There is noway to bundle your packages without using a bundler like webpack or rollup.js.
If it is necessarily to use task runner you may find a way to make the bundler work with your task runner.
I had the same problem with gulpjs and wepack, and it was really painful to make it work. The solution was using a webpack and webpack plugins in gulpjs.
const webpack = require('webpack');
const webpackStream = require('webpack-stream');
const path = require('path');
const webapckJsConfig = {
mode: (process.env.APP_ENV === 'dev' && process.env.APP_DEBUG === 'true') ? 'development' : 'production',
devtool: (process.env.APP_ENV === 'dev' && process.env.APP_DEBUG === 'true') ? 'source-map' : false,
entry: {
// Website JS Files
'website/home.js': './resources/js/website/home.js',
'website/notfound.js': './resources/js/website/notfound.js',
'website/error.js': './resources/js/website/error.js',
// Admin JS Files
'admin/home.js': './resources/js/admin/home.js',
'admin/notfound.js': './resources/js/admin/notfound.js',
},
output: {
path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'public/'),
filename: '[name]',
},
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.m?js$/,
exclude: /(node_modules|bower_components)/,
use: {
loader: 'babel-loader',
},
},
],
},
};
// JavaScript lint Cehck ✅ Convert 🔂 Compresse 🔄 Output ↪ 📁 public/js
async function scripts() {
return gulp
.src(`${JAVASCRIPT_DIR}/**/*.js`)
.pipe(webpackStream(webapckJsConfig), webpack)
.pipe(gulp.dest(`${JS_PUBLIC_DIR}`));
}
exports.scripts = scripts;
you can also check it here
You can of course take the webpack configuration and put them in external file, but you have to consider that you will confuse other developers because they will think webpack is independent and start to use it as an independent tool, so that's why I keep it in gulp.js.