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Out of the box SplitChunksPlugin should work well for most users.
By default it only affects on-demand chunks, because changing initial chunks would affect the script tags the HTML file should include to run the project.
Rspack will automatically split chunks based on these conditions:
When trying to fulfill the last two conditions, bigger chunks are preferred.
Rspack provides a set of options for developers that want more control over this functionality.
The default configuration was chosen to fit web performance best practices, but the optimal strategy for your project might differ. If you're changing the configuration, you should measure the effect of your changes to ensure there's a real benefit.
This configuration object represents the default behavior of the SplitChunksPlugin.
When files paths are processed by Rspack, they always contain / on UNIX systems and \ on Windows. That's why using [\\/] in {cacheGroup}.test fields is necessary to represent a path separator. / or \ in {cacheGroup}.test will cause issues when used cross-platform.
Passing an entry name to {cacheGroup}.test and using a name of an existing chunk for {cacheGroup}.name is no longer allowed.
Cache groups can inherit and/or override any options from splitChunks.{cacheGroup}.*; but test, priority and reuseExistingChunk can only be configured on cache group level. To disable any of the default cache groups, set them to false.
'initial' | 'all' | 'async' | RegExp | ((chunk: Chunk) => bool)'async'This indicates which chunks will be selected for optimization.
When a string is provided, valid values are all, async, and initial. Providing all can be particularly powerful, because it means that chunks can be shared even between async and non-async chunks.
Alternatively, you may provide a function for more control. The return value will indicate whether to include each chunk.
You can also pass a regular expression, which is a short for (chunk) => regex.test(chunk.name).
number30Maximum number of parallel requests when on-demand loading.
number30Maximum number of parallel requests at an entry point.
number1The minimum times must a module be shared among chunks before splitting.
booleantrue if options.mode is 'production', otherwise defaults to falsePrevents exposing path info when creating names for parts splitted by maxSize.
number | Record<string, number>20000 in production and 10000 in othersMinimum size, in bytes, for a chunk to be generated.
number | Record<string, number> = 0
Using maxSize (either globally optimization.splitChunks.maxSize per cache group optimization.splitChunks.cacheGroups[x].maxSize or for the fallback cache group optimization.splitChunks.fallbackCacheGroup.maxSize) tells Rspack to try to split chunks bigger than maxSize bytes into smaller parts. Parts will be at least minSize (next to maxSize) in size.
The algorithm is deterministic and changes to the modules will only have local effects. So that it is usable when using long term caching and doesn't require records. maxSize is only a hint and could be violated when modules are bigger than maxSize or splitting would violate minSize.
When the chunk has a name already, each part will get a new name derived from that name. Depending on the value of optimization.splitChunks.hidePathInfo it will add a key derived from the first module name or a hash of it.
maxSize option is intended to be used with HTTP/2 and long term caching. It increases the request count for better caching. It could also be used to decrease the file size for faster rebuilding.
maxSize takes higher priority than maxInitialRequest/maxAsyncRequests. Actual priority is maxInitialRequest/maxAsyncRequests < maxSize < minSize.
Setting the value for maxSize sets the value for both maxAsyncSize and maxInitialSize.
number | Record<string, number>
Like maxSize, maxAsyncSize can be applied globally (splitChunks.maxAsyncSize), to cacheGroups (splitChunks.cacheGroups.{cacheGroup}.maxAsyncSize), or to the fallback cache group (splitChunks.fallbackCacheGroup.maxAsyncSize).
The difference between maxAsyncSize and maxSize is that maxAsyncSize will only affect on-demand loading chunks.
number | Record<string, number>
Like maxSize, maxInitialSize can be applied globally (splitChunks.maxInitialSize), to cacheGroups (splitChunks.cacheGroups.{cacheGroup}.maxInitialSize), or to the fallback cache group (splitChunks.fallbackCacheGroup.maxInitialSize).
The difference between maxInitialSize and maxSize is that maxInitialSize will only affect initial load chunks.
string-By default Rspack will generate names using origin and name of the chunk (e.g. vendors-main.js).
This option lets you specify the delimiter to use for the generated names.
string | functionfalsewhere the version of the function type is
>=0.4.1.
Also available for each cacheGroup: splitChunks.cacheGroups.{cacheGroup}.name.
The name of the split chunk. Providing false will keep the same name of the chunks so it doesn't change names unnecessarily. It is the recommended value for production builds.
Providing a string allows you to use a custom name. Specifying a string will merge all common modules and vendors into a single chunk. This might lead to bigger initial downloads and slow down page loads.
If the splitChunks.name matches an entry point name, the entry point will be removed.
splitChunks.cacheGroups.{cacheGroup}.name can be used to move modules into a chunk that is a parent of the source chunk. For example, use name: "entry-name" to move modules into the entry-name chunk. You can also use on demand named chunks, but you must be careful that the selected modules are only used under this chunk.
booleanEnabling this configuration, the splitting of chunks will be grouped based on the usage of modules exports in different runtimes, ensuring the optimal loading size in each runtime.
For example, if there are three entry points named foo, bar, and baz, they all depend on the same module called shared. However, foo and bar depend on the export value1 from shared, while baz depends on the export value2 from shared.
In the default strategy, the shared module appears in 3 chunks. If it meets the minSize for splitting, then the shared module should be extracted into a separate chunk.
However, this would result in none of the three entry points having the optimal loaded size. Loading the shared module from the foo and bar entries would unnecessarily load the export value2, while loading from the baz entry would unnecessarily load the export value1.
When the splitChunks.usedExports optimization is enabled, it analyzes which exports of the shared module are used in different entries. It finds that the exports used in foo and bar are different from those in baz, resulting in the creation of two distinct chunks, one corresponding to the entries foo and bar, and the other corresponding to the entry baz.
string[]Sets the size types which are used when a number is used for sizes.
Cache groups can inherit and/or override any options from splitChunks.*; but test, priority and reuseExistingChunk can only be configured on cache group level. To disable any of the default cache groups, set them to false.
number-20A module can belong to multiple cache groups. The optimization will prefer the cache group with a higher priority. The default groups have a negative priority to allow custom groups to take higher priority (default value is 0 for custom groups).
RegExp | string | functionwhere the version of the function type is
>=0.4.1.
Controls which modules are selected by this cache group. Omitting it selects all modules. It can match the absolute module resource path or chunk names. When a chunk name is matched, all modules in the chunk are selected.
booleanTells Rspack to ignore splitChunks.minSize, splitChunks.minChunks, splitChunks.maxAsyncRequests and splitChunks.maxInitialRequests options and always create chunks for this cache group.
stringSets the hint for chunk id. It will be added to chunk's filename.
stringAllows to override the filename when and only when it's an initial chunk. All placeholders available in output.filename are also available here.
booleanfalseWhether to reuse existing chunks when possible. If so, after splitting, the newly created chunk contains modules that are exactly the same as those in the original chunk, the original chunk will be reused, and no new chunk will be generated, which may affect the final filename of the chunk. For example:
In chunks Foo and Bar, the module B, due to the configuration of cacheGroup, will be split into a new chunk that only contains module B. This new chunk is identical in terms of the modules it contains with chunk Bar, so chunk Bar can be directly reused.
If the setting of reuseExistingChunk is set to false, then the module B in chunks Bar and Foo will be moved to a new chunk, and chunk Bar, since it no longer contains any modules, will be deleted as an empty chunk.
string | RegExpAllows to assign modules to a cache group by module type.