I'm fairly familiar with webpack and the html-webpack-plugin and have used them on a couple of other (SPA) projects. But in this new project I have to convert a legacy multi-page website to use webpack. There is a custom asp.net handler (ashx) that currently bundles (and minifies in prod builds) registered scripts by placing a comma separate list of script names on the query string of the .ashx reference in a script tag: <script src="Script.ashx?i=jquery,jquery-ui,...">
.
One of the problems is that almost all the pages use a master page. So, there is no <body>
tag to use for the html-webpack-plugin.
If I was dealing with a small number of entries I would have no problem using a few html-webpack-plugin templates to inject the scripts and place the output files in the correct place in the project folder structure. But there are 50 aspx pages in various locations in the project folder structure. So I would very much like to avoid maintaining separate templates for all of those pages.
But given that there no <body>
tags in any of these files, how do I inject the scripts into the desired place?
I've built a custom code generator to read all the aspx pages in the project and find the Script.ashx references. It then parses the comma separated query string and generates a companion .js file with one import statement for each of the referenced scripts. These companion .js files will be what are referenced in the webpack "entry" array. So, for instance /home.aspx gets a companion /home-entry.js file. That file is in the webpack config: entry { "home" : "./home-entry", ... }
. And the corresponding Script.ashx is commented out in the source aspx page. I'm also code generating the webpack entry
array and the html-webpack-plugin references for each entry
into the plugins
array in the webpack config.
Home.aspx (snippet):
<asp:Content ID="Content6" ContentPlaceHolderID="footerPlaceHolder" runat="server">
<script type="text/javascript" src="/Script.ashx?i=jquery,jquery-migrate,jquery-ui,jquery-watermark,popr,acrobat-detection,pdflinkfix,device,navbar,jqdialoghelper,home&v=<%= "" + MyNameSpace.Scripts.ScriptHelpers.AssemblyVersion %>"></script>
</asp:Content>
Entry example:
"home" : "./home-entry",
Plugins example:
new HtmlWebpackPlugin( {
chunks: ['home-entry'],
alwaysWriteToDisk: true,
filename: "./home.aspx",
inject: 'body', // or what?
chunkSortMode: "dependency",
hash: true
} ),
home-entry.js:
import '/Scripts/jquery-3.3.1.min'
import '/Scripts/jquery-migrate-min'
import '/Scripts/jquery-ui-1.12.1.min'
import '/Scripts/jquery.watermark.min'
import '/Scripts/popr/popr'
import '/Scripts/acrobat_detection'
import '/Scripts/PDFLinkFix'
import '/Scripts/Device'
import '/Scripts/NavBar'
import '/Scripts/jqDialogHelper'
import '/Scripts/Home'
Expected result: The big problem is that I cannot figure out if there is a way to tell html-webpack-plugin to inject into a specific tag. I.e. what I want it to do is find the specific <asp:Content ID="Content6" ContentPlaceHolderID="footerPlaceHolder" runat="server">
tag and inject the script tags into it. Note that there are other <asp:Content>
tags that have different ContentPlaceHolderID
values. So html-webpack-plugin has to find the one with ContentPlaceHolderID="footerPlaceHolder"
.
Actual result: I believe with a default html-webpack-plugin options, in the absence of a <body>
tag, the plugin will place the scripts at the end of the file. Which will confuse asp.net.
<asp:Content
tag does not render client side, so you cannot reference it. 2: There will always be abody
tag, the one from the Master Page. The Master and one or more content pages will be merged into a single html page.<!-- #include file="~/home-scripts.html" -->
. Testing this now./SomeFolder/SomePage.aspx
I am code generating/SomeFolder/SomePage-entry.js
.html-webpack-plugin
is writing/SomeFolder/SomePage-bundles.inc
with just the script tags. Inside that aspx file I am replacing the oldScript.ashx
reference with:<!-- #include file="SomePage-bundles.inc" -->
<head>
tag that encloses the<link>
tags for my styles. So I would still like an answer to my original post.