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A Vite/Rollup plugin which support Module Federation. Inspired by Webpack and compatible with Webpack Module Federation.
npm install @originjs/vite-plugin-federation --save-dev
or
yarn add @originjs/vite-plugin-federation --dev
Using the Module Federation
usually requires more than 2 projects, one as the host side
and one as the remote side
.
- for a vite project, modify
vite.config.js
:
// vite.config.js
import federation from "@originjs/vite-plugin-federation";
export default {
plugins: [
federation({
name: 'remote-app',
filename: 'remoteEntry.js',
// Modules to expose
exposes: {
'./Button': './src/Button.vue',
},
shared: ['vue']
})
]
}
- for a rollup project, modify
rollup.config.js
:
// rollup.config.js
import federation from '@originjs/vite-plugin-federation'
export default {
input: 'src/index.js',
plugins: [
federation({
name: 'remote-app',
filename: 'remoteEntry.js',
// Modules to expose
exposes: {
'./Button': './src/button'.
},
shared: ['vue']
})
]
}
- for a vite project, modify
vite.config.js
:
// vite.config.js
import federation from "@originjs/vite-plugin-federation";
export default {
plugins: [
federation({
name: 'host-app',
remotes: {
remote_app: "https://localhost:5001/assets/remoteEntry.js",
},
shared: ['vue']
})
]
}
- for a rollup project, modify
rollup.config.js
:
// rollup.config.js
import federation from '@originjs/vite-plugin-federation'
export default {
input: 'src/index.js',
plugins: [
federation({
name: 'host-app',
remotes: {
remote_app: "https://localhost:5001/remoteEntry.js",
},
shared: ['vue']
})
]
}
Using a Vue project as an example
import { createApp, defineAsyncComponent } from "vue";
const app = createApp(Layout);
...
const RemoteButton = defineAsyncComponent(() => import("remote_app/Button"));
app.component("RemoteButton", RemoteButton);
app.mount("#root");
Using remote components in templates
<template>
<div>
<RemoteButton />
</div>
</template>
Examples | Host | Remote |
---|---|---|
basic-host-remote | rollup +esm |
rollup +esm |
react-in-vue | vite +esm |
vite +esm |
simple-react-esm | rollup +esm |
rollup +esm |
simple-react-systemjs | rollup +systemjs |
rollup +systemjs |
simple-react-webpack | rollup +systemjs |
webpack +systemjs |
vue2-demo | vite +esm |
vite +esm |
vue3-advanced-demo | vite +esm vue-router /pinia |
vite +esm vue-router /pinia |
vue3-demo-esm | vite +esm |
vite +esm |
vue3-demo-systemjs | vite +systemjs |
vite +systemjs |
vue3-demo-webpack-esm-esm | vite/webpack +esm |
vite/webpack +esm |
vue3-demo-webpack-esm-var | vite +esm |
webpack +var |
vue3-demo-webpack-systemjs | vite +systemjs |
webpack +systemjs |
react-vite | vite +react |
vite + react |
It is now possible to use Module Federation without the restrictions of Vite
and Webpack
! That is, you can choose to use the components exposed by vite-plugin-federation
in Webpack
or the components exposed by Webpack ModuleFederationPlugin
in Vite
. But you need to pay attention to the configuration in remotes
, for different frameworks you need to specify remotes.from
and remotes.format
to make them work better. A couple of example projects can be found here.
-
Vite
is relatively easy to use with theWebpack
component, butWebpack
is best used with thevite-plugin-federation
component using theesm
format, as the other formats lack complete test cases for now. -
It is not recommended to mix
Vite
andWebpack
inReact
projects, as there is no guarantee thatVite/Rollup
andWebpack
will generate the samechunk
when packagingcommonjs
, which may cause problems withshared
.
As Vite is built on esbuild in dev development mode, we provide separate support for dev mode to take advantage of Vite's high performance development server in the case of remote module deployment.
- Only the Host side supports dev mode, the Remote side requires the RemoteEntry.js package to be generated using
vite build
. This is because Vite Dev mode is Bundleless and you can usevite build --watch
to achieve a hot update effect.
Static import and dynamic import of components are supported, the following shows the difference between the two methods, you can see examples of dynamic import and static import in the project in examples
, here is a simple example.
- Vue
// dynamic import
const myButton = defineAsyncComponent(() => import('remote/myButton'));
app.component('my-button' , myButton);
// or
export default {
name: 'App',
components: {
myButton: () => import('remote/myButton'),
}
}
// static import
import myButton from 'remote/myButton';
app.component('my-button' , myButton);
// or
export default {
name: 'App',
components: {
myButton: myButton
}
}
- React
// dynamic import
const myButton = React.lazy(() => import('remote/myButton'))
// static import
import myButton from 'remote/myButton'
- Static imports may rely on the browser
Top-level await
feature, so you will need to set build.target in the configuration file tonext
or use the pluginvite-plugin-top-level-await
. You can see the browser compatibility of top-level await here compatibility)
Required as the module name of the remote module.
As the entry file of the remote module, not required, default is remoteEntry.js
- In most cases, the file types that the plug-in needs to process do not need to be configured, because these types are set by default.['.js', '.ts', '.jsx', '.tsx', '.mjs', '.cjs', '.vue', '.svelte'],When you customize some file types and need the
vite-plugin-federation
plugin processing, please add it to the array configuration.
- As the remote module, the list of components exposed to the public, required for the remote module.
exposes: {
// 'externally exposed component name': 'externally exposed component address'
'./remote-simple-button': './src/components/Button.vue',
'./remote-simple-section': './src/components/Section.vue'
},
- If you need a more complex configuration
exposes: {
'./remote-simple-button': {
import: './src/components/Button.vue',
name: 'customChunkName',
dontAppendStylesToHead: true
},
},
The import
property is the address of the module. If you need to specify a custom chunk name for the module use the name
property.
The dontAppendStylesToHead
property is used if you don't want the plugin to automatically append all styles of the exposed component to the <head>
element, which is the default behavior. It's useful if your component uses a ShadowDOM and the global styles wouldn't affect it anyway. The plugin will then expose the addresses of the CSS files in the global window
object, so that your exposed component can append the styles inside the ShadowDOM itself. The key under the window
object used for styles will be css__{name_of_the_app}__{key_of_the_exposed_component}
. In the above example it would be css__App__./remote-simple-button
, assuming that the global name
option (not the one under exposed component configuration) is App
. The value under this key is an array of strings, which contains the addresses of CSS files. In your exposed component you can iterate over this array and manually create <link>
elements with href
attribute set to the elements of the array like this:
const styleContainer = document.createElement("div");
const hrefs = window["css__App__./remote-simple-button"];
hrefs.forEach((href: string) => {
const link = document.createElement('link')
link.href = href
link.rel = 'stylesheet'
styleContainer.appendChild(link);
});
The remote module entry file referenced as a local module
- remote module address, e.g. https://localhost:5011/remoteEntry.js
- You can simply configure it as follows
remotes: {
// 'remote module name': 'remote module entry file address'
'remote-simple': 'https://localhost:5011/remoteEntry.js',
}
- Or do a slightly more complex configuration, if you need to use other fields
remotes: {
remote-simple: {
external: 'https://localhost:5011/remoteEntry.js',
format: 'var',
}
}
default: 'url'
- Set the type of external. If you want to use a dynamic url address, you can set the
external
aspromise
, but please note that you need to set theexternalType
as 'promise' at the same time, and please ensure that the code of thepromise
part is correct, otherwise the package may fail,here is a simple example.
remotes: {
home: {
external: `Promise.resolve('your url')`,
externalType: 'promise'
},
},
// or from networke
remotes: {
remote-simple: {
external: `fetch('your url').then(response=>response.json()).then(data=>data.url)`,
externalType: 'promise'
}
}
default:'esm'
- Specify the format of the remote component, this is more effective when the host and the remote use different packaging formats, for example the host uses vite + esm and the remote uses webpack + var, in which case you need to specify
type
:'var'
default : 'vite'
- Specify the source of the remote component, from
vite-plugin-federation
selectvite
, fromwebpack
selectwebpack
Dependencies shared by local and remote modules. Local modules need to configure the dependencies of all used remote modules; remote modules need to configure the dependencies of externally provided components.
default: true
- The default is
true
, whether to add shared to the module, only for theremote
side,remote
will reduce some of the packaging time when this configuration is turned on, because there is no need to package some of theshared
, but once there is noshared
module available on thehost
side, it will report an error directly, because there is no fallback module available
default: 'default'
- Default is
default
, the shared domain name, just keep theremote
andhost
sides the same
Only works on host
side, the version of the shared module provided is version
of the package.json
file in the shared package by default, you need to configure it manually only if you can't get version
by this method
Only for the remote
side, it specifies the required version of the host shared
used, when the version of the host
side does not meet the requiredVersion
requirement, it will use its own shared
module, provided that it is not configured with import=false
, which is not enabled by default
supportMode: only serve
- Allow custom packages to be shared via packagePath (previously limited to those under node_modules), For Example You can only define similar shared
shared :{
packageName:{
...
}
}
- packageName must be a package under node_modules, such as vue, react, etc., but you cannot define your own package. But now you can share a custom package by specifying the package path, for example
shared: {
packageName: {
packagePath: './src/a/index.js'
}
}
default: true
- generate a shared chunk file or not , if you make sure that the host side has a share that can be used, then you can set not to generate a shared file on the remote side to reduce the size of the remote's chunk file, which is only effective on the remote side, the host side will generate a shared chunk no matter what.
shared: {
packageName: {
generate: false
}
}
First of all, you need to determine whether the test is suitable for dev
mode or build&serve
mode, or both.
In addition, the current test will directly access localhost:5000
for testing, which means that the startup port of host
must be 5000
, otherwise it will directly lead to test failure.
According to the file name of the test file.
For example, vue3-demo-esm.dev&serve.spec.ts
means that tests will be built in dev
mode and build&serve
mode.
The vue3-demo-esm.dev.spec.ts
will only build tests in dev
mode, as summarized as follows
Mode | File Name |
---|---|
Only for dev mode |
*.dev.spec.ts |
Only for build&serve mode |
*.serve.spec.ts |
dev and build&serve mode |
*.dev&serve.spec.ts |
Since the current plug-in only supports the dev
mode of vite
on the host
end, the dev
mode test will execute the following code on the root path of the test project in turn.
pnpm run dev:host
pnpm run build:remotes
pnpm run serve:remotes
- Execute test cases
pnpm run stop
This also means that there are at least four instructions in the package.json
file of the project in dev
mode.
"scripts": {
"build:remotes": "pnpm --filter \"./remote\" build",
"serve:remotes": "pnpm --filter \"./remote\" serve",
"dev:hosts": "pnpm --filter \"./host\" dev",
"stop": "kill-port --port 5000,5001"
},
"workspaces": [
"host",
"remote"
]
The build&serve
mode will execute the following instructions in turn
pnpm run build
pnpm run serve
- Execute test cases
pnpm run stop
This also means that there are at least three instructions in the package.json
file of the project in build&serve
mode.
"scripts": {
"build": "pnpm --parallel --filter \"./**\" build",
"serve": "pnpm --parallel --filter \"./**\" serve ",
"stop": "kill-port --port 5000,5001"
},
"workspaces": [
"host",
"remote"
]
The solution is to set build.target
to esnext
, which you can find at https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/await to see the support for this feature in each browser.
build: {
target: "esnext"
}
or
build: {
target: ["chrome89", "edge89", "firefox89", "safari15"]
}
Or you can try using the plugin vite-plugin-top-level-await
to eliminate top-level-await
, as demonstrated in vue3-demo- esm demonstrates this usage
Please check if you have started the project in dev
mode with vite
, currently only the fully pure host side can use dev
mode, the remote
side must use build
mode to make the plugin take effect.
It is recommended to check this Issue, which contains most of the React
related issues
The remote module failed to load the share of the local module, for examplelocalhost/:1 Uncaught (in promise) TypeError: Failed to fetch dynamically imported module: https://your url
Reason: Vite has auto fetch logic for IP
and Port when starting the service, no full fetch logic has been found in the Plugin
, and in some cases a fetch failure may occur.
Solutions:
Explicitly declaring IP, Port, cacheDir
in the local module ensures that our Plugin
can correctly fetch and pass the dependent addresses.
Local module's vite.config.ts
export default defineConfig({
server:{
https: "http",
host: "192.168.56.1",
port: 5100,
},
cacheDir: "node_modules/.cacheDir",
}
Add declarations in the d.ts file, like this
declare module "router-remote/*"{}