Managing Dependencies

Managing Dependencies

As you're developing your Ember app, you'll likely run into common scenarios that aren't addressed by Ember itself, such as authentication or using SASS for your stylesheets. Ember CLI provides a common format called Ember Addons for distributing reusable libraries to solve these problems. Additionally, you may want to make use of front-end dependencies like a CSS framework or a JavaScript datepicker that aren't specific to Ember apps.

Addons

Ember Addons can be installed using Ember CLI (e.g. ember install ember-cli-sass). Addons may bring in other dependencies by modifying your project's bower.json file automatically.

You can find listings of addons on Ember Observer.

Other assets

Third-party JavaScript not available as an addon or Bower package should be placed in the vendor/ folder in your project.

Your own assets (such as robots.txt, favicon, custom fonts, etc) should be placed in the public/ folder in your project.

Compiling Assets

When you're using dependencies that are not included in an addon, you will have to instruct Ember CLI to include your assets in the build. This is done using the asset manifest file ember-cli-build.js. You should only try to import assets located in the bower_components and vendor folders.

Globals provided by JavaScript assets

The globals provided by some assets (like moment in the below example) can be used in your application without the need to import them. Provide the asset path as the first and only argument.

ember-cli-build.js
app.import('bower_components/moment/moment.js');

You will need to add "moment" to the predef section in .jshintrc to prevent JSHint errors about using an undefined variable.

AMD JavaScript modules

Provide the asset path as the first argument, and the list of modules and exports as the second.

ember-cli-build.js
app.import('bower_components/ic-ajax/dist/named-amd/main.js', {
  exports: {
    'ic-ajax': [
      'default',
      'defineFixture',
      'lookupFixture',
      'raw',
      'request'
    ]
  }
});

You can now import them in your app. (e.g. import { raw as icAjaxRaw } from 'ic-ajax';)

Environment-Specific Assets

If you need to use different assets in different environments, specify an object as the first parameter. That object's key should be the environment name, and the value should be the asset to use in that environment.

ember-cli-build.js
app.import({
  development: 'bower_components/ember/ember.js',
  production:  'bower_components/ember/ember.prod.js'
});

If you need to import an asset in only one environment you can wrap app.import in an if statement. For assets needed during testing, you should also use the {type: 'test'} option to make sure they are available in test mode.

ember-cli-build.js
if (app.env === 'development') {
  // Only import when in development mode
  app.import('vendor/ember-renderspeed/ember-renderspeed.js');
}
if (app.env === 'test') {
  // Only import in test mode and place in test-support.js
  app.import(app.bowerDirectory + '/sinonjs/sinon.js', { type: 'test' });
  app.import(app.bowerDirectory + '/sinon-qunit/lib/sinon-qunit.js', { type: 'test' });
}

CSS

Provide the asset path as the first argument:

ember-cli-build.js
app.import('bower_components/foundation/css/foundation.css');

All style assets added this way will be concatenated and output as /assets/vendor.css.

Other Assets

All assets located in the public/ folder will be copied as is to the final output directory, dist/.

For example, a favicon located at public/images/favicon.ico will be copied to dist/images/favicon.ico.

All third-party assets, included either manually in vendor/ or via a package manager like Bower, must be added via import().

Third-party assets that are not added via import() will not be present in the final build.

By default, imported assets will be copied to dist/ as they are, with the existing directory structure maintained.

ember-cli-build.js
app.import('bower_components/font-awesome/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.ttf');

This example would create the font file in dist/font-awesome/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.ttf.

You can also optionally tell import() to place the file at a different path. The following example will copy the file to dist/assets/fontawesome-webfont.ttf.

ember-cli-build.js
app.import('bower_components/font-awesome/fonts/fontawesome-webfont.ttf', {
  destDir: 'assets'
});

If you need to load certain dependencies before others, you can set the prepend property equal to true on the second argument of import(). This will prepend the dependency to the vendor file instead of appending it, which is the default behavior.

ember-cli-build.js
app.import('bower_components/es5-shim/es5-shim.js', {
  type: 'vendor',
  prepend: true
});

© 2017 Yehuda Katz, Tom Dale and Ember.js contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://guides.emberjs.com/v2.13.0/addons-and-dependencies/managing-dependencies

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