136 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
136 lines
4.5 KiB
Markdown
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# sorcery.js
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Sourcemaps are great - if you have a JavaScript file, and you minify it, your minifier can generate a map that lets you debug as though you were looking at the original uncompressed code.
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But if you have more than one transformation - say you want to transpile your JavaScript, concatenate several files into one, and minify the result - it gets a little trickier. Each intermediate step needs to be able to both *ingest* a sourcemap and *generate* one, all the time pointing back to the original source.
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Most compilers don't do that. ([UglifyJS](https://github.com/mishoo/UglifyJS2) is an honourable exception.) So when you fire up devtools, instead of looking at the original source you find yourself looking at the final intermediate step in the chain of transformations.
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**Sorcery aims to fix that.** Given an file at the end of a transformation chain (e.g., your minified JavaScript), it will follow the entire chain back to the original source, and generate a new sourcemap that describes the whole process. How? Magic.
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This is a work-in-progress - suitable for playing around with, but don't rely on it to debug air traffic control software or medical equipment. Other than that, it can't do much harm.
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## Usage
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### As a node module
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Install sorcery locally:
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```bash
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npm install sorcery
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```
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```js
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var sorcery = require( 'sorcery' );
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sorcery.load( 'some/generated/code.min.js' ).then( function ( chain ) {
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// generate a flattened sourcemap
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var map = chain.apply(); // { version: 3, file: 'code.min.js', ... }
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// get a JSON representation of the sourcemap
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map.toString(); // '{"version":3,"file":"code.min.js",...}'
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// get a data URI representation
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map.toUrl(); // 'data:application/json;charset=utf-8;base64,eyJ2ZXJ...'
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// write to a new file - this will create `output.js` and
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// `output.js.map`, and will preserve relative paths. It
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// returns a Promise
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chain.write( 'output.js' );
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// write to a new file but use an absolute path for the
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// sourceMappingURL
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chain.write( 'output.js', { absolutePath: true });
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// write to a new file, but append the flattened sourcemap as a data URI
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chain.write( 'output.js', { inline: true });
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// overwrite the existing file
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chain.write();
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chain.write({ inline: true });
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// find the origin of line x, column y. Returns an object with
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// `source`, `line`, `column` and (if applicable) `name` properties.
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// Note - for consistency with other tools, line numbers are always
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// one-based, column numbers are always zero-based. It's daft, I know.
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var loc = chain.trace( x, y );
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});
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// You can also use sorcery synchronously:
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var chain = sorcery.loadSync( 'some/generated/code.min.js' );
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var map = chain.apply();
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var loc = chain.trace( x, y );
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chain.writeSync();
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```
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#### Advanced options
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You can pass an optional second argument to `sorcery.load()` and `sorcery.loadSync()`, with zero or more of the following properties:
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* `content` - a map of `filename: contents` pairs. `filename` will be resolved against the current working directory if needs be
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* `sourcemaps` - a map of `filename: sourcemap` pairs, where `filename` is the name of the file the sourcemap is related to. This will override any `sourceMappingURL` comments in the file itself.
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For example:
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```js
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sorcery.load( 'some/generated/code.min.js', {
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content: {
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'some/minified/code.min.js': '...',
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'some/transpiled/code.js': '...',
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'some/original/code.js': '...'
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},
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sourcemaps: {
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'some/minified/code.min.js': {...},
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'some/transpiled/code.js': {...}
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}
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}).then( chain => {
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/* ... */
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});
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```
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Any files not found will be read from the filesystem as normal.
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### On the command line
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First, install sorcery globally:
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```bash
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npm install -g sorcery
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```
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```
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Usage:
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sorcery [options]
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Options:
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-h, --help Show help message
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-v, --version Show version
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-i, --input <file> Input file
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-o, --output <file> Output file (if absent, will overwrite input)
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-d, --datauri Append map as a data URI, rather than separate file
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-x, --excludeContent Don't populate the sourcesContent array
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```
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Examples:
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```bash
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# overwrite sourcemap in place (will write map to
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# some/generated/code.min.js.map, and update
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# sourceMappingURL comment if necessary
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sorcery -i some/generated/code.min.js
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# append flattened sourcemap as an inline data URI
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# (will delete existing .map file, if applicable)
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sorcery -d -i some/generated/code.min.js
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# write to a new file (will create newfile.js and
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# newfile.js.map)
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sorcery -i some/generated/code.min.js -o newfile.js
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```
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## License
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MIT
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