How to transpile node_modules with babel and webpack in a monorepo

ℹ️ The original version of this post referred to a fork of the are-you-es5 library. This is no longer needed as the changes have been incorporated into the original library. This post has been updated accordingly.


Recently, we faced an issue where Javascript stopped working on our storefront frontend on Internet Explorer 11. This came with the usual consequences such as onClick functions not working etc. We were naturally concerned about this, and upon investigation we found that a certain dependency of ours - or so we thought - was not being transpiled from ES6 to ES5 before being published.

Erm, what is transpilation?

Given how complex this turned out to be, it bears giving a little background on what transpilation is, and why we need it. Transpilation is the process of transforming code from one programming language to its equivalent in another programming language, when both languages are on the same abstraction level. An example of this is transpiling Typescript - a strictly syntactical superset of JavaScript, to pure Javascript. This, of course, is opposed to compilation which, though also a transformation of code from one language to another, can be between languages of varying abstraction levels, e.g. compiling C code to binary executables (machine code).

A story of Javascript standards and transpilation

In this case though, we are not transpiling between Javascript and a derivative language, but between 2 standards of Javascript: ES5 and ES6. The ES stands for ECMAScript, which is a scripting-language specification, created to standardize Javascript. ES5 refers to the fifth edition of ECMAScript, which is currently supported by all modern browsers. ES6 - also known as ES2015 - is the sixth edition, and added several helpful features to Javascript which can be found here. Now, to avoid browser compatibility issues, it is generally advisable to transpile any code meant to run in the browser and written in ES6 or greater, to ES5. This is because, while most browsers have added support for ES6, there are still some holdouts (I’m looking at you, Internet Explorer!!) with quite widespread usage. Other ways of ensuring browser compatibility - which can of course be used with transpilation (and should be in most cases) include avoiding or polyfilling browser or DOM APIs not supported in a browser, or feature detection.

Tools we use

There are a number of tools for Javascript transpilation out there, but we use Babel - an extremely powerful Javascript transpilation toolchain that supports conversion between Javascript standards as well as its derivative languages. Babel can be configured using a .babelrc file, or a babel.config.js file. Another tool we rely on heavily in our build environment is Webpack, a static module bundler for modern JavaScript applications. Webpack is highly configurable, and can be set up so one can configure Babel from within the webpack configuration file, which is usually called webpack.config.js using the Babel plugin.

So what happened then?

We do not transpile the contents of our node_modules folder, to reduce the size of our bundle and avoid extremely long build times. This is because we expect that we receive already transpiled code from our dependencies. This time, we were wrong.

What we did…

Of course, we cannot transpile our entire node_modules folder, since that would increase build time by a terrible factor. The compromise we came up with was to modify the regex pattern we used to exclude the node_modules folder in our webpack/babel config so that it excluded everything in the node_modules folder except the folder containing the module that was not transpiled.

Essentially we changed this:

...
  exclude: /node_modules/,
...

into this:

...
  exclude: /node_modules\/(?!name-of-untranspiled-module)/,
...

Why this didn’t work…

We should have expected this from the onset, but upon rebuilding the project we errored again on IE11, because another module was also not being transpiled! Seeing as it would be a laborious process to add every untranspiled module to our regex, we decided to figure out a way to do this check programmatically.

Enter are-you-es5

are-you-es5 is a nifty npm package which according to its readme, is “A package to help you find out which of your node_modules aren’t written in ES5 so you can add them to your Webpack/Rollup/Parcel transpilation steps”. It must be said that the package works entirely as advertised, and ordinarily I would recommend this for use in any project that may run on Internet Explorer, except for the following caveat: It does not work when used in monorepos.

What is a monorepo?

A monorepo, short for monolithic repository, is a software development strategy where code for several projects is stored in a single repository. The advantages of using a monorepo structure are numerous and include simplified dependency management, streamlining of large scale refactoring processes, and ease of code reuse among others. Despite all the vaunted advantages, a glaring flaw of the monorepo project structure which affected us in this case is the fact that it complicates build and version control processes. There aren’t many tools that help overcome the version control issues, and this has led to companies such as Facebook and Microsoft contributing heavily to or forking their own versions of their preferred version control software, or just building theirs as in the case of Google. Build problems are in a similar situation. So much, that Facebook and Google also developed their own build software.

We are fortunate to have Lerna, a tool which optimizes the workflow around monorepos with git and npm, and for this reason fits our purposes quite nicely. The way Lerna sets up monorepos, most node_modules folders end up in the root folder, but are referenced in the package.json of their respective packages. are-you-es5 is currently not configured to work with such a project structure.

Enter depoulo/are-you-es5

Paolo Priotto forked the are-you-es5 repository and changed it so that instead of hardcoding a path to the node_modules directory, require.resolve() is used to generate an absolute path to each package’s directory. The pull request, which we’ve been using when this post was published, has been merged in the meantime. The performance caveats that ensue due to the fact that require.resolve() interacts with the file system are acceptable, since this occurs only at build time. Also, it worked!! Using this modified version we are able to check if all our dependencies are transpiled or not, but it doesn’t end there. There is an ongoing discussion on the pull request, but so far our solution has worked reliably for us.

Our final solution

We added Paolo’s version of are-you-es5 to devDependencies in the package with the untranspiled modules.

yarn add are-you-es5 -D

Or if you use npm,

npm install are-you-es5 --save-dev

Next, we created a file called non_ES5_node_modules in the root of the package. Then we added a postinstall script to the scripts object of our package’s package.json like so

...
"postinstall": "sh -c \"yarn --silent are-you-es5 check -r . | tail -n 1 > ./non_ES5_node_modules \"",
...

One of the reasons are-you-es5 is so useful is, that it has a --regex(-r) flag which generates the regular expression needed to exclude everything in the node_modules directory except the untranspiled modules. The postinstall script leverages this feature by writing the regex to the non_ES5_node_modules file anytime yarn or npm install is run.

Finally, redefine the exclusion regex in your webpack.config.js or babel.config.js like this,

exclude: new RegExp(
          fs
            .readFileSync(path.resolve('./non_ES5_node_modules'), 'utf-8')
            .slice(1, -2)
        )

Now that your regex is ready and added to your build configuration, you should have no problems with ES6 modules and legacy browser compatibilty.

Conclusion

I’d like to give a huge shout out to obahareth, creator of the are-you-es5 package, and Paolo - who did a huge part of the work needed to achieve this solution.

About the author

Somto Zikora is a Javascript developer. He loves solving problems, the knottier the better.