Skip to content

cropio/bundlewatch

 
 

Repository files navigation



npm bundlewatch All Contributors

node Libraries.io dependency status for latest release builds test


npm-chart contributors license

BundleWatch

BundleWatch checks file sizes, ensuring bundled browser assets don't jump in file size.
Sharp increases in BundleWatch can signal that something is wrong - adding a package that bloats the slug, a wrong import, or forgetting to minify.

Inspired by Siddharth Kshetrapal bundlesize

Getting Started

Install the BundleWatch package:

  • NPM: npm install bundlewatch --save-dev
  • Yarn: yarn add bundlewatch --dev

Add some basic configuration to your package.json

{
    "name": "my package name",
    "version": "0.0.1",
    "bundlewatch": {
        "files": [
            {
                "path": "myfolder/*.js",
                "maxSize": "100kB"
            }
        ]
    }
}

Usage:

  • NPM: npm run bundlewatch
  • Yarn: yarn run bundlewatch

This will give you command line output. If you want BundleWatch to report build status on your pull requests, see below.

Adding Build Status

BundleWatch can report its status on your GitHub Pull Requests.

build status preview

CI Auth Variables Needed by BundleWatch

  • BUNDLEWATCH_GITHUB_TOKEN

You will need to give BundleWatch access to your GitHub Statuses, which can be done by heading to: https://service.bundlewatch.io/setup-github

This will give you your BUNDLEWATCH_GITHUB_TOKEN. You will need to set this as an environment variable in CI.

CI Variables Needed by BundleWatch

The most efficient way to get this running is to ensure that some environment variables are available for BundleWatch to find.

  • CI_REPO_OWNER github.com/facebook/react
  • CI_REPO_NAME github.com/facebook/react
  • CI_COMMIT_SHA
  • CI_BRANCH

If you're using, Travis, CircleCI, Wrecker, Drone or GitHub Actions these should all work out of the box.

Have a look at the source code to see which variables are automatically found: getCIVars

Viewing the results breakdown

After setting up the above you will have BuildStatus on your Pull Requests. Clicking the details link on the reported status will show you a results file breakdown.

build results preview

Additional Documentation

Full documentation available on bundlewatch.io

I use bundlesize, why should I switch to BundleWatch

  • Bundlesize has entered maintenance mode and pull requests are left hanging, so we wanted to reboot the community through creating BundleWatch
  • New BundleWatch service with infrastructure as code
  • Launched bundlewatch.io documentation website
  • Enough test coverage to support CD
  • Node API Support
  • Lower barrier to contributing (automated testing and publishing), build a trusted community of contributors to have continuous improvement

Additional Features

  • Config validation to stop users from guessing why BundleWatch won't work
  • Support for config file path
  • Better results breakdown page
  • Better comparisons between branches, support branches other than master
  • Support for your own server for storing data
  • New and improved CI behaviour
  • Show history of BundleWatchs over time

Contributors

Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):


Jake Bolam

💻

Shouvik DCosta

💻

Tyler Benning

🎨

Leila Rosenthal

📖

Francois Campbell

💻

Emmanuel Ogbizi

🚧 💻 🛡️

Pascal Iske

🐛

Oleksii Leonov

💻

Nicolas Charpentier

💻 🚧 🛡️

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

Want to Help? Become a Contributor

Contributions of any kind are welcome! See the Contributing docs or Join us on Slack.

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 89.7%
  • Makefile 5.8%
  • Shell 4.5%