Package Exports
- resolve-url-loader
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (resolve-url-loader) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
Resolve URL Loader
Webpack loader that resolves relative paths in url() statements based on the original source file.
Use in conjunction with the sass-loader and specify your asset url()
relative to the scss
file in question. This loader will use the source-map from the SASS compiler to locate the
original file and write a more complete path for your asset. Subsequent build steps can then locate your asset for
processing.
Usage
Plain CSS works fine:
var css = require('!css!resolve-url!./file.css');
or using sass-loader:
var css = require('!css!resolve-url!sass?sourceMap!./file.scss');
Use in tandem with the style-loader
to compile sass and to add the css
rules to your document:
require('!style!css!resolve-url!./file.css');
and
require('!style!css!resolve-url!sass?sourceMap!./file.scss');
Source maps required
Note that source maps must be enabled on any preceding loader. In the above example we use sass?sourceMap
.
Apply via webpack config
It is preferable to adjust your webpack.config
so to avoid having to prefix every require()
statement:
module.exports = {
module: {
loaders: [
{
test : /\.css$/,
loaders: ['style', 'css', 'resolve-url']
}, {
test : /\.scss$/,
loaders: ['style', 'css', 'resolve-url', 'sass?sourceMap']
}
]
}
};
Options
absolute
Forces the url() to be resolved to an absolute path. This is considered bad practice so only do it if you know what you are doing.sourceMap
Generate a source-map.
How it works
The incoming source-map is used to resolve the original file. This is necessary where there was some preceding transpile
step such as SASS. A rework process is then run on incoming css
.
Each url()
statement that implies an asset triggers a file search using node fs
operations. The search begins
relative to the original file and usually the asset is found immediately. However in some cases there is no immediate
match (cough bootstrap cough) and we so we start searching both deeper and shallower from the starting directory.
The search will continue while within the project directory and until a package.json
or bower.json
file is
encountered.
If the asset is not found then the url()
statement will not be updated.