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I'm working on an outlook addin I have an express server running. I am setting webpack because I need to transpile js to es5 to make it work in Outlook Desktop. Here is the simplified project structure.
/public
/javascripts
ssoAuth.js
/addin
/commmands
commands.js
commands.html
/server
/bin
/helpers
app.js
The public folder is set as a static folder in my express server
app.use(express.static(path.join(__dirname, '../public'),
My problem is in commands.js I import ssoAuth.js with es6 module import with relative path :
import getGraphAccessToken from "/javascripts/ssoAuthES6.js";
It works fine when I run node ./server/app.js and load my outlook addin, but when I want to use Webpack to bundle, the import is not working, I get :
ERROR in ./addin/commands/commands.js
Module not found: Error: Can't resolve '/javascripts/ssoAuth.js'
I can't figure out how to configure webpack to allow the imports from the public folder.
Here are my webpack config files :
webpack.config.js :
const config = {
devtool: "source-map",
entry: {
polyfill: "#babel/polyfill",
commands: "./addin/commands/commands.js"
},
resolve: {
extensions: [".ts", ".tsx", ".html", ".js"]
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.js$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
use: {
loader: "babel-loader",
options: {
presets: ["#babel/preset-env"]
}
}
},
{
test: /\.html$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
use: "html-loader"
},
{
test: /\.(png|jpg|jpeg|gif)$/,
use: "file-loader"
}
]
},
plugins: [
new CleanWebpackPlugin(),
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
filename: "commands.html",
template: "./addin/commands/commands.html",
chunks: ["polyfill", "commands"]
})
]};
webpack.server.config.js :
return ({
entry: {
server: './server/bin/www',
},
output: {
path: path.join(__dirname, 'dist'),
publicPath: '/',
filename: '[name].js'
},
target: 'node',
node: {
__dirname: false,
__filename: false,
},
externals: [nodeExternals()],
module: {
rules: [
{
// Transpiles ES6-8 into ES5
test: /\.js$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
use: {
loader: "babel-loader"
}
}
]
},
plugins: [
new CopyWebpackPlugin([
{
to: "./public",
from: "./public"
}
])
]})
Can you help figure this out ? Is there a better folder structure that I should use to make it work ?
Thanks
You're using an absolute path
import getGraphAccessToken from "/javascripts/ssoAuthES6.js";
// ^ this will look in your topmost directory on your OS
The relative path, from commands.js, would be:
import getGraphAccessToken from "../../javascripts/ssoAuthES6.js";
Alternatively, you can set Webpack to look for modules from your root directory by adding the following to your webpack configuration:
{
// ...
resolve: {
modules: [path.resolve(__dirname, "src"), "node_modules"],
},
// ...
}
Then you can import from your project's root directory from anywhere, like so:
import getGraphAccessToken from "javascripts/ssoAuthES6.js";
Some other points:
Since you're setting the extensions: [".ts", ".tsx", ".html", ".js"], you don't need to provide file extensions for those imports
You specify .ts and .tsx in your webpack config, but you are using .js files. Consider removing the Typescript extensions
If you are using Typescript, you will need to update import paths in your tsconfig.json
You can consider import path aliases in both Webpack and Typescript to be more explicit that your imports are coming from your project root. Instructions here
Having a lot of trouble trying to set up a common UI library.
I've set up a yarn workspace which looks like this:
/monorepo
/common-16.13
/react-app-16.8.
/another-app-16.13
I then import common-16.13 into react-app-16.8 and use one of the components like this:
/react-app/home.js
import {SharedComponent} from "common"
However when I run the application I get this error:
react.development.js?80c6:1465 Uncaught Error: Invalid hook call. Hooks can only be called inside of the body of a function component. This could happen for one of the following reasons:
1. You might have mismatching versions of React and the renderer (such as React DOM)
2. You might be breaking the Rules of Hooks
3. You might have more than one copy of React in the same app
Inside common I have:
/src/components/SharedComponent.jsx:
import React from 'react';
import { Box } from 'material-ui/core';
export const ShareComponent = ()=> <Box>SharedComponent</Box>;
/src/components/index.js:
export { SharedComponen t} from 'SharedComponent';
/src/index.js:
export {SharedComponent } from './components';
package.json:
{
"name": "#libs/common",
"main": "dist/index.js",
"scripts" {
"build": "webpack"
}
}
/common/webpack.config.json:
const webpack = require('webpack');
module.exports = env => {
// Each key value generate a page specific bundle
entry: {
index: './src/index.js'
},
output: {
path: path.resolve(ROOT_PATH, 'dist'),
publicPath: '/',
filename: 'index.js',
library: '#libs/common',
libraryTarget: 'umd'
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.(js|jsx)$/,
use: 'happypack/loader?id=jsx',
exclude: /node_modules/
}
]
},
// Automatically resolve below extensions
// Enable users to leave off the extensions when importing
resolve: {
symlinks: false,
extensions: ['*', '.js', '.jsx', '.css', '.scss']
},
plugins: [
new HappyPack({
id: 'css',
threadPool: happyThreadPool,
loaders: [
'cache-loader',
'style-loader',
{
loader: MiniCssExtractPlugin.loader,
options: {
hmr: true
}
},
'css-loader',
'sass-loader'
]
}),
new HappyPack({
id: 'jsx',
threadPool: happyThreadPool,
loaders: [
'cache-loader',
{
loader: 'babel-loader'
}
]
})
]
}
So I bundle common. Then in my react-app I yarn install #lib/common. Then I import SharedComponent into my react app:
/react-app/src/index.js:
import { SharedComponent } from '#libs/common';
/react-app/webpack.config.js:
{
// Each key value generate a page specific bundle
entry: {
index: './src/index.jsx',
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.(js|jsx)$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
loader: 'babel-loader'
},
]
},
// Automatically resolve below extensions
// Enable users to leave off the extensions when importing
resolve: {
extensions: ['*', '.js', '.jsx', '.css', 'scss'],
alias: {
react: path.resolve('./node_modules/react'),
}
},
output: {
path: path.resolve(ROOT_PATH, 'dist'),
publicPath: '/',
filename: '[name].bundle.js',
chunkFilename: '[id].bundle.js'
},
};
It bundles fine but when I run the application I run into the error above. I can't tell if it's related to how i'm exporting my common components, but it it seems right. I read I should have a react alias in my app, which I do. I'm using yarn workspaces and not sure if that's related somehow.
Run the following command:
yarn why react
If the result shows that you have multiple versions of react:
Remove all local installations
Install a single version of React in the root workspace instead
this is probably a bug coming from yarn
issue:
https://github.com/yarnpkg/yarn/issues/8540
I did a workaround by:
exporting my common package into a new private github repo
create access token
https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team#latest/github/authenticating-to-github/creating-a-personal-access-token
in my package.json dependencies I added:
"common": "git+https://{accessToken}:x-oauth-basic#github.com/{user}/{repo}.git",
It happened to me when when migrating existing project to mono repo.
It was caused because I copied the lock files into the packages folders.
I've solved it by deleting any node_modules and any lock(yarn.lock and package-lock) from any package folder and then running yarn install on root directory.
Recently I came across the same issue as the post "historyApiFallback doesn't work in Webpack dev server".
I will first quote the accepted answer in that post.
Answer:
I meet the same question today. let config in webpack.config.js:
output.publicPath be equal to devServer.historyApiFallback.index and
point out html file route.my webpack-dev-server version is 1.10.1 and work well. http://webpack.github.io/docs/webpack-dev-server.html#the-historyapifallback-option doesn't work, you must point out html file route.
module.exports = {
entry: "./src/app/index.js",
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'build'),
publicPath: 'build',
filename: 'bundle-main.js'
},
devServer: {
historyApiFallback:{
index:'build/index.html'
},
},
};
I tried to use this answer to fix the problem(set output.publicPath: 'dist' and devServer.historyApiFallback:{index:'dist/index.html'})
but somehow it didn't work.
After some search I found this page. According to the description in the page:
This section is for everyone who ran into this problem in development
using webpack-dev-server.. Just as above, what we need to do it tell
Webpack Dev Sever to redirect all server requests to /index.html.
There are just two properties in your webpack config you need to set
to do this, publicPath and historyApiFallback.
module.exports = {
entry: './app/index.js',
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
filename: 'index_bundle.js',
publicPath: '/'
},
module: {
rules: [
{ test: /\.(js)$/, use: 'babel-loader' },
{ test: /\.css$/, use: [ 'style-loader', 'css-loader' ]}
]
},
devServer: {
historyApiFallback: true,
},
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
template: 'app/index.html'
})
]
};
According to the config I modified my devServer.historyApiFallback to be true, and output.publicPath to be /.
My webpack config:
const webpack = require("webpack")
const path = require("path")
const CleanWebpackPlugin = require('clean-webpack-plugin');
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
mode: "development",
entry: {
app: "./src/base/index.js"
},
output: {
filename: "[name].bundle.js",
publicPath: '/',
path: path.resolve(__dirname, "dist")
},
devtool: 'inline-source-map',
devServer: {
hot: true,
port: 3000,
historyApiFallback: true
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.(js|jsx)$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
use: {
loader: "babel-loader"
}
},
{
test: /\.(scss|css)$/,
use: [
"style-loader",
"css-loader",
"sass-loader"
]
},
{
test: /\.(pdf|jpg|png|gif|svg|ico)$/,
use: [
{
loader: 'url-loader'
},
]
},
]
},
plugins: [
new CleanWebpackPlugin(),
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
template: './src/base/index.html'
}),
new webpack.HotModuleReplacementPlugin()
],
}
Everything seemed working now.
But I have the puzzle that I don't know why it's working.
To be specific
devServer.historyApiFallback: true is clear according to webpack doc, so I'm not doubt about that part.
output.publicPath:/ is pretty vague for me though.
Question:
If I tried to use something like output.publicPath:/public, it
will not work. So why I must use output.publicPath:/ here?
How output.publicPath:/ can tell webpack-devserver to find the
right place and server the right index.html(which is generated by the
devserver I believe)?
Sry if it's a bit tedious. I just want to provide some detail.
But I have the puzzle that I don't know why it's working.
Setting 1
In webpack.config.js the setting
output: {
...
publicPath: '/static1/',
},
tells webpack to embed '/static1/' into the bundle's path in the generated .html file:
<script src="/static1/<name>.bundle.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
You can open the generated .html file(s) on disk and see the above tag with '/static1/' prepended to the bundle.
Setting 2
This setting:
devServer: {
publicPath: '/static/', // different from 'static1' we used above
tells webpack-dev-server to create a route handler for the path /static and serve resourses e.g. /static/<name>.bundle.js. The webpack-dev-server is based on Express which uses route handlers e.g. app.use(/mypath, ...); to serve requests.
If now you point a browser to localhost:8080, you will see blank screen. Righ-click on it to see Page Source. You will see the above <script>tag that makes the browser issue GET request for the bundle using the path /static1/xxx that doesn't work because you didn't tell webpack-dev-server to create a route handler for this path. Now type in the browser navigation bar
http://localhost:8080/static/<name>.bundle.js and you will see the internals of your bundle.
Eliminate the discrepancy between static1 and static and the page will render. In your case it works because one setting is set explicitly to '/' and the second one defaults to the same value.
Setting 3
historyApiFallback has a more narrow scope than other two settings because it is used with SPAs only. During the initial rendering a user sees the landing page of the SPA e.g. /mysample.html. This is the file with our <script> tag shown above. It should be used without any path like /static prepended to it:
historyApiFallback: {
...
index: mysample.html,
because Setting1 and Setting2 apply to bundles, not to bundle-containing .html pages.
Faced the same problem, it was succeeded to solve, having specified a route, instead of a path to index.html
devServer: {
publicPath: `/myApp`,
historyApiFallback: {
rewrites: [
{ from: /\/myApp/, to: `/myApp` }
]
}
}
(webpack.config.js file content below)
I'm trying to make a webpack exclusion on node modules.
I found that using webpack-node-externals works for it but using that on my common config causes this other error:
Require is not defined on reflect-metadata - __webpack_require__ issue
So... I was wondering how can i exclude webpack bundling also on the browser side without getting any issue.
My webpack version: 3.11.0
webpack-config.js
const path = require('path');
const webpack = require('webpack');
const merge = require('webpack-merge');
const AotPlugin = require('#ngtools/webpack').AotPlugin;
const CheckerPlugin = require('awesome-typescript-loader').CheckerPlugin;
var nodeExternals = require('webpack-node-externals');
module.exports = (env) => {
// Configuration in common to both client-side and server-side bundles
const isDevBuild = !(env && env.prod);
const sharedConfig = {
//externals: [nodeExternals()], // in order to ignore all modules in node_modules folder
stats: { modules: false },
context: __dirname,
resolve: { extensions: [ '.js', '.ts' ] },
output: {
filename: '[name].js',
publicPath: 'dist/' // Webpack dev middleware, if enabled, handles requests for this URL prefix
},
module: {
rules: [
{ test: /\.ts$/, use: isDevBuild ? ['awesome-typescript-loader?silent=true', 'angular2-template-loader', 'angular2-router-loader'] : '#ngtools/webpack' },
{ test: /\.html$/, use: 'html-loader?minimize=false' },
{ test: /\.css$/, use: [ 'to-string-loader', 'style-loader', isDevBuild ? 'css-loader' : 'css-loader?minimize' ] },
{ test: /\.(png|jpg|jpeg|gif|svg)$/, use: 'url-loader?limit=25000' }
]
},
plugins: [new CheckerPlugin()]
};
// Configuration for client-side bundle suitable for running in browsers
const clientBundleOutputDir = './wwwroot/dist';
const clientBundleConfig = merge(sharedConfig, {
entry: { 'main-client': './ClientApp/boot.browser.ts' },
output: { path: path.join(__dirname, clientBundleOutputDir) },
plugins: [
new webpack.DllReferencePlugin({
context: __dirname,
manifest: require('./wwwroot/dist/vendor-manifest.json')
})
].concat(isDevBuild ? [
// Plugins that apply in development builds only
new webpack.SourceMapDevToolPlugin({
filename: '[file].map', // Remove this line if you prefer inline source maps
moduleFilenameTemplate: path.relative(clientBundleOutputDir, '[resourcePath]') // Point sourcemap entries to the original file locations on disk
})
] : [
// Plugins that apply in production builds only
new webpack.optimize.UglifyJsPlugin(),
new AotPlugin({
tsConfigPath: './tsconfig.json',
entryModule: path.join(__dirname, 'ClientApp/app/app.browser.module#AppModule'),
exclude: ['./**/*.server.ts']
})
])
});
// Configuration for server-side (prerendering) bundle suitable for running in Node
const serverBundleConfig = merge(sharedConfig, {
resolve: { mainFields: ['main'] },
entry: { 'main-server': './ClientApp/boot.server.ts' },
plugins: [
new webpack.DllReferencePlugin({
context: __dirname,
manifest: require('./ClientApp/dist/vendor-manifest.json'),
sourceType: 'commonjs2',
name: './vendor'
})
].concat(isDevBuild ? [] : [
// Plugins that apply in production builds only
new AotPlugin({
tsConfigPath: './tsconfig.json',
entryModule: path.join(__dirname, 'ClientApp/app/app.server.module#AppModule'),
exclude: ['./**/*.browser.ts']
})
]),
output: {
libraryTarget: 'commonjs',
path: path.join(__dirname, './ClientApp/dist')
},
target: 'node',
externals: [nodeExternals()], // in order to ignore all modules in node_modules folder,
devtool: 'inline-source-map'
});
return [clientBundleConfig, serverBundleConfig];
};
GOT IT!
Before posting my solution, I'd like to thanks Aluan Haddad for his useful comment in my question above.
As suggested by Aluan, in fact, the problem was related to the need to use also a module loader, more than a module bundler.
So, the steps that I followed are these:
Installing requireJS ==> http://requirejs.org/docs/node.html
Removing externals: [nodeExternals()], // in order to ignore all modules in node_modules folder from my common webpack configuration and adding it under my server configuration (done before my question, but it's a really important step) [see webpack.config.js content in the question]
Adding target: 'node', before my externals point above, under my server side section (done before my question, but it's a really important step) [see webpack.config.js content in the question]
This makes sure that browser side keeps target:'web' (default target), and target becomes node just for the server.
launched webpack config vendor command manually from powershell webpack --config webpack.config.vendor.js
launched webpack config command manually from powershell webpack --config webpack.config.js
That worked for me! Hope It will works also for anyone else reading this question and encountering this issue!
I'm a webpack rookie who wants to learn all about it.
I came across a conflict when running my webpack telling me:
ERROR in chunk html [entry] app.js Conflict: Multiple assets emit to
the same filename app.js
What should I do to avoid the conflict?
This is my webpack.config.js:
module.exports = {
context: __dirname + "/app",
entry: {
'javascript': "./js/app.js",
'html': "./index.html",
},
output: {
path: __dirname + "/dist",
filename: "app.js",
},
resolve: {
extensions: ['.js', '.jsx', '.json']
},
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.jsx?$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
loaders: ["babel-loader"]
},
{
test: /\.html$/,
loader: "file-loader?name=[name].[ext]",
}
]
}
};
i'm not quite familiar with your approach so I'll show you a common way to help you out.
First of all, on your output, you are specifying the filename to app.js which makes sense for me that the output will still be app.js. If you want to make it dynamic, then just use "filename": "[name].js".
The [name] part will make the filename dynamic for you. That's the purpose of your entry as an object. Each key will be used as a name in replacement of the [name].js.
And second, you can use the html-webpack-plugin. You don't need to include it as a test.
I had the same problem, I found it was setting a static output file name that was causing my problem, in the output object try the following object.
output:{
filename: '[name].js',
path: __dirname + '/build',
chunkFilename: '[id].[chunkhash].js'
},
This makes it so that the filenames are different and it doesn't clash.
EDIT:
One thing i've recently found is that you should use a hash instead of chunkhash if using HMR reloading. I haven't dug into the root of the problem but I just know that using chunkhash was breaking my webpack config
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
filename: '[name].[hash:8].js',
sourceMapFilename: '[name].[hash:8].map',
chunkFilename: '[id].[hash:8].js'
};
Should work fine with HMR then :)
EDIT July 2018:
A little more information on this.
Hash
This is a hash generated every time that webpack compiles, in dev mode this is good for cache busting during development but shouldn't be used for long term caching of your files. This will overwrite the Hash on every build of your project.
Chunkhash
If you use this in conjunction with a runtime chunk then you can use it for long term caching, the runtime chunk will see what's changed in your source code and update the corresponding chunks hash's. It won't update others allowing for your files to be cached.
I had exactly the same problem. The problem seems to occur with the file-loader. The error went away when I removed the html test and included html-webpack-plugin instead to generate an index.html file. This is my webpack.config.js file:
var path = require('path');
var HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
var HTMLWebpackPluginConfig = new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
template: __dirname + '/app/index.html',
filename: 'index.html',
inject: 'body'
})
module.exports = {
entry: {
javascript: './app/index.js',
},
output: {
filename: 'bundle.js',
path: __dirname + '/dist'
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.jsx?$/,
exclude: [
path.resolve(__dirname, '/node_modules/')
],
loader: 'babel-loader'
},
]
},
resolve: {
extensions: ['.js', '.jsx', '.json']
},
plugins: [HTMLWebpackPluginConfig]
}
The html-webpack-plugin generates an index.html file and automatically injects the bundled js file into it.
I had the same issue after upgrading to Webpack 5. My problem was caused by the copy-webpack-plugin.
Below is the original pattern ignoring a specified file, it works with Webpack 4, but throws an error with Webpack 5.
ERROR in Conflict: Multiple assets emit different content to the same
filename default.hbs
plugins: [
new CopyPlugin({
patterns: [
{
from: "./src/academy/templates",
globOptions: {
ignore: ["default.hbs"]
}
},
]
}),
],
To fix the error:
plugins: [
new CopyPlugin({
patterns: [
{
from: "./src/academy/templates",
globOptions: {
ignore: ["**/default.hbs"]
}
},
]
}),
],
By not ignoring the specified file, the default.hbs (a.k.a index.html) was copied twice into the build (a.k.a /disk) directory effectively resulting in Webpack trying to insert multiple assets into the "same" (duplicated) filename.
I had the same problem, and I found these in the documents.
If your configuration creates more than a single “chunk” (as with multiple entry points or when using plugins like CommonsChunkPlugin), you should use substitutions to ensure that each file has a unique name.
[name] is replaced by the name of the chunk.
[hash] is replaced by the hash of the compilation.
[chunkhash] is replaced by the hash of the chunk.
output: {
path:__dirname+'/dist/js',
//replace filename:'app.js'
filename:'[name].js'
}
In my case the source map plugin was conflicting with the extract mini plugin.
Could not find a solution to this anywhere. source maps for css and javascript were writing to the same file. Here is how I finally solved it in my project:
new webpack.SourceMapDevToolPlugin({
filename: '[name].[ext].map'
}),
I encountered this error in my local dev environment. For me, the solution to this error was to force the files to rebuild. To do this, I made a minor change to one of my CSS files.
I reloaded my browser and the error went away.
If you getting same kind error in Angular
Solution : delete cache folder inside .angular folder and
start portal again ng serve
I had the same problem after updating all the dependencies to latest (e.g. webpack 4 -> 5) for a Chrome extension I made about 2 years ago, and managed to solve it.
There were two files in the complaint (popup.html and options.html). Here is my original webpack.config.js file:
const path = require('path');
const CopyPlugin = require('copy-webpack-plugin');
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require("html-webpack-plugin");
const { CleanWebpackPlugin } = require("clean-webpack-plugin");
module.exports = {
target: 'web',
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
filename: '[name].js',
},
entry: {
popup: './src/scripts/popup.tsx',
options: './src/scripts/options.tsx',
},
context: path.join(__dirname),
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.tsx?$/,
loader: 'ts-loader',
},
{
test: /\.css$/,
use: [
'style-loader',
'css-loader',
],
},
{
test: /\.scss$/,
use: [
'style-loader',
'css-loader',
'sass-loader',
],
},
],
},
resolve: {
extensions: ['.tsx', '.ts', '.js', '.json', '.css'],
},
plugins: [
new CleanWebpackPlugin(),
new CopyPlugin([
{ from: 'src/popup.html', to: 'popup.html' },
{ from: 'src/options.html', to: 'options.html' },
{ from: 'src/manifest.json', to: 'manifest.json' },
{ from: 'src/icons', to: 'icons' },
]),
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
template: path.join("src", "popup.html"),
filename: "popup.html",
chunks: ["popup"]
}),
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
template: path.join("src", "options.html"),
filename: "options.html",
chunks: ["options"]
}),
]
};
I solved it by removing:
{ from: 'src/popup.html', to: 'popup.html' },
{ from: 'src/options.html', to: 'options.html' },
under new CopyPlugin... part.
So seems like right now there is no need to explicitly copy popup.html and options.html to output folder when HtmlWebpackPlugin is already emitting them.
Similar solution to the above with file-loader, however, I think this solution is the more elegant. Before, I was only specifying the [name], adding the [path][name] resolved my conflict as below:
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.(mp4|m4s)$/,
use: [
{
loader: 'file-loader',
options: {
name: '[path][name].[ext]',
},
},
],
},
],
I changed index.html file from /public directory to /src to fix this issue. (Webpack 5.1.3)
The same error in a Vue.js project when doing e2e with Karma. The page was served using a static template index.html with /dist/build.js. And got this error running Karma.
The command to issue Karma using package.json was:
"test": "cross-env BABEL_ENV=test CHROME_BIN=$(which chromium-browser) karma start --single-run"
The output configuration in webpack.config.js was:
module.exports = {
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, './dist'),
publicPath: '/dist/',
filename: 'build.js'
},
...
}
My solution: inspired by the Evan Burbidge's answer I appended the following at the end of webpack.config.js:
if (process.env.BABEL_ENV === 'test') {
module.exports.output.filename = '[name].[hash:8].js'
}
And then it eventually worked for both page serving and e2e.
I had a similar problem while upgrading webpack 3 to webpack 4. After upgrading the modules I came across this error.
WARNING in Conflict: Multiple assets emit different content to the same filename alert-icon.svg
WARNING in Conflict: Multiple assets emit different content to the same filename comment.svg
The problem was caused by fileloader for svg. Solved the error by adding a hash name: '[name].[hash:8].[ext]' making it unique every time webpack compiles.
Provinding the code below:
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.svg$/,
loader: 'file-loader',
query: {
name: '[name].[hash:8].[ext]'
}
]
}
webpack 5 solution
Add chunkFilename and assetModuleFilename in output as showed below.
output: {
path: path.join(__dirname, "/build/"),
filename: "js/[name].[contenthash].js",
chunkFilename: 'chunks/[name].[chunkhash].js',
assetModuleFilename: 'media/[name][hash][ext][query]'
},