputs a separate .css file for each component
- compilation also adds an "import foo.css" to the top of each generated
.mjs file
- when the .mjs files are bundled into app.js, esbuild creates an app.css
as well
- graphs.scss was renamed to graphs_shared.scss and imported in the
top level GraphsPage. Henrik's style refactoring would be a better path
forward, but I needed to make this change for now, as the filenames were
conflicting.
2021-03-21 16:06:36 +10:00
Damien Elmes
a581c082f6 switch from rollup to esbuild
brings the 2+ second bundle on a module like the graphs down to 90ms
2021-03-21 16:06:36 +10:00