Hook into angular-cli build watch

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南方客
南方客 2020-12-06 10:06

I\'d like to to know if it is possible to hook into angular-cli\'s build/watch command:

ng build /w

which generates files and dr

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  • 2020-12-06 10:42

    I managed to achieve what I wanted with parallel tasks, copyfiles and npm watch:

    npm dev dependencies:

    "npm-watch": "^0.1.8",
    "parallelshell": "^2.0.0",
    "copyfiles": "^1.2.0",
    

    package.json snippet:

    "watch": {
        "copy-files": "dist/*.js"
      },
      "scripts": {
        "ng": "ng",
        "start": "ng serve",
        "lint": "tslint \"src/**/*.ts\" --project src/tsconfig.json --type-check && tslint \"e2e/**/*.ts\" --project e2e/tsconfig.json --type-check",
        "test": "ng test",
        "pree2e": "webdriver-manager update --standalone false --gecko false",
        "e2e": "protractor",
        "watch": "npm-watch",
        "copy-files": "copyfiles src/** dist/** ../angular",
        "ng-build": "ng build -w",
        "build": "parallelshell \"ng build\" \"npm run watch\" "
      },
    

    Then

    npm run build

    FWIW the watch config is saying, if anything in dist/*.js changes, run the "copy-files" npm script...

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  • 2020-12-06 10:43

    If you just want to change the folder that it outputs to you can set that in the angular-cli.json file. There is an 'outdir' setting in that you can change to be the folder you want it to output to.

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  • 2020-12-06 10:48

    One way is to run npm run build and have a postbuild script that copies the content of index.html from your dist folder to your html/cshtml file in your desired folder and changes the script and link tag's paths in your newly copied file to point to the dist folder after the build it complete. Now run ng build --watch and start development. I'm using angular 6 and angular-cli with .Net MVC 4.5 and I use ~\Views\Home as my desired destination folder.

    To have the watch mode running in my project I Run npm run build:watch Now the watch mode works. Below is my package.json:

    "scripts": {
            "ng": "ng",
            "build": "ng build",
            "build:watch": "npm run build && ng build --watch",
            "build:prod": "ng build --prod && npm run postbuild",
            "postbuild": "npm run copyindex && npm run fixpath",
            "copyindex": "copy /D \".\\dist\\index.html\" \"Views\\Home\\Index.cshtml\" /Y",
            "fixpath": "powershell -Command \"(gc Views\\Home\\Index.cshtml) -replace '(\\w+\\.js|\\w+\\.css)', '~/dist/$1' | Out-File Views\\Home\\Index.cshtml\"",
        },

    package.json explanation : after running npm run build the postbuild gets called automatically. postbuild will call copyindex and fixpath one after another.

    • copyindex will copy the content of my dist\index.html to my Views\Home\Index.cshtml.
    • fixpath will add ~/dist/ to the beginning of all js and css file paths in my Index.cshtml.
    • build:watch: calls ng build --watch.
    • build:prod: is for prod build and calls ng build --prod and postbuild one after another.

    Note

    • The commands can be run in any console on windows (cmd or bash).
    • I used powershell in my fixpath. It can be replaced by your favorite tool.
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  • Those looking for solution in angular 6+

    In angular.json

    in "build" --> options --> "outputPath":"../../your_path"
    
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  • 2020-12-06 10:59

    You should create your own node build script which calls the ng build command and after that copies the files to a directory:

    let thread = exec('ng build -e=prod --prod', { maxBuffer: 1024 * 5000});
    thread.on('close', (data) => {
        //do your moving stuff here
    });
    

    There is no way to hook into the cli (yet), and I don't think they will allow it. As far as I remember, they like to keep things closed there, because this way they are able to change/tune/update the build process a lot, without older builds going haywire

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