Vite plugins for isolating server-only and client-only code
npm install -D vite-env-only
Prevents specific packages and files from being included in the client or server bundle by throwing an error at build-time when a matching import would have been included.
// vite.config.ts
import { defineConfig } from "vite"
import { denyImports } from "vite-env-only"
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [
denyImports({
client: {
specifiers: ["fs-extra", /^node:/, "@prisma/*"],
files: ["**/.server/*", "**/*.server.*"],
},
server: {
specifiers: ["jquery"],
},
}),
],
})
{
client?: {
specifiers?: Array<string | RegExp>,
files?: Array<string | RegExp>
},
server?: {
specifiers?: Array<string | RegExp>,
files?: Array<string | RegExp>
}
}
Matching is performed against the raw import specifier in the source code. Match patterns can be:
- String literal for exact matches
- Globs via micromatch
RegExp
s
Matching is performed against the resolved and normalized root-relative file path. Match patterns can be:
- String literal for exact matches
- Globs via micromatch
RegExp
s
// vite.config.ts
import { defineConfig } from "vite"
import { envOnlyMacros } from "vite-env-only"
export default defineConfig({
plugins: [envOnlyMacros()],
})
All macros can be imported within your app code from "vite-env-only/macros"
.
Marks an expression as server-only and replaces it with undefined
on the client.
Keeps the expression as-is on the server.
For example:
import { serverOnly$ } from "vite-env-only/macros"
export const message = serverOnly$("i only exist on the server")
On the client this produces:
export const message = undefined
On the server this produces:
export const message = "i only exist on the server"
Marks an expression as client-only and replaces it with undefined
on the server.
Keeps the expression as-is on the client.
For example:
import { clientOnly$ } from "vite-env-only/macros"
export const message = clientOnly$("i only exist on the client")
On the client this produces:
export const message = "i only exist on the client"
On the server this produces:
export const message = undefined
This plugin eliminates any identifiers that become unreferenced as a result of macro replacement.
For example, given the following usage of serverOnly$
:
import { serverOnly$ } from "vite-env-only/macros"
import { readFile } from "node:fs"
function readConfig() {
return JSON.parse(readFile.sync("./config.json", "utf-8"))
}
export const serverConfig = serverOnly$(readConfig())
On the client this produces:
export const serverConfig = undefined
On the server this produces:
import { readFile } from "node:fs"
function readConfig() {
return JSON.parse(readFile.sync("./config.json", "utf-8"))
}
export const serverConfig = readConfig()
The macro types capture the fact that values can be undefined
depending on the environment.
For example:
import { serverOnly$ } from "vite-env-only/macros"
export const API_KEY = serverOnly$("secret")
// ^? string | undefined
If you want to opt out of strict type safety, you can use a non-null assertion (!
):
import { serverOnly$ } from "vite-env-only/macros"
export const API_KEY = serverOnly$("secret")!
// ^? string
Vite already provides import.meta.env.SSR
which works in a similar way to these macros in production.
However, in development Vite neither replaces import.meta.env.SSR
nor performs dead-code elimination as Vite considers these steps to be optimizations.
In general, its a bad idea to rely on optimizations for correctness. In contrast, these macros treat code replacement and dead-code elimination as part of their feature set.
Additionally, these macros use function calls to mark expressions as server-only or client-only. That means they can guarantee that code within the function call never ends up in the wrong environment while only transforming a single AST node type: function call expressions.
import.meta.env.SSR
is instead a special identifier which can show up in many different AST node types: if
statements, ternaries, switch
statements, etc.
This makes it far more challenging to guarantee that dead-code completely eliminated.
Thanks to these project for exploring environment isolation and conventions for transpilation: