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smooshpack
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1.0.0-beta-5 • Public • Published

sandpack-client

A bundler that completely works in the browser and takes advantage of it.

Why?

Online code playgrounds are getting more popular: they provide an easy way to play with code without installation.

As CodeSandbox came along, it had a pretty basic bundler. However, as CodeSandbox got more popular its bundler got more advanced. Nowadays the bundler is used for all kinds of bigger web projects, and it would be a shame if others couldn't use the functionality.

This library acts as an interface with the bundler of CodeSandbox. It allows you to run any code on a web page, from Vue projects to React projects to Parcel projects. With everything that CodeSandbox supports client side as well.

So what can this bundler do?

This is a list of features that the bundler supports out of the box, the list may be outdated.

  1. Hot Module Reloading API (module.hot)
  2. npm dependencies
  3. Most common transpilers (vue, babel, typescript, css, scss, less, stylus, parcel, etc...)
  4. Parallel transpiling
  5. On-demand transpiler loading
  6. Webpack loader syntax (!raw-loader!./test.js)
  7. Friendly error overlay (using create-react-app overlay)
  8. Transpilation result caching
  9. HTML/CSS entry points

Example usage

This repo serves as an interface to communicate with the bundler. The bundler itself is hosted on {version}-sandpack.codesandbox.io and is heavily cached by a CDN. We also included the necessary files under sandpack if you want to host the bundler yourself.

Using the Client

The Client is a class implementation, you can import it from the package.

import { Client } from 'smooshpack';

// There are two ways of initializing a preview, you can give it either an
// iframe element or a selector of an element to create an iframe on.
const client = new Client(
  '#preview', // iframe selector or element itself
  {
    files: {
      '/index.js': {
        code: `console.log(require('uuid'))`,
      },
    },
    entry: '/index.js',
    dependencies: {
      uuid: 'latest',
    },
  } /* We support a third parameter for advanced options, you can find more info below */
);

// When you make a change you can just run `updatePreview`, we'll automatically discover
// which files have changed and hot reload them.
client.updatePreview({
  files: {
    '/index.js': {
      code: `console.log('New Text!')`,
    },
  },
  entry: '/index.js',
  dependencies: {
    uuid: 'latest',
  },
});

If you specify a package.json in the list of files we will use that as source of truth. Otherwise, we infer dependencies and entry from it:

// We infer dependencies and the entry point from package.json
const PACKAGE_JSON_CODE = JSON.stringify(
  {
    title: 'test',
    main: 'index.js',
    dependencies: {
      uuid: 'latest',
    },
  },
  null,
  2
);

// Give it either a selector or an iframe element as first argument, the second arguments are the files
const client = new Client('#preview', {
  files: {
    '/index.js': {
      code: `console.log(require('uuid'))`,
    },
    '/package.json': {
      code: PACKAGE_JSON_CODE,
    },
  },
});

SandboxInfo

The second argument in the constructor of Client is all sandbox info. It has this structure:

{
  /**
   * Files, keys are paths.
  **/
  files: {
    [path: string]: {
      code: string
    }
  },
  /**
   * Dependencies, supports npm and GitHub dependencies
  **/
  dependencies?: {
    [dependencyName: string]: string
  },
  /**
   * Default file to evaluate
  **/
  entry?: string,
  /**
   * The sandbox template to use, this is inferred from the files and package.json if not specified
  **/
  template?: string
}

ClientOptions

The third argument in the constructor of Client is extra options. Here you can pass custom bundling/evaluation options or instructions for what and how to render inside the iframe:

{
  /**
   * Location of the bundler. Defaults to `${version}-sandpack.codesandbox.io`
   */
  bundlerURL?: string;
  /**
   * Width/Height of the iframe.
   */
  width?: string;
  height?: string;
  /**
   * If we should skip the third step: evaluation. Useful if you only want to see
   * transpiled results
   */
  skipEval?: boolean;
  /**
   * Boolean flags to trigger certain UI elements in the bundler
   */
  showOpenInCodeSandbox?: boolean;
  showErrorScreen?: boolean;
  showLoadingScreen?: boolean;
}

Client API

The client instance has several helper functions you can call.

updatePreview

Send new content like files and dependencies, to the preview. It will automatically hot update the preview with the new files and options. Accepts a single argument sandboxInfo of type SandboxInfo.

updateOptions

Updates the given options and then updates the preview. Accepts a single argument options of type ClientOptions.

dispatch

Dispatch an event to the bundler and all other listeners. Accepts a single argument, which is the data to send. The dispatch function will pass the internal id of the client, so only the bundler that performed the handshake with this client instance will respond.

client.dispatch({ type: 'refresh' }); // sends a refresh action to the bundler

listen

Listens to events coming from the bundler that performed the handshake with this client instance. Uses the internal id to filter events coming from other bundlers.

client.listen(message => {
  if (message.type === 'status') {
    console.log(message.status);
  }
});

getCodeSandboxURL

Create a sandbox from the current files and return an object in this form:

{
  sandboxId: sandbox_id,
  editorUrl: `https://codesandbox.io/s/${sandbox_id}`,
  embedUrl: `https://codesandbox.io/embed/${sandbox_id}`,
}

Why is the bundler hosted externally and not a simple import?

We have three reasons to host the bundler of sandpack externally:

Security

The bundler evaluates and transpiles all files in an iframe under a different subdomain. This is important, because it prevents attackers from tampering with cookies of the host domain when evaluating code.

Performance

We heavily make use of Web Workers for transpilations. Almost all our transpilation happens in web workers, and there is no easy way yet to bundle this in a library.

Bundle Size

Another reason to host the bundler externally is because of code splitting: we split all our transpilers away and load them on-demand. If a user doesn't use sass we won't load the transpiler. This wouldn't be possible if we would give one big JS file as the library.

Offline Support

We use Service Workers to download all transpilers in the background, so the next time a user visits your website they don't have to download the bundler anymore and it can be used offline. This is possible because we host the service worker externally.

I want to highlight that you can also host the bundler by yourself, all necessary files are in the sandpack folder.

For React developers

If you want to integrate the sandpack bundler into your React project, we recomment you check out the sandpack-react package, which has all the components and hooks you need for building an instant code running experience for your users.

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Install

npm i smooshpack

Weekly Downloads

115

Version

1.0.0-beta-5

License

GPL-2.0

Unpacked Size

86.8 MB

Total Files

417

Last publish

Collaborators

  • alexnm
  • compuives