• Resolving an absolute path
  • Resolving a relative path
  • Resolving a module path
  • Aliasing
  • Caching
  • Unsafe caching
  • Context
  • Loaders
  • Asynchronous

    The resolving process is pretty simple. We distinguish three types of requests:

    • absolute path: require("/home/me/file") require("C:\Home\me\file")
    • relative path: require("../src/file") require("./file")
    • module path: require("module") require("module/lib/file")

    Resolving an absolute path

    We first check if the path points to a directory. For a directory we need to find the main file in this directory. Therefore the main field in the package.json is joined to the path. If there is no package.json or no main field, index is used as filename.

    We have an absolute path to a file now. We try to append all extensions (configuration option resolve.extensions). The first existing file is used as result.

    Resolving a relative path

    The context directory is the directory of the resource file that contains the require statement. If there is no resource file the configuration option context is used as context directory. (This can occur for entry points or with loader-generated files).

    The relative path is joined to the context directory and the resulting absolute file is resolved according to “Resolving an absolute path”.

    Resolving a module path

    For resolving a module we first gather all search directories for modules from the context directory. This process is similar to the node.js resolving process, but the search directories are configurable with the configuration option resolve.modulesDirectories. In addition to this the directories in the configuration option resolve.root are prepended and directories in the configuration option resolve.fallback are appended.

    The module is looked up in each module directory and resolved according to “Resolving an absolute path”. If the first match has no success, the second is tried and so on.

    Aliasing

    There is a configuration option resolve.alias which renames modules.

    When trying to “resolve a module path” the module name is matched to the resolve.alias option and when there is a match it gets replaced with the alias.

    Caching

    Every filesystem access is cached so that multiple parallel or serial requests to the same thing are merged. In watching mode only changed files are removed from cache (the watcher knows which files got changed). In non-watching mode the cache is purged before every compilation.

    Unsafe caching

    There is a configuration option resolve.unsafeCache which boosts performance by aggressive caching.

    Every resolve process is cached and isn’t ever purged. This is correct in most cases, but incorrect in edge cases (what edge cases?).

    Context

    When trying to resolve a [[context]] “Resolving an absolute path” ends when a directory is found.

    Loaders

    For loaders the configuration options in resolveLoader are used.

    In addition to that when trying to “resolve a module path” all module name variations in the configuration option resolveLoader.moduleTemplates are tried.

    Asynchronous

    The above description suggests a serial process, but in the implementation the process is completely asynchronous and parallel. This may cause more filesystem access than required.