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Bump esbuild from 0.21.4 to 0.22.0
Bumps esbuild from 0.21.4 to 0.22.0.
Release notes
Sourced from esbuild's releases.
v0.22.0
This release deliberately contains backwards-incompatible changes. To avoid automatically picking up releases like this, you should either be pinning the exact version of
esbuild
in yourpackage.json
file (recommended) or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as^0.21.0
or~0.21.0
. See npm's documentation about semver for more information.
Omit packages from bundles by default when targeting node (#1874, #2830, #2846, #2915, #3145, #3294, #3323, #3582, #3809, #3815)
This breaking change is an experiment. People are commonly confused when using esbuild to bundle code for node (i.e. for
--platform=node
) because some packages may not be intended for bundlers, and may use node-specific features that don't work with a bundler. Even though esbuild's "getting started" instructions say to use--packages=external
to work around this problem, many people don't read the documentation and don't do this, and are then confused when it doesn't work. So arguably this is a bad default behavior for esbuild to have if people keep tripping over this.With this release, esbuild will now omit packages from the bundle by default when the platform is
node
(i.e. the previous behavior of--packages=external
is now the default in this case). Note that your dependencies must now be present on the file system when your bundle is run. If you don't want this behavior, you can do--packages=bundle
to allow packages to be included in the bundle (i.e. the previous default behavior). Note that--packages=bundle
doesn't mean all packages are bundled, just that packages are allowed to be bundled. You can still exclude individual packages from the bundle using--external:
even when--packages=bundle
is present.The
--packages=
setting considers all import paths that "look like" package imports in the original source code to be package imports. Specifically import paths that don't start with a path segment of/
or.
or..
are considered to be package imports. The only two exceptions to this rule are subpath imports (which start with a#
character) and TypeScript path remappings viapaths
and/orbaseUrl
intsconfig.json
(which are applied first).Drop support for older platforms (#3802)
This release drops support for the following operating systems:
- Windows 7
- Windows 8
- Windows Server 2008
- Windows Server 2012
This is because the Go programming language dropped support for these operating system versions in Go 1.21, and this release updates esbuild from Go 1.20 to Go 1.22.
Note that this only affects the binary esbuild executables that are published to the
esbuild
npm package. It's still possible to compile esbuild's source code for these older operating systems. If you need to, you can compile esbuild for yourself using an older version of the Go compiler (before Go version 1.21). That might look something like this:git clone https://github.com/evanw/esbuild.git cd esbuild go build ./cmd/esbuild ./esbuild.exe --version
In addition, this release increases the minimum required node version for esbuild's JavaScript API from node 12 to node 18. Node 18 is the oldest version of node that is still being supported (see node's release schedule for more information). This increase is because of an incompatibility between the JavaScript that the Go compiler generates for the
esbuild-wasm
package and versions of node before node 17.4 (specifically thecrypto.getRandomValues
function).Update
await using
behavior to match TypeScriptTypeScript 5.5 subtly changes the way
await using
behaves. This release updates esbuild to match these changes in TypeScript. You can read more about these changes in microsoft/TypeScript#58624.Allow
es2024
as a target environmentThe ECMAScript 2024 specification was just approved, so it has been added to esbuild as a possible compilation target. You can read more about the features that it adds here: https://2ality.com/2024/06/ecmascript-2024.html. The only addition that's relevant for esbuild is the regular expression
/v
flag. With--target=es2024
, regular expressions that use the/v
flag will now be passed through untransformed instead of being transformed into a call tonew RegExp
.Publish binaries for OpenBSD on 64-bit ARM (#3665, #3674)
With this release, you should now be able to install the
esbuild
npm package in OpenBSD on 64-bit ARM, such as on an Apple device with an M1 chip.This was contributed by
@ikmckenz
.Publish binaries for WASI (WebAssembly System Interface) preview 1 (#3300, #3779)
The upcoming WASI (WebAssembly System Interface) standard is going to be a way to run WebAssembly outside of a JavaScript host environment. In this scenario you only need a
.wasm
file without any supporting JavaScript code. Instead of JavaScript providing the APIs for the host environment, the WASI standard specifies a "system interface" that WebAssembly code can access directly (e.g. for file system access).
... (truncated)
Changelog
Sourced from esbuild's changelog.
0.22.0
This release deliberately contains backwards-incompatible changes. To avoid automatically picking up releases like this, you should either be pinning the exact version of
esbuild
in yourpackage.json
file (recommended) or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as^0.21.0
or~0.21.0
. See npm's documentation about semver for more information.
Omit packages from bundles by default when targeting node (#1874, #2830, #2846, #2915, #3145, #3294, #3323, #3582, #3809, #3815)
This breaking change is an experiment. People are commonly confused when using esbuild to bundle code for node (i.e. for
--platform=node
) because some packages may not be intended for bundlers, and may use node-specific features that don't work with a bundler. Even though esbuild's "getting started" instructions say to use--packages=external
to work around this problem, many people don't read the documentation and don't do this, and are then confused when it doesn't work. So arguably this is a bad default behavior for esbuild to have if people keep tripping over this.With this release, esbuild will now omit packages from the bundle by default when the platform is
node
(i.e. the previous behavior of--packages=external
is now the default in this case). Note that your dependencies must now be present on the file system when your bundle is run. If you don't want this behavior, you can do--packages=bundle
to allow packages to be included in the bundle (i.e. the previous default behavior). Note that--packages=bundle
doesn't mean all packages are bundled, just that packages are allowed to be bundled. You can still exclude individual packages from the bundle using--external:
even when--packages=bundle
is present.The
--packages=
setting considers all import paths that "look like" package imports in the original source code to be package imports. Specifically import paths that don't start with a path segment of/
or.
or..
are considered to be package imports. The only two exceptions to this rule are subpath imports (which start with a#
character) and TypeScript path remappings viapaths
and/orbaseUrl
intsconfig.json
(which are applied first).Drop support for older platforms (#3802)
This release drops support for the following operating systems:
- Windows 7
- Windows 8
- Windows Server 2008
- Windows Server 2012
This is because the Go programming language dropped support for these operating system versions in Go 1.21, and this release updates esbuild from Go 1.20 to Go 1.22.
Note that this only affects the binary esbuild executables that are published to the
esbuild
npm package. It's still possible to compile esbuild's source code for these older operating systems. If you need to, you can compile esbuild for yourself using an older version of the Go compiler (before Go version 1.21). That might look something like this:git clone https://github.com/evanw/esbuild.git cd esbuild go build ./cmd/esbuild ./esbuild.exe --version
In addition, this release increases the minimum required node version for esbuild's JavaScript API from node 12 to node 18. Node 18 is the oldest version of node that is still being supported (see node's release schedule for more information). This increase is because of an incompatibility between the JavaScript that the Go compiler generates for the
esbuild-wasm
package and versions of node before node 17.4 (specifically thecrypto.getRandomValues
function).Update
await using
behavior to match TypeScriptTypeScript 5.5 subtly changes the way
await using
behaves. This release updates esbuild to match these changes in TypeScript. You can read more about these changes in microsoft/TypeScript#58624.Allow
es2024
as a target environmentThe ECMAScript 2024 specification was just approved, so it has been added to esbuild as a possible compilation target. You can read more about the features that it adds here: https://2ality.com/2024/06/ecmascript-2024.html. The only addition that's relevant for esbuild is the regular expression
/v
flag. With--target=es2024
, regular expressions that use the/v
flag will now be passed through untransformed instead of being transformed into a call tonew RegExp
.Publish binaries for OpenBSD on 64-bit ARM (#3665, #3674)
With this release, you should now be able to install the
esbuild
npm package in OpenBSD on 64-bit ARM, such as on an Apple device with an M1 chip.This was contributed by
@ikmckenz
.Publish binaries for WASI (WebAssembly System Interface) preview 1 (#3300, #3779)
... (truncated)
Commits
80c6e6e
publish 0.22.0 to npm196dcad
fix #1874: node defaults to--packages=external
3f57db8
release notes for #353991663db
Provide API to create a custom esbuild CLI with plugins (#3539)e01c0e0
also mention #3665 in release notes65711b3
release notes for #367463eb814
Add OpenBSD arm64 (#3674)b722000
fix #3300, fix #3779: add@esbuild/wasi-preview1
6679ec8
fix: verbose analyse output improperly trimmed (#3785)94f09ea
fix #3790: warn about incorrectonResolve
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