I'm using a babel plugin to load environment variables from a .env
file into a React Native project, but changes to the .env
file are not loaded until the javascript file importing them changes. I'd like a way to tell the react-native packager to recompile in the event that this file changes. I would accept an answer that:
- Simply re-transpiles the entire project when a specific file (
.env
) changes. - Re-transpiles only those files containing a specific string, say
foo
Is there a simple way to do this by writing a plugin/middleware? Maybe a separate background script that fires events to watchman that the react-native packager is listening for?
[EDIT in reply to a comment]
My current .babelrc
is the following, where babel-plugin-react-native-config
is a plugin I wrote to do hot variable swapping in conjunction with the react-native-config
package.
{
"presets": [
"react-native"
],
"plugins": [
["babel-plugin-espower", {
"sourceRoot": "./App"
}],
"transform-flow-strip-types"
],
"env": {
"production": {
"plugins": [
"babel-plugin-unassert",
]
},
"development": {
"plugins": [
["babel-plugin-react-native-config", { envfile: ".env" }]
]
}
}
}
The problem is that the react-native packager only watches javascript files. I don't think changing my babel configuration will help, unless babel can somehow speak upwards to react-native or watchman to inform it that some file needs recompiling...
[EDIT 2]
I determined that the react-native packager uses watchman to watch files. E.g., when I do watchman watch-list
after starting the packager (and after doing a watchman watch-del-all
), I get
{
"version": "4.6.0",
"roots": [
"/path/to/my/project"
]
}
Moreover, when I delete this watch while the packager is running, nothing happens (from its perspective, the js isn't changing because it doesn't receive any updates), but then when I restart the packager it recreates this watch and transpiles everything.
So it seems that, unless there's a better way, I have to create a watchman trigger to both (1) kill the react-packager (2) kill the watch on my app directory (3) restart the node packager. This seems slow and hacky, but I would like to see if it can even work.
I haven't quite gotten this to work in a generic way, but I'm experimenting with various things.
exports.assetExts = [ 'bmp', 'gif', 'jpg', 'jpeg', 'png', 'psd', 'svg', 'webp', // Image formats 'm4v', 'mov', 'mp4', 'mpeg', 'mpg', 'webm', // Video formats 'aac', 'aiff', 'caf', 'm4a', 'mp3', 'wav', // Audio formats 'html', 'pdf', // Document formats ];