Webpack 5 implements long-term caching through deterministic Chunk IDs, module IDs, and export IDs, which means that the same input will always produce the same output. In this way, when your users visit the updated website again, the browser can reuse the old cache instead of re-downloading all resources.
// webpack.config.js module.exports = { // ... output: { // Use contenthash to ensure that the file name is associated with the content filename: '[name].[contenthash].js', chunkFilename: '[name].[contenthash].chunk.js', // Configure the asset hash to ensure long-term caching assetModuleFilename: '[name].[contenthash][ext][query]', // Use file system cache cache: { type: 'filesystem', }, }, // ... };
Webpack 5 enhances the efficiency of Tree Shaking, especially the support for ESM.
// package.json { "sideEffects": false, // Tell Webpack that this package has no side effects and can safely remove unreferenced code } // library.js export function myLibraryFunction() { // ... } // main.js import { myLibraryFunction } from './library.js';
The concatenateModules option of Webpack 5 can combine small modules to reduce the number of HTTP requests. However, this feature may increase memory consumption, so it is necessary to use it with a trade-off:
// webpack.config.js module.exports = { // ... optimization: { concatenateModules: true, // Defaults to true, but may need to be turned off in some cases }, // ... };
Webpack 5 no longer automatically injects polyfills for Node.js core modules. Developers need to manually import them according to the target environment:
// If you need to be compatible with older browsers, you need to manually import polyfills import 'core-js/stable'; import 'regenerator-runtime/runtime'; // Or use babel-polyfill import '@babel/polyfill';
Use cache: Configure cache.type:'filesystem' to use the file system cache to reduce repeated builds.
SplitChunks optimization: Adjust optimization.splitChunks according to project requirements, for example:
// webpack.config.js module.exports = { // ... optimization: { splitChunks: { chunks: 'all', minSize: 10000, // Adjust the appropriate size threshold maxSize: 0, // Allow code chunks of all sizes to be split }, }, // ... };
Module resolution optimization: Reduce the overhead of module resolution through resolve.mainFields and resolve.modules configurations.
Parallel compilation: Use threads-loader or worker-loader to process tasks in parallel and speed up compilation.
Code splitting: Use dynamic import (import()) to load code on demand and reduce initial loading time.
// main.js import('./dynamic-feature.js').then((dynamicFeature) => { dynamicFeature.init(); });
// webpack.config.js module.exports = { // ... experiments: { outputModule: true, // Enable output module support }, // ... };
Although Webpack 5 itself has optimized Tree shaking, developers can further improve its effect through some strategies. Make sure your code follows the following principles:
Source Map is essential for debugging, but it also increases build time and output size. You can adjust the Source Map type according to the environment:
// webpack.config.js module.exports = { // ... output: { // Use contenthash to ensure that the file name is associated with the content filename: '[name].[contenthash].js', chunkFilename: '[name].[contenthash].chunk.js', // Configure the asset hash to ensure long-term caching assetModuleFilename: '[name].[contenthash][ext][query]', // Use file system cache cache: { type: 'filesystem', }, }, // ... };
// package.json { "sideEffects": false, // Tell Webpack that this package has no side effects and can safely remove unreferenced code } // library.js export function myLibraryFunction() { // ... } // main.js import { myLibraryFunction } from './library.js';
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