directory-tree-webpack-plugin

Store a JSON mapping of a directory.

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import directoryTreeWebpackPlugin from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/directory-tree-webpack-plugin';
</script>

README

NPM Version Standard Version

Directory Tree Plugin

This plugin allows you to generate a JSON representation of a directory and all its child nodes (files and folders). It uses the fantastic directory-tree package, which does the majority of the work although some additional options are provided (see below).

Install the plugin via NPM:

npm i --save-dev directory-tree-webpack-plugin

The latest version of the plugin is compatible with webpack v4+. To use this plugin with webpack v3, install v0.3.x:

npm i --save-dev directory-tree-webpack-plugin@0.3

Usage

This plugin is particularly useful when using dynamic import() statements as you can get a mapping of all the items in the import(...) location. For example, let's say we wanted to dynamically import() all *.md pages within a content directory:

project

demo
|- package.json
|- webpack.config.js
|- /src
  |- index.js
  |- /content
    |- index.md
    |- about.md
    |- contact.md

webpack.config.js

const Path = require('path')
const DirectoryTreePlugin = require('directory-tree-webpack-plugin')

module.exports = {
  entry: './src/index.js',
  plugins: [
    new DirectoryTreePlugin({
      dir: './src/content',
      path: './src/_content.json',
      extensions: /\.md/
    })
  ],
  module: {
    rules: [
      {
        test: /\.md/,
        use: [
          'html-loader',
          'markdown-loader'
        ]
      }
    ]
  },
  output: {
    path: Path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
    filename: 'bundle.js'
  }
}

src/index.js

import ContentTree from './_content.json'

ContentTree.children.forEach(page => {
  import(`./content/${item.path}.md`)
    .then(body => {
      console.log('The page object can be used to generate routes, build navigations, and more...')
      console.log(page)
      console.log('The body string can be rendered when needed...')
      console.log(body)
    })
    .catch(error => console.error('Failed to load page!'))
})

Note that the example above uses promises and arrow functions. In a real app, you would likely polyfill these ES6+ features to ensure they work on older browsers.

Options

The following options can be passed to the plugin:

  • dir (string): A path to the directory that should be mapped.
  • path (string): The path to and filename of the JSON file to create.
  • enhance (func): A function to execute on every item in the tree (see below).
  • filter (func): A .filter callback run on each layer of children.
  • sort (func): A .sort callback run on each layer of children.

All the remaining options are passed to the directory-tree package. See that package's documentation for a listing of all available options.

Enhancing the Output

To customize each item in the tree, simply pass an enhance method. When this option is passed, the plugin will recurse through the tree calling it on every item. Here's a small example of how it can be used to change each item's path:

new DirectoryTreePlugin({
  dir: './src/content',
  path: './src/_content.json',
  extensions: /\.md/,
  enhance: (item, options) => {
    item.path = item.path.replace(options.dir, '')
  }
})

The first parameter given to the method is the item and the second, options, contains the same options object passed to the plugin. The enhance function makes changes to the item object directly. Note that this function MUST be deterministic, otherwise an infinite loop of tree generation will occur.