Shared Options #
root #
- Type:
string
- Default:
process.cwd()
Project root directory (where index.html
is located). Can be an absolute path, or a path relative to the current working directory.
See Project Root for more details.
base #
- Type:
string
- Default:
/
Base public path when served in development or production. Valid values include:
- Absolute URL pathname, e.g.
/foo/
- Full URL, e.g.
https://foo.com/
- Empty string or
./
(for embedded deployment)
See Public Base Path for more details.
mode #
- Type:
string
- Default:
'development'
for serve,'production'
for build
Specifying this in config will override the default mode for both serve and build. This value can also be overridden via the command line --mode
option.
See Env Variables and Modes for more details.
define #
- Type:
Record<string, string>
Define global constant replacements. Entries will be defined as globals during dev and statically replaced during build.
Starting from
2.0.0-beta.70
, string values will be used as raw expressions, so if defining a string constant, it needs to be explicitly quoted (e.g. withJSON.stringify
).To be consistent with esbuild behavior, expressions must either be a JSON object (null, boolean, number, string, array, or object) or a single identifier.
Replacements are performed only when the match isn't surrounded by other letters, numbers,
_
or$
.
WARNING
Because it's implemented as straightforward text replacements without any syntax analysis, we recommend using define
for CONSTANTS only.
For example, process.
and __APP_VERSION__
are good fits. But process
or global
should not be put into this option. Variables can be shimmed or polyfilled instead.
NOTE
For TypeScript users, make sure to add the type declarations in the env.d.ts
or vite-env.d.ts
file to get type checks and Intellisense.
Example:
// vite-env.d.ts
declare const __APP_VERSION__: string
NOTE
Since dev and build implement define
differently, we should avoid some use cases to avoid inconsistency.
Example:
const obj = {
__NAME__, // Don't define object shorthand property names
__KEY__: value // Don't define object key
}
plugins #
- Type:
(Plugin | Plugin[] | Promise<Plugin | Plugin[]>)[]
Array of plugins to use. Falsy plugins are ignored and arrays of plugins are flattened. If a promise is returned, it would be resolved before running. See Plugin API for more details on Vite plugins.
publicDir #
- Type:
string | false
- Default:
"public"
Directory to serve as plain static assets. Files in this directory are served at /
during dev and copied to the root of outDir
during build, and are always served or copied as-is without transform. The value can be either an absolute file system path or a path relative to project root.
Defining publicDir
as false
disables this feature.
See The public
Directory for more details.
cacheDir #
- Type:
string
- Default:
"node_modules/.vite"
Directory to save cache files. Files in this directory are pre-bundled deps or some other cache files generated by vite, which can improve the performance. You can use --force
flag or manually delete the directory to regenerate the cache files. The value can be either an absolute file system path or a path relative to project root. Default to .vite
when no package.json is detected.
resolve.alias #
- Type:
Record<string, string> | Array<{ find: string | RegExp, replacement: string, customResolver?: ResolverFunction | ResolverObject }>
Will be passed to @rollup/plugin-alias
as its entries option. Can either be an object, or an array of { find, replacement, customResolver }
pairs.
When aliasing to file system paths, always use absolute paths. Relative alias values will be used as-is and will not be resolved into file system paths.
More advanced custom resolution can be achieved through plugins.
resolve.dedupe #
- Type:
string[]
If you have duplicated copies of the same dependency in your app (likely due to hoisting or linked packages in monorepos), use this option to force Vite to always resolve listed dependencies to the same copy (from project root).
SSR + ESM
For SSR builds, deduplication does not work for ESM build outputs configured from build.rollupOptions.output
. A workaround is to use CJS build outputs until ESM has better plugin support for module loading.
resolve.conditions #
- Type:
string[]
Additional allowed conditions when resolving Conditional Exports from a package.
A package with conditional exports may have the following exports
field in its package.json
:
{
"exports": {
".": {
"import": "./index.mjs",
"require": "./index.js"
}
}
}
Here, import
and require
are "conditions". Conditions can be nested and should be specified from most specific to least specific.
Vite has a list of "allowed conditions" and will match the first condition that is in the allowed list. The default allowed conditions are: import
, module
, browser
, default
, and production/development
based on current mode. The resolve.conditions
config option allows specifying additional allowed conditions.
Resolving subpath exports
Export keys ending with "/" is deprecated by Node and may not work well. Please contact the package author to use *
subpath patterns instead.
resolve.mainFields #
- Type:
string[]
- Default:
['module', 'jsnext:main', 'jsnext']
List of fields in package.json
to try when resolving a package's entry point. Note this takes lower precedence than conditional exports resolved from the exports
field: if an entry point is successfully resolved from exports
, the main field will be ignored.
resolve.extensions #
- Type:
string[]
- Default:
['.mjs', '.js', '.ts', '.jsx', '.tsx', '.json']
List of file extensions to try for imports that omit extensions. Note it is NOT recommended to omit extensions for custom import types (e.g. .vue
) since it can interfere with IDE and type support.
resolve.preserveSymlinks #
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
false
Enabling this setting causes vite to determine file identity by the original file path (i.e. the path without following symlinks) instead of the real file path (i.e. the path after following symlinks).
css.modules #
- Type:
interface CSSModulesOptions { scopeBehaviour?: 'global' | 'local' globalModulePaths?: RegExp[] generateScopedName?: | string | ((name: string, filename: string, css: string) => string) hashPrefix?: string /** * default: null */ localsConvention?: | 'camelCase' | 'camelCaseOnly' | 'dashes' | 'dashesOnly' | null }
Configure CSS modules behavior. The options are passed on to postcss-modules.
css.postcss #
- Type:
string | (postcss.ProcessOptions & { plugins?: postcss.AcceptedPlugin[] })
Inline PostCSS config or a custom directory to search PostCSS config from (default is project root).
For inline PostCSS config, it expects the same format as postcss.config.js
. But for plugins
property, only array format can be used.
The search is done using postcss-load-config and only the supported config file names are loaded.
Note if an inline config is provided, Vite will not search for other PostCSS config sources.
css.preprocessorOptions #
- Type:
Record<string, object>
Specify options to pass to CSS pre-processors. The file extensions are used as keys for the options. Example:
export default defineConfig({
css: {
preprocessorOptions: {
scss: {
additionalData: `$injectedColor: orange;`
},
styl: {
additionalData: `$injectedColor ?= orange`
}
}
}
})
css.devSourcemap #
- Experimental
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
false
Whether to enable sourcemaps during dev.
json.namedExports #
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
true
Whether to support named imports from .json
files.
json.stringify #
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
false
If set to true
, imported JSON will be transformed into export default JSON.parse("...")
which is significantly more performant than Object literals, especially when the JSON file is large.
Enabling this disables named imports.
esbuild #
- Type:
ESBuildOptions | false
ESBuildOptions
extends esbuild's own transform options. The most common use case is customizing JSX:
export default defineConfig({
esbuild: {
jsxFactory: 'h',
jsxFragment: 'Fragment'
}
})
By default, esbuild is applied to ts
, jsx
and tsx
files. You can customize this with esbuild.include
and esbuild.exclude
, which can be a regex, a picomatch pattern, or an array of either.
In addition, you can also use esbuild.jsxInject
to automatically inject JSX helper imports for every file transformed by esbuild:
export default defineConfig({
esbuild: {
jsxInject: `import React from 'react'`
}
})
When build.minify
is true
, all minify optimizations are applied by default. To disable certain aspects of it, set any of esbuild.minifyIdentifiers
, esbuild.minifySyntax
, or esbuild.minifyWhitespace
options to false
. Note the esbuild.minify
option can't be used to override build.minify
.
Set to false
to disable esbuild transforms.
assetsInclude #
- Type:
string | RegExp | (string | RegExp)[]
- Related: Static Asset Handling
Specify additional picomatch patterns to be treated as static assets so that:
They will be excluded from the plugin transform pipeline when referenced from HTML or directly requested over
fetch
or XHR.Importing them from JS will return their resolved URL string (this can be overwritten if you have a
enforce: 'pre'
plugin to handle the asset type differently).
The built-in asset type list can be found here.
Example:
export default defineConfig({
assetsInclude: ['**/*.gltf']
})
logLevel #
- Type:
'info' | 'warn' | 'error' | 'silent'
Adjust console output verbosity. Default is 'info'
.
clearScreen #
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
true
Set to false
to prevent Vite from clearing the terminal screen when logging certain messages. Via command line, use --clearScreen false
.
envDir #
- Type:
string
- Default:
root
The directory from which .env
files are loaded. Can be an absolute path, or a path relative to the project root.
See here for more about environment files.
envPrefix #
- Type:
string | string[]
- Default:
VITE_
Env variables starts with envPrefix
will be exposed to your client source code via import.
SECURITY NOTES
envPrefix
should not be set as ''
, which will expose all your env variables and cause unexpected leaking of of sensitive information. Vite will throw error when detecting ''
.
appType #
- Type:
'spa' | 'mpa' | 'custom'
- Default:
'spa'
Whether your application is a Single Page Application (SPA), a Multi Page Application (MPA), or Custom Application (SSR and frameworks with custom HTML handling):
'spa'
: include SPA fallback middleware and configure sirv withsingle: true
in preview'mpa'
: only include non-SPA HTML middlewares'custom'
: don't include HTML middlewares
Learn more in Vite's SSR guide. Related: server.middlewareMode
.