I feel like this must be so obvious but it's escaping me.
I'd like to run requirejs's r.js compilation from a node module instead of from the command line, and every bit of documentation I've seen just shows the command line option. Something like this is what I'm looking for:
var r = require('requirejs');
r('./build/common.js');
r('./build/app-main.js');
Let me explain the underlying motivation in case there's a better way to do it:
I've got a few different build.js files that I want to run r.js on (separate bundles for common dependencies and the main app). I'd like to wrap this up inside a gulpfile or gruntfile that runs both, and without putting all the r.js config in the actual grunt/gulp file like the grunt and gulp require.js plugins all seem to do. Leaving the r.js config in the separate build/*.js files would let us use grunt/gulp OR command line when we want to.
Any way to accomplish this?
Using the optimizer as a Node module is documented but it is not in the most evident place. This is the example that the documentation gives:
var requirejs = require('requirejs');
var config = {
baseUrl: '../appDir/scripts',
name: 'main',
out: '../build/main-built.js'
};
requirejs.optimize(config, function (buildResponse) {
//buildResponse is just a text output of the modules
//included. Load the built file for the contents.
//Use config.out to get the optimized file contents.
var contents = fs.readFileSync(config.out, 'utf8');
}, function(err) {
//optimization err callback
});
I am creating a grunt task for building a javascript project with requirejs using grunt-contrib-requirejs
https://github.com/gruntjs/grunt-contrib-requirejs
Here is the config:
requirejs:
compile:
options:
#appDir: './'
baseUrl: "client"
mainConfigFile: "client/main.js"
name: "main"
out: "build/main.js"
wrap:
start: ""
end: ""
The main.js file requires 2 other files inside subdirectories. Althrough this task does not throw errors, the resulting built file does not run the browser. The files seem to be concatenated since the require calls still exist in the built file. I expect the js files called by require to substitute the require calls, and then be optimized. how can I achieve that?
PS: The config above is written in coffeescript.
If you want your compiled javascript file to not contain and require() or define() calls you can use the AMDclean npm package and simple add this to your options object:
onModuleBundleComplete: function (data) {
var fs = require('fs'),
amdclean = require('amdclean'),
outputFile = data.path;
fs.writeFileSync(outputFile, amdclean.clean({
'filePath': outputFile
}));
}
Trying to get karma working with requirejs. I don't understand why I am getting all of these errors when running Karma:
ERROR: 'There is no timestamp for /base/test/mainSpec.js?bust=1387739317116!'
ERROR: 'There is no timestamp for /base/app/main.js?bust=1387739317116!'
ERROR: 'There is no timestamp for /base/bower_components/jquery/jquery.js?bust=1387739317116!'
When I go to the network tab in inspector, all of the files are there with no 404s.
I'm a little confused because karma seems to be looking for a 'base' directory but there is no 'base' directory in my project. According to the karma docs:
Karma serves files under the /base directory. So, on the server
requests to files will be served up under
http://localhost:9876/base/*. The Require.js config for baseUrl gives
a starting context for modules that load with relative paths. When
setting this value for the Karma server it will need to start with
/base. We want the baseUrl for our tests to be the same folder as the
base url we have in src/main.js, so that relative requires in the
source won’t need to change. So, as we want our base url to be at
src/, we need to write /base/src.
This confusing to say the least. Am I supposed to have a baseUrl configuration in my main.js file that points to '/base'?
note: This post was valid by Karma in 2014 Jan 16. I am not certain of the current state of that lib, maybe they fixed their weird configuration logic and added meaningful error messages. If not, then this post can be probably very helpful by fixing configuration issues related to Karma.
These kind of errors occur by misconfiguration. You should add everything your test uses to the file patterns in your config file.
For example:
module.exports = function (config) {
config.set({
basePath: './',
frameworks: ['jasmine', 'requirejs'],
files: [
{pattern: 'test/bootstrap.js', included: true},
{pattern: 'test/**/*.js', included: false},
{pattern: 'src/**/*.js', included: false},
{pattern: 'vendor/**/*.js', included: false}
],
exclude: [
],
reporters: ['progress'],
port: 9876,
colors: true,
logLevel: config.LOG_INFO,
autoWatch: true,
browsers: ['Firefox'],
captureTimeout: 6000,
singleRun: false
});
};
In this example the bootstrap.js is the only file included by Karma in the HTML, the other files are dependencies which are loaded by the code in the bootstrap.js. The pattern order is very important and sadly it is far from logical: the next pattern does not override the previous one. So if I'd give the test/**/*.js pattern as first and test/bootstrap.js as second, it would not work because the bootstrap would not be included. In these cases Karma sends you an "empty testsuite" message, which is useless if you don't know how to configure it...
If your tests try to use a file which is not covered by the patterns you gave in your Karma configuration file, then you will get the "There is no timestamp for xy" error message, which is very similar to the previously mentioned "empty testsuite". If you don't know the system you won't have a clue, what it means, or what you have to do in order to fix it ...
The exclude part of the configuration object is for files, which have been added to the file patterns for inclusion, but you don't want to include or use them in your tests. These can be for example requirejs configuration files for development and production environments, etc...
For me it was simply making the mistake of setting basePath: 'base' instead of baseUrl: '/base'.
baseUrl: '/base' ftw!
The basePath is to identify the root of your project relative to the configuration file (karma.conf.js). Take a look at this example: https://github.com/karma-runner/karma/blob/v0.8.5/test/client/karma.conf.js
In the browser, I also got this error about the timestamp but it doesn't affect anything. The tests are working properly. I guess it should be a warning more than an error :-)
Jeff's right, you should exclude the requirejs config file of your app, because "we don't want to actually start the application in our tests. [LINK]".
The test-main.js config file is a separate file from the requirejs config file your app uses, which in your case might be config.js or main.js, depending on where you config your requirejs.
They both configures path and dependencies (could be specifying about the same ones), but the former is to provide requirejs support for the tests you write. This whole requirejs setup is a separate one from the requirejs you use in your app. So don't include the latter, it confuses Karma.
And the link above is a working Karma with its requirejs demo, check it out.
After trying all the solutions posted on different sources, Finally I got it Fixed. Check it here: Make "no timestamp" error configurable #6 .
Example from the issue for the karma.conf.js file:
client: {
requireJsShowNoTimestampsError: '^(?!.*(^/base/app/node_modules/))'
}
in my karma.conf.js file, I simply excluded my file that contained my require.config function (in my case happened to be config.js) and the errors went away.
exclude: [
'app/config.js',
'bower_components/jasmine/**/*.js'
],
This error can also happen when the files in question don't actually exist!
So check to make sure that the file you're getting this error for actually exists in your project!
Once you find out what the files are, you can ignore them using a pattern like so in your karma.conf.js, if it turns out their existence should be ignored in some cases:
exclude: [
'path/to/files/to/ignore/**/*.js'
]
I had an exact same error in my project and I found that the best and fastest way to debug where is the problem is to list the files that our karma have loaded.
If you used karma init (if not, just do it) and respond YES to the question about the usage of RequireJS you probably have a file like this:
var tests = [];
var TEST_REGEXP = /(spec|test)\.js$/i;
var BASE_URL = '/base/build/js';
var BASE_URL_REGEXP = /^\/base\/build\/js\/|\.js$/g;
// Get a list of all the test files to include
Object.keys(window.__karma__.files).forEach(function (file) {
console.log(file;) // ADD THIS CONSOLE LOG TO LIST LOADED FILES
if (TEST_REGEXP.test(file)) {
var normalizedTestModule = file.replace(BASE_URL_REGEXP, '')
tests.push(normalizedTestModule)
}
})
require.config({
// Karma serves files under /base, which is the basePath from your config file
baseUrl: BASE_URL,
paths: {
},
shim: {
},
deps: tests,
// we have to kickoff jasmine, as it is asynchronous
callback: window.__karma__.start
})
Then you can play with your karam.conf.js file and load new files to check whats going on in karma local path.
Expanding from #Naruto Sempai's answer:
I resolved this issue by first setting the basePath attribute in my karma.conf.js file. This path contains the needed ../ (previous directory) strings until my path was at the root of my source/test files.
Then I modified my test-main.js file (containing my RequireJS configuration) and set the baseUrl to /base.
Now, no timestamp errors.
--
To illustrate my environment and paths I configured, heres a basic setup example:
Source file location:
/Users/ben/some-project/src/main/resources/var/www/project/js/app
Test file location:
/Users/ben/some-project/src/test/var/www/project/
Karma Config location:
/Users/ben/some-project/src/test/var/www/project/karma.conf.js
Test RequireJS Config location:
/Users/ben/some-project/src/test/var/www/project/test-main.js
My karma.conf.js:
module.exports = function (config) {
config.set({
basePath: '../../../../'
});
}
to make my "root" at /Users/ben/some-project/src/.
My test-main.js:
requirejs.config({
baseUrl: '/base'
});
I know we could use requirejs combine files into one js file.
such like the following config.
module.exports = {
baseUrl: 'js/',
mainConfigFile: 'src/js/common.js',
dir: 'scripts/',
optimize: 'uglify2',
modules: [
{
name: 'common',
include: [
'jquery',
]
}
]
};
my result into one file is
common.js
----------------
jquery.js
modernizr.js
common.js
my question is, do we still need to put a require.js file in scripts folder and to use the following format
<script data-main="scripts/common" src="scripts/require.js"></script>
or we could just use
<script src="scripts/common.js"></script>
as files are compressed into one file?
You still need to load require.js the usual way to actually make use of the module loading benefits that it provides, and especially if you use the asynchronous functionality a lot. However, you can have a look at almond providing your code uses AMD and (from the README):
optimize all the modules into one file -- no dynamic code loading.
all modules have IDs and dependency arrays in their define() calls -- the RequireJS optimizer will take care of this for you.
only have one requirejs.config() or require.config() call.
do not use RequireJS multiversion support/contexts.
do not use require.toUrl() or require.nameToUrl().
do not use packages/packagePaths config. If you need to
use packages that have a main property,
volo can create an adapter module so
that it can work without this config. Use the amdify add command to
add the dependency to your project.
Almond is great because it doesn't need require.js at all; it wraps your own code with itself, which is a very minimal AMD loader skeleton and nowhere near as powerful as the main library. You then get a single optimised file that can be linked directly in your HTML:
<script src="scripts/common.js"></script>
The Gruntfile config for almond could look something like this:
compile: {
options: {
name: 'path/to/almond',
baseUrl: 'js',
include: ['main'],
insertRequire: ['main'],
mainConfigFile: 'scripts/config.js',
out: 'scripts/main.js',
optimizeAllPluginResources: true,
wrap: true
}
}
The above is all standard r.js boilerplate, you can find many more examples at the almond homepage.
I've got some paths configured in require-config.js as follows:
var require = {
baseUrl: '/javascript',
paths: {
'jquery': 'jquery/jquery-1.8.1.min'
// etc. -- several paths to vendor files here
},
}
I am trying to get the optimization working for deployment. The docs say I should have a build.js that looks something like this:
({
baseUrl: 'javascript',
paths: {
'jquery': 'jquery/jquery-1.8.1.min'
},
name: 'main',
out: 'main-build.js'
})
Is there a way to have the optimizer read my config file instead of (or in addition to) build.js? I don't want to have to manually keep the paths configured the same in both files if they change.
I tried to just run node r.js -o path/to/require-config.js, but it threw an error, "malformed: SyntaxError: Unexpected token var"
Edit: for clarification, my require-config.js file is the config only, not my main module. I did this so I could use the same configuration but load a different main module when unit testing.
You'll need to adjust the way your config options are defined. Taken from the RequireJS documentation:
In version 1.0.5+ of the optimizer, the mainConfigFile option can be used to specify the location of the runtime config. If specified with the path to your main JS file, the first requirejs({}), requirejs.config({}), require({}), or require.config({}) found in that file will be parsed out and used as part of the configuration options passed to the optimizer:
So basically you can point your r.js build file to your config options that will also be shared with the browser.
You will need to make use of the mainConfigFile option
For other's reference:
https://github.com/jrburke/r.js/blob/master/build/example.build.js
The build settings (no need to repeat your config.js lib inclusions here):
baseUrl: 'app',
name: 'assets/js/lib/almond', // or require
// Read config and then also build it into the app
mainConfigFile: 'app/config.js',
include: ['config'],
// Needed for almond (and does no harm for require)
wrap: true,