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vite-node

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  • License MIT

Vite as Node.js runtime

Package Exports

    Readme

    vite-node

    Vite as Node runtime.
    The engine that powers Vitest and Nuxt 3 Dev SSR.

    Features

    • On-demand evaluation
    • Vite's pipeline, plugins, resolve, aliasing
    • Out-of-box ESM & TypeScript support
    • Respect vite.config.ts
    • Hot module replacement (HMR)
    • Separate server/client architecture
    • Top-level await
    • Shims for __dirname and __filename in ESM
    • Access to native node modules like fs, path, etc.

    CLI Usage

    Run JS/TS file on Node.js using Vite's resolvers and transformers.

    npx vite-node index.ts

    Options:

    npx vite-node -h

    Options via CLI

    All ViteNodeServer options are supported by the CLI. They may be defined through the dot syntax, as shown below:

    npx vite-node --options.deps.inline="module-name" --options.deps.external="/module-regexp/" index.ts

    Note that for options supporting RegExps, strings passed to the CLI must start and end with a /;

    Hashbang

    If you prefer to write scripts that don't need to be passed into Vite Node, you can declare it in the hashbang.

    Simply add #!/usr/bin/env vite-node --script at the top of your file:

    file.ts

    #!/usr/bin/env vite-node --script
    
    console.log('argv:', process.argv.slice(2))

    And make the file executable:

    chmod +x ./file.ts

    Now, you can run the file without passing it into Vite Node:

    $ ./file.ts hello
    argv: [ 'hello' ]

    Note that when using the --script option, Vite Node forwards every argument and option to the script to execute, even the one supported by Vite Node itself.

    Programmatic Usage

    In Vite Node, the server and runner (client) are separated, so you can integrate them in different contexts (workers, cross-process, or remote) if needed. The demo below shows a simple example of having both (server and runner) running in the same context

    import { createServer, version as viteVersion } from 'vite'
    import { ViteNodeRunner } from 'vite-node/client'
    import { ViteNodeServer } from 'vite-node/server'
    import { installSourcemapsSupport } from 'vite-node/source-map'
    
    // create vite server
    const server = await createServer({
      optimizeDeps: {
        // It's recommended to disable deps optimization
        disabled: true,
      },
    })
    // For old Vite, this is need to initialize the plugins.
    if (Number(viteVersion.split('.')[0]) < 6) {
      await server.pluginContainer.buildStart({})
    }
    
    // create vite-node server
    const node = new ViteNodeServer(server)
    
    // fixes stacktraces in Errors
    installSourcemapsSupport({
      getSourceMap: source => node.getSourceMap(source),
    })
    
    // create vite-node runner
    const runner = new ViteNodeRunner({
      root: server.config.root,
      base: server.config.base,
      // when having the server and runner in a different context,
      // you will need to handle the communication between them
      // and pass to this function
      fetchModule(id) {
        return node.fetchModule(id)
      },
      resolveId(id, importer) {
        return node.resolveId(id, importer)
      },
    })
    
    // execute the file
    await runner.executeFile('./example.ts')
    
    // close the vite server
    await server.close()

    Debugging

    Debug Transformation

    Sometimes you might want to inspect the transformed code to investigate issues. You can set environment variable VITE_NODE_DEBUG_DUMP=true to let vite-node write the transformed result of each module under .vite-node/dump.

    If you want to debug by modifying the dumped code, you can change the value of VITE_NODE_DEBUG_DUMP to load and search for the dumped files and use them for executing.

    VITE_NODE_DEBUG_DUMP=load vite-node example.ts

    Or programmatically:

    import { ViteNodeServer } from 'vite-node/server'
    
    const server = new ViteNodeServer(viteServer, {
      debug: {
        dumpModules: true,
        loadDumppedModules: true,
      },
    })

    Debug Execution

    If the process gets stuck, it might be because there are unresolvable circular dependencies. You can set VITE_NODE_DEBUG_RUNNER=true for vite-node to warn about this.

    VITE_NODE_DEBUG_RUNNER=true vite-node example.ts

    Or programmatically:

    import { ViteNodeRunner } from 'vite-node/client'
    
    const runner = new ViteNodeRunner({
      debug: true,
    })

    Credits

    Based on @pi0's brilliant idea of having a Vite server as the on-demand transforming service for Nuxt's Vite SSR.

    Thanks @brillout for kindly sharing this package name.

    Sponsors

    License

    MIT License © 2021 Anthony Fu