This page is a reference for all of the Figwheel configuration options.
You can enter these options in a figwheel-main.edn file that is in the root
of your project directory.
Example figwheel-main.edn file:
{:watch-dirs ["src" "admin-src"]
:css-dirs ["resources/public/css"]}
The options can also be entered as metadata in a Figwheel build file
in your project's root directory. The name of a build file has the form
[build-id].cljs.edn where [build-id] is an identifier of your
choice.
An example dev.cljs.edn build file that supplies figwheel config options.
^{:watch-dirs ["src" "admin-src"]
:css-dirs ["resources/public/css"]}
{:main example.core}
Any options provided in the metadata of the build file will override the
options in the figwheel-main.edn file.
The options below are listed in order of importance
A list of ClojureScript source directories to be watched and compiled on change.
The directories in :watch-dirs are passed to the compiler as source
directories. For this reason, any entry in the watch directories must
be on the classpath and must point to the root directory of a
ClojureScript namespace source tree.
I.E. If your example.core namespace is located at
src/cljs/example/core.cljs you cannot use src as an element of
:watch-dirs, you must use the path to the root directory of the
namespace tree src/cljs.
:watch-dirs ["src/cljs"]
A list of CSS source directories to be watched and reloaded into the browser.
:css-dirs ["resources/public/css"]
A symbol or string indicating a ring-handler to embed in the figwheel.repl server. This aids in quickly getting a dev server up and running. If the figwheel server doesn't meet your needs you can simply start your own server. The figwheel.client will still be able to connect to its websocket endpoint. Default: none
:ring-handler my-project.server/handler
All the options to forward to the ring-jetty-adapter/run-jetty function
which figwheel.main uses to run its ring server.
All the available options are documented here: https://github.com/ring-clojure/ring/blob/master/ring-jetty-adapter/src/ring/adapter/jetty.clj#L127
This will normally be used to set the :port and :host of the server.
Most uses of these options are considered advanced. If you find yourself using many of these options you problably need to run your own server outside of figwheel.main.
By default Figwheel engauges a Rebel readline editor when it starts the ClojureScript REPL in the terminal that it is launched in.
This will only work if you have com.bhauman/rebel-readline-cljs in
your dependencies.
More about Rebel readline: https://github.com/bhauman/rebel-readline
Default: true
:rebel-readline false
When :pprint-config is set to true. The figwheel.main will print the
computed config information and will terminate the process. Useful for
understanding what figwheel.main adds to your configuration before it
compiles your build.
Default: false
:pprint-config true
A path to an executable shell script that will be passed a file and line information for a particular compilation error or warning.
A script like this would work ie. in ~/bin/myfile-opener
#! /bin/sh
emacsclient -n +$2:$3 $1
Then add this script in your config:
:open-file-command "myfile-opener"
But that's not the best example because Figwheel handles emacsclient
as a special case. So as long as emacsclient is on the shell path you can
simply do:
:open-file-command "emacsclient"
and Figwheel will call emacsclient with the correct args.
Whether to include the figwheel.core library in the build. This enables hot reloading and client notification of compile time errors. Default: true
:figwheel-core false
Whether or not figwheel.core should hot reload compiled ClojureScript. Only has meaning when :figwheel-core is true. Default: true
:hot-reload-cljs false
Whether or not figwheel.core should reload the namespaces that
depend on the changed namespaces in addition to the changed
namespaces themselves. Only has meaning when :figwheel-core is true.
Default:true
:reload-dependents false
The url that the figwheel REPL client will use to connect back to the server.
This url is actually a template that will be filled in. For example
the default :connect-url is:
"ws://[[config-hostname]]:[[server-port]]/figwheel-connect"
The available template variables are:
For the server side:
[[config-hostname]] the host supplied in :ring-server-options > :host or "localhost"
[[server-hostname]] the java.InetAddress localhost name - "Bruces-MacBook-Pro.local" on my machine
[[server-ip]] the java.InetAddress localhost ip interface - normally 192.168.x.x
[[server-port]] the port supplied in :ring-server-options > :port or the default port 9500
On the client side:
[[client-hostname]] the js/location.hostname on the client
[[client-port]] the js/location.port on the client
If the url starts with a Websocket scheme "ws://" a websocket connection will be established. If the url starts with an http scheme "http" an http long polling connection will be established.
Either a boolean value false or a string that indicates the url
that the figwheel REPL will open in the browser after the source code
has been compiled. A false value will disable this behavior.
The string value is actually a template that can provide optional
template variables. For example the default :open-url is:
"http://[[server-hostname]]:[[server-port]]"
The available template variables are:
For the server side:
[[server-hostname]] the host supplied in :ring-server-options > :host or "localhost"
[[server-port]] the port supplied in :ring-server-options > :port or the default port 9500
Figwheel naively reloads clj and cljc files on the :source-paths.
It doesn't reload clj dependent files like tools.namspace.
Figwheel does note if there is a macro in the changed clj or cljc file
and then marks any cljs namespaces that depend on the clj file for
recompilation and then notifies the figwheel client that these
namespaces have changed.
If you want to disable this behavior:
:reload-clj-files false
Or you can specify which suffixes will cause the reloading
:reload-clj-files #{:clj :cljc}
The name of a file to redirect the figwheel.main logging to. This will only take effect when a REPL has been started.
:log-file "figwheel-main.log"
The level to set figwheel.main java.util.logger to.
Can be one of: :error :info :debug :trace :all :off
:log-level :error
The log level to set the client side goog.log.Logger to for
figwheel.repl and figwheel.core. Can be one of:
:severe :warning :info :config :fine :finer :finest
:client-log-level :warning
figwheel.main logging prints out compile time syntax errors which
includes displaying the erroneous code.
Setting :log-syntax-error-style to :concise will cause the logging to
not display the erroneous code.
Available options: :verbose, :concise
Default: :verbose
:log-syntax-error-style :concise
If there are warnings in your code emitted from the compiler, figwheel does not refresh. If you would like Figwheel to load code even if there are warnings generated set this to true. Default: false
:load-warninged-code true
Figwheel makes an effort to provide colorful text output. If you need
to prevent ANSI color codes in figwheel output set :ansi-color-output
to false. Default: true
:ansi-color-output false
Whether to validate the figwheel-main.edn and build config (i.e.".cljs.edn") files. Default: true
:validate-config false
Whether to validate the figwheel-main command line options Default: true
:validate-cli false
A String that specifies the target directory component of the path where figwheel.main outputs compiled ClojureScript
The default :output-dir is composed of:
[[:target-dir]]/public/cljs-out/[[build-id]]
The default :output-to is composed of:
[[:target-dir]]/public/cljs-out/[[build-id]]-main.js
If you are using the default figwheel.repl server to serve compiled assets, it is very important that the :target-dir be on the classpath.
The default value of :target-dir is "target"
:target-dir "cljs-target"
A boolean that indicates whether you want figwheel to automatically launch Node. Defaults to true.
A boolean that indicates whether you want figwheel to enable remote inspection by adding "--inspect" when it launches Node. Defaults to true.
A String indicating the Node.js executable to launch Node with. Defaults to "node"
Figwheel optionally launches a JavaScript host environment when it
starts a REPL or runs a script. You see this behavior when it opens a
browser or starts Nodejs. This behavior can be overridden with the
:launch-js option.
Can take the name of an executable script on your system and will pass it either the path to the compiled JavaScript (when the target is Nodejs) or the URL to the JavaScript (when the target is the browser).
Script example:
#! /bin/sh
chrome --headless --disable-gpu --repl --remote-debugging-port=9222 $1
If the above script is named headless-chrome-launcher and is on your
path, then you would add this to your config:
:launch-js `headless-chrome-launcher`
Can also take a vector that represents a shell command to invoke. The
vector can contain the keywords :output-to and :open-url which
will be replaced with the the path or the URL to the compiled
JavaScript.
Shell command vector example:
:launch-js ["chrome" "--headless" "--repl" "--disable-gpu" :open-url]
The :launch-js option can also take a namespaced symbol
representing a function to invoke. The function will be passed a map
containing the keys :open-url and :output-to.
Symbol example:
:launch-js user/start-js-environment
and in your user.clj file:
(defn start-js-environment [{:keys [output-to open-url]}]
(clojure.java.shell/sh "headless-chome" open-url))
The :launch-js option will take precedence over any node
configurations like :node-command or :launch-node.
A boolean that indicates whether to include binaryage/devtools into the clojurescript build. Defaults to true when the target is a browser and the :optimizations level is :none, otherwise it is false.
:cljs-devtools false
A boolean that indicates whether figwheel should try and be helpful by adding classpaths to help you get started, or whether you want to have complete control over classpaths. Advanced users will want to disable this option.
:helpful-classpaths false
Support for importing webpack bundles.
Experimental feature! This feature may change or be removed entirely. Only available in
0.1.8-SNAPSHOTor higher
This also works best with ClojureScript >= 1.10.339.
Currently takes a map with only one valid key :bundles. The value of
the :bundles key must be a map of bundled JavaScript files to the
index JavaScript files that they are compiled from.
:npm {:bundles {"dist/index.bundle.js" "src/webpack/index.js"}}
This feature will read an index.js file like:
import React from 'react';
import ReactDom from 'react-dom';
window.React = React;
window.ReactDom = ReactDom;
and will then generate a :foreign-libs entry for it. For example the
above index.js would cause the following to be added to your compiler
options:
:foreign-libs [{:file "dist/index.bundle.js"
:provides ["react" "react-dom"]
:global-exports {react React
react-dom ReactDom}}]
This will set :npm-deps to false if it hasn't been previously set.
This will set :infer-externs to true if it hasn't been
previously set.
You can learn more about ClojureScript and Webpack here: https://clojurescript.org/guides/webpack
A collection of symbol or strings that represent Clojure functions to call just before your ClojureScript sources get built.
These functions will be called before every build.
These functions will be passed the current configuration of the
system. This is a fairly complex data-structure and contains the
:options for the current build among other things.
:pre-build-hooks [user/gen-testfile]
A collection of symbol or strings that represent clojure functions to call just after your ClojureScript sources have been built.
These functions will be called after every build.
These functions will be passed the current configuration of the
system. This is a fairly complex data-structure and contains the
:options for the current build among other things.
:post-build-hooks [user/gen-alternate-main-js]
A map of keyword ids to Clojurescript option maps.
:extra-main-files will output extra main files besides the one that was
configured in your ClojureScript options.
For example this will output a dev-main-test.js file for your tests:
::extra-main-files {:tests {:main example.tests.test-runner}}
This file will be created in addition to the dev-main.js file.
The options will be merged with the ClojureScript options for the
current build. Keep in mind that this merge supports keywords prefixed
with extra- when you want the values of these keys to be merged. If
you supply :extra-preloads in the options map they will be
concatenated with the existing :preloads. Since
Figwheel works by injecting itself into your config with :preloads
and :closure-defines it is recommended that you always use
:extra-preloads and :extra-closure-defines if you want to change
these values.
This extra main will have all the same configured Figwheel options as the main build. In other words, the extra main will connect to the Figwheel REPL and get reloads just like the main build.
This feature will only output the ClojureScript bootstrap file that
you will require on your host page, it will not cause any files to be
compiled. So you will need to make sure that you have added all the
needed source directories to your :watch-dirs and your classpath.
This will only work under :optimizations level :none.
Figwheel provides a default host page for extra mains so that you do
not have to configure one. The default host page can be found at
/figwheel-extra-main/[id] where id is the id you supplied as a key
in the config you passed to the :extra-main-files. For example the
config above you would be able to find the :tests main at
/figwheel-extra-main/tests. Keep in mind that the id of the app
div on the default host page will be app-[id].
If you don't want to use the default host page you will need to create a your own host page for it. See https://figwheel.org/docs/your_own_page for help.
This feature is perfect for adding cljs-test-display and devcards to your workflow.
Also keep in mind that you can insert extra behavior with :preloads
and you can even change the :target to :nodejs if you want to work
on a Nodejs app in parallel with your main build.
:extra-main-files {:devcards {:main example.devcards}}
Build inputs are passed as the first argument to the CLJS compiler.
Build inputs are normally a list of sources (files and directories) for the compiler to compile.
Figwheel attempts to provide build inputs to the ClojureScript
compiler based on your current configuration. The logic is roughly: if
you are using :optimizations level :none and not only building
once, use the :watch-dirs as the build inputs, otherwise use the
:main namespace as the build input.
Using the :watch-dirs as a build input has the advantage that
Figwheel will watch and compile all the source files in the
:watch-dirs even if they are not required in your application
yet. This allows Figwheel to provide compiler feedback while you are
working on files that are not in your require tree.
When you provide a :build-inputs in your config you will be
overriding the default Figwheel behavior and be specifing which
specific inputs you want to send to the compiler.
:build-inputs is a collection of:
strings representing paths to source files and directories
namespace symbols that are on the classpath
the keyword :main which will be replaced with the namespace in your :main CLJS option
the keyword :watch-dirs which will be replaced with your configured :watch-dirs
:build-inputs [:watch-dirs example.core-tests "extra-src"]
Figwheel will automatically discover all the cljs.test based tests
that you have defined and will provide an endpoint to display them
with cljs-test-display. It will only provide this by default when
the tests are present in your watched directories and a build is using
:optimizations level :none.
You can find these tests at the /figwheel-extra-main/auto-testing
HTTP endpoint on the Figwheel server.
Figwheel will automatically find all the namespaces with tests in them.
You can enable this feature by specifying:
:auto-testing true
You can specify which namespaces to test:
:auto-testing {:namespaces [example.core-tests example.logic-tests]}
You can also disable cljs-test-display with:
:auto-testing {:cljs-test-display false}
When using the :bundle target and there is a :bundle-cmd specified, this option specifies how often to call the bundle-cmd.
There are three possible values for this key:
:once - only bundle once on the first compile :always - exec the bundle cmd on every compile :smart - bundle only when the :output-to file or the npm_deps.js file changes
Default: :once
:bundle-freq :smart
When you have a process or a bundler that is going to process the :output-to file and produce a final load file for your application, you can specify it with :final-output-to.
Defaults to the value of :output-to
:final-output-to "target/public/cljs-out/dev-main-bundle.js"
If you want to automatically configure your build with the default configuration when working with NPM and JavaScript bundle like Webpack set :auto-bundle.
You can currently set :bundle-cmd to either :webpack of :parcel.
If you are willing to live with the default configuration options :auto-bundle allows you to quickly configure a build to use NPM and webpack or parcel.
This will set the Clojurescript compile options :target and :bundle-cmd
This will set :target to :bundle
Using :webpack this will set :bundle-cmd to:
{:none ["npx" "webpack" "--mode=development" :output-to "-o" :final-output-to]
:default ["npx" "webpack" :output-to "-o" :final-output-to]}
Using :parsel this will set :bundle-cmd to:
{:none ["npx" "parcel" "build" :output-to
"--out-dir" :final-output-dir
"--out-file" :final-output-filename
"--no-minify"]
:default ["npx" "parcel" "build" :output-to
"--out-dir" :final-output-dir
"--out-file" :final-output-filename]}
And it will also add
:clojure-defines {"cljs.core/*global*""window"}
when using :optimizations :simple or :advanced.
Default value is nil
:auto-bundle :webpack
Takes a boolean value that if true indicates that figwheel.main should clean the output artifacts of the compile BEFORE building or compiling. I.E. :output-to, :output-dir, and :final-output-to all be deleted along with any extra-main, and auto-testing files.
Default value is nil
:clean-outputs true
Takes a boolean value that if true indicates that figwheel.main should configure the server to use https.
This adds default :ring-server-options for
:ssl? true
:ssl-port 9533
This also changes the default :connect-url to
wss://[[config-hostname]]:<ssl-port>/figwheel-connect and the
default :open-url to https://[[server-hostname]]:<ssl-port> where
<ssl-port> is replaced with the :ssl-port from
:ring-server-options.
This will also attempt to auto-configure an SSL Certificate for local development by using the Certifiable library.
To supply your own SSL configuration you will need to provide a
certificate and keys to options to :ring-server-options via a Java
KeyStore.
:keystore <path to java keystore>
:key-password <password to the java keystore>
You may also need to supply the :keystore-type to
:ring-server-options if you are using a PKCS12 certificate bundle.
:keystore-type "PKCS12"
Setting this to true, :cli, or :expo will automatically configure a project to support React Native. Using true or :cli will emit an index.js file that can be used in a React Native CLI project. :expo will emit and index.js file that can be used in a project generated by React Native expo.
In order to use this feature you will have to first generate a React Native project (using either CLI or Expo) according to the instructions found at https://reactnative.dev/docs/environment-setup.
Then create a figwheel-main project in the root directory of the generated React Native project.
:react-native :cli
When this is set to false cause the React Native figwheel bridge to not auto-refresh the React Native application on file save.
Defaults to true
:react-native-auto-refresh false
Takes a collection of hosts that the local dev SSL certificate should consider valid. These will be supplied to the Certifiable library if you do not provide a certificate when you use the :use-ssl option.
::ssl-valid-hosts ["localhost" "www.localhost" "127.0.0.1"]
The number of milliseconds to wait before launching the browser.
Default: none
:open-url-wait-ms 1000
When you use libraries from http://cljsjs.github.io they sometimes come bundled with static resources (like CSS files) that you would like to be served from the Figwheel server.
If you set :cljsjs-resources to true the Figwheel server will
serve the resources with the cljsjs root.
For example: if there is a CSS file in the react-vis jar at
cljsjs/react-vis/common/react-vis.inc.css you will be able to access
it via the Figwheel server at the path
/react-vis/common/react-vis.inc.css.
:cljsjs-resources true
The figwheel.repl client can direct printed (via pr) output to the
REPL and/or the console. :client-print-to is a list of where you
want print output directed. The output choices are :console and :repl
Default: [:console :repl]
:client-print-to [:console]
The figwheel server has a notion of a :ring-stack. The
:ring-stack is a composition of basic ring-middleware (think
sessions) to wrap around a supplied :ring-handler.
The default :ring-stack is a slightly modified
ring.middleware.defaults/wrap-defaults
The figwheel.repl server has a notion of a :ring-stack. The
:ring-stack is a composition of basic ring-middleware to wrap around
a supplied :ring-handler.
The default :ring-stack is a slightly modified
ring.middleware.defaults/wrap-defaults.
:ring-stack-options are the options that figwheel.repl supplies to
ring.middleware.defaults/wrap-defaults.
The default options are slightly modified from ring.middleware.defaults/site-defaults:
{:params
{:urlencoded true, :multipart true, :nested true, :keywordize true},
:cookies true,
:session
{:flash true, :cookie-attrs {:http-only true, :same-site :strict}},
:static {:resources "public"},
:responses {:content-types true, :default-charset "utf-8"},
:figwheel.server.ring/dev
{:figwheel.server.ring/fix-index-mime-type true,
:figwheel.server.ring/resource-root-index true,
:figwheel.server.ring/wrap-no-cache true,
:figwheel.server.ring/cljsjs-resources false,
:ring.middleware.not-modified/wrap-not-modified true,
:co.deps.ring-etag-middleware/wrap-file-etag true,
:ring.middleware.cors/wrap-cors true,
:ring.middleware.stacktrace/wrap-stacktrace true}}
You can override these options by suppling your own to :ring-stack-options
If these options are changed significantly don't be suprised if the figwheel server stops behaving correctly :)
The number of milliseconds to wait before issuing reloads. Set this higher to wait longer for changes. This is the interval from when the first file change occurs until we finally issue a reload event.
Default: 50
:wait-time-ms 50
The :mode indicates the behavior that occurs after a compile.
Options: :repl :serve or :build-once
:repl indicates that a REPL will be started:serve indicates that a server will be started:build-once indicates that a compile will not be follwed by any actionThis is mainly intended for use when you are launching figwheel.main from a script.
Normally defaults to :repl
Figwheel broadcasts hot reloads to all clients that have connected
since the figwheel process has started. Set :broadcast-reload to
false if you want to only send hot-reloads to the client where the
REPL eval occurs.
Default: true
:broadcast-reload false
In the past figwheel would broadcast REPL evaluations to all
connected clients and then print the first result received in the
REPL. Setting :broadcast to true will give you back this legacy
behavior. Default: false
:broadcast true
The time (in milliseconds) it takes for the REPL to timeout. Evaluating any given expression in cljs can take some time. The REPL is configured to throw a timeout exception as to not hang forever.
This config option will determine how long the REPL waits for the result of an eval before throwing.
Default: 8000
:repl-eval-timeout 10000 ;;waits for 10 seconds instead of 8
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