Frontend Developer Manual / Version 2201
Table Of Contents
You can customize the webpack configuration of a theme by editing its webpack.config.js
which
should look like this if you have not made any adjustments yet:
const { webpackConfig } = require("@coremedia/theme-utils"); module.exports = (env, argv) => { const config = webpackConfig(env, argv); // ... return config; };
The imported method webpackConfig
will generate our default configuration provided by the package
@coremedia/theme-utils
. You can simply extend this configuration by modifying the JavaScript
Object that is returned by the function. This following example shows how to copy additional files:
const CopyWebpackPlugin = require("copy-webpack-plugin"); const path = require("path"); const { webpackConfig } = require("@coremedia/theme-utils"); module.exports = (env, argv) => { const config = webpackConfig(env, argv); // make sure that configuration for plugins exists config.plugins = config.plugins || []; config.plugins.push( new CopyWebpackPlugin({ patterns: [ { from: path.resolve("src/additional"), to: "additional", force: true, cacheTransform: true, } ] }); return config; };
This will copy all files located in your themes src/additional
folder to the additional
folder inside theme's target folder when the theme is build and also causes webpack to track changes to the files
when using the Chapter 3, Web Development Workflow.
You can find more information about the configuration by checking the Webpack Documentation. More information about the CopyWebpackPlugin can be found here.
Note
If you do not want to use any of CoreMedia's preconfigured webpack configuration, you can remove the call to @coremedia/theme-utils
(not recommended) and just start with an empty JavaScript Object ({}
). In that case you are starting
from scratch and need to configure webpack yourself to provide a proper theme structure that can be used by the
theme-importer.