26

I would like for Webpack to log which file triggered my watch mode build.

I have configured a plugin that listens to the watch-run compiler event hook like this:

function() {
  this.plugin("watch-run", function(watching, callback) {
    // maybe something in `watching` will indicate the changed file?
    // when I find out what it is, `console.log` it here
    callback();
  });
}

// Example output: "/Users/aaron/git/test/index.js" was changed, new build triggered

But I cannot figure out where the changed file information might be, if it is there at all.

The Webpack documentation is really lacking in this area. The Compiler Event Hook page doesn't have any examples (only a message to explain that examples are coming soon), and the old v1 documentation is not much better at elaborating the properties/methods available in the watching/compiler object.

Any help or guidance would be greatly appreciated.

4 Answers 4

36

For Webpack 5, since watchFileSystem.watcher.mtimes has been removed, I've changed the excellent answer by Sander to this:

class WatchRunPlugin {
    apply(compiler) {
        compiler.hooks.watchRun.tap('WatchRun', (comp) => {
            if (comp.modifiedFiles) {
                const changedFiles = Array.from(comp.modifiedFiles, (file) => `\n  ${file}`).join('');
                console.log('===============================');
                console.log('FILES CHANGED:', changedFiles);
                console.log('===============================');
            }
        });
    }
}
1
  • console.log() can output mid-line inside other log output. You can get a webpack logger with: const logger = comp.getInfrastructureLogger('WatchRun'); and then use logger.log()
    – Sam Hasler
    Jan 13, 2023 at 16:42
31

The plugin I used for this in Webpack 4:

class WatchRunPlugin {
  apply(compiler) {
    compiler.hooks.watchRun.tap('WatchRun', (comp) => {
      const changedTimes = comp.watchFileSystem.watcher.mtimes;
      const changedFiles = Object.keys(changedTimes)
        .map(file => `\n  ${file}`)
        .join('');
      if (changedFiles.length) {
        console.log("====================================")
        console.log('NEW BUILD FILES CHANGED:', changedFiles);
        console.log("====================================")
      }
    });
  }
}
5
  • 1
    awesome. I'm using Laravel mix and for some reason i had to add a constructor constructor() {} for this to work May 8, 2019 at 21:32
  • 1
    If this isn't working then take a look at the answer below which uses the second argument done (or callback in the docs). I couldn't get this to work without invoking the callback at the end. stackoverflow.com/a/52363168/697745. With the callback it works nicely.
    – Dol
    Feb 12, 2020 at 20:58
  • I just copypasta that at the type of my webpack.config.js file, then add new WatchRunPlugin() to my plugins and... Bob's your uncle. Jul 9, 2020 at 17:07
  • If you're using WatchIgnorePlugin you need: const watcher = comp.watchFileSystem.wfs ? comp.watchFileSystem.wfs.watcher : comp.watchFileSystem.watcher; const changedTimes = watcher.mtimes; Jul 10, 2020 at 19:30
  • @Sander I'm getting changed filenames which is great, but also sometimes just a timestamp instead of a filename. Ive ignored many of the files, so now Im getting rebuilds triggered for a "file" indicated with a timestamp. So to be clear: Object.keys() returned a timestamp. Any idea why?
    – Flion
    Sep 1, 2022 at 17:42
25

This kind of information is not covered by the webpack documentation and it would be difficult to include every possible option that is available on the compiler. But I would say that this is an area where you should explore the available options by either reading the source code or spinning up a debugger and investigate them. I did the latter and found that the changed files are available in:

watching.compiler.watchFileSystem.watcher.mtimes

This is an object where each key is an absolute path to a file that has been changed and the value is the timestamp when it has been changed. It is possible to have more than one file change that triggers the recompilation, when multiple changes have been saved within the configured poll interval.

The following code prints the files that have been changed (the files might also be empty):

this.plugin("watch-run", (watching, done) => {
  const changedTimes = watching.compiler.watchFileSystem.watcher.mtimes;
  const changedFiles = Object.keys(changedTimes)
    .map(file => `\n  ${file}`)
    .join("");
  if (changedFiles.length) {
    console.log("New build triggered, files changed:", changedFiles);
  }
  done();
});

An example output of this is:

New build triggered, files changed:
  /path/to/app/src/components/item/Item.js
  /path/to/app/src/App.js

Note: This output will come before the final stats are printed.

1
  • 2
    Thanks for sharing this information... Your code allowed me to find out the reason for non-stop continuous HMR rebuild in my project caused by a stray .html file created by code coverage module. Nov 27, 2017 at 7:28
10

In webpack 4 you can access to watcher in that way:

getChangedFiles(compiler) {
  const { watchFileSystem } = compiler;
  const watcher = watchFileSystem.watcher || watchFileSystem.wfs.watcher;

  return Object.keys(watcher.mtimes);
}

latter in watchRun hook

compiler.hooks.watchRun.tapAsync('plugin name', (_compiler, done) => {
  const changedFile = this.getChangedFiles(_compiler)

  // ...

  return done();
});

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