Tree Shaking

Tree shaking is a term commonly used in the JavaScript context for dead-code elimination. It relies on the static structure of ES2015 module syntax, i.e. import and export. The name and concept have been popularized by the ES2015 module bundler rollup.

The webpack 2 release came with built-in support for ES2015 modules (alias harmony modules) as well as unused module export detection. The new webpack 4 release expands on this capability with a way to provide hints to the compiler via the "sideEffects" package.json property to denote which files in your project are "pure" and therefore safe to prune if unused.

Add a Utility

Let's add a new utility file to our project, src/math.js, that exports two functions:

project

webpack-demo
|- package.json
|- webpack.config.js
|- /dist
  |- bundle.js
  |- index.html
|- /src
  |- index.js
+ |- math.js
|- /node_modules

src/math.js

export function square(x) {
  return x * x;
}

export function cube(x) {
  return x * x * x;
}

Set the mode configuration option to development to make sure that the bundle is not minified:

webpack.config.js

const path = require('path');

module.exports = {
  entry: './src/index.js',
  output: {
    filename: 'bundle.js',
    path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
  },
+ mode: 'development',
+ optimization: {
+   usedExports: true,
+ },
};

With that in place, let's update our entry script to utilize one of these new methods and remove lodash for simplicity:

src/index.js

- import _ from 'lodash';
+ import { cube } from './math.js';

  function component() {
-   const element = document.createElement('div');
+   const element = document.createElement('pre');

-   // Lodash, now imported by this script
-   element.innerHTML = _.join(['Hello', 'webpack'], ' ');
+   element.innerHTML = [
+     'Hello webpack!',
+     '5 cubed is equal to ' + cube(5)
+   ].join('\n\n');

    return element;
  }

  document.body.appendChild(component());

Note that we did not import the square method from the src/math.js module. That function is what's known as "dead code", meaning an unused export that should be dropped. Now let's run our npm script, npm run build, and inspect the output bundle:

dist/bundle.js (around lines 90 - 100)

/* 1 */
/***/ (function (module, __webpack_exports__, __webpack_require__) {
  'use strict';
  /* unused harmony export square */
  /* harmony export (immutable) */ __webpack_exports__['a'] = cube;
  function square(x) {
    return x * x;
  }

  function cube(x) {
    return x * x * x;
  }
});

Note the unused harmony export square comment above. If you look at the code below it, you'll notice that square is not being imported, however, it is still included in the bundle. We'll fix that in the next section.

Mark the file as side-effect-free

In a 100% ESM module world, identifying side effects is straightforward. However, we aren't there quite yet, so in the mean time it's necessary to provide hints to webpack's compiler on the "pureness" of your code.

The way this is accomplished is the "sideEffects" package.json property.

{
  "name": "your-project",
  "sideEffects": false
}

All the code noted above does not contain side effects, so we can mark the property as false to inform webpack that it can safely prune unused exports.

If your code did have some side effects though, an array can be provided instead:

{
  "name": "your-project",
  "sideEffects": ["./src/some-side-effectful-file.js"]
}

The array accepts simple glob patterns to the relevant files. It uses glob-to-regexp under the hood (Supports: *, **, {a,b}, [a-z]). Patterns like *.css, which do not include a /, will be treated like **/*.css.

{
  "name": "your-project",
  "sideEffects": ["./src/some-side-effectful-file.js", "*.css"]
}

Finally, "sideEffects" can also be set from the module.rules configuration option.

Clarifying tree shaking and sideEffects

The sideEffects and usedExports (more known as tree shaking) optimizations are two different things.

sideEffects is much more effective since it allows to skip whole modules/files and the complete subtree.

usedExports relies on terser to detect side effects in statements. It is a difficult task in JavaScript and not as effective as straightforward sideEffects flag. It also can't skip subtree/dependencies since the spec says that side effects need to be evaluated. While exporting function works fine, React's Higher Order Components (HOC) are problematic in this regard.

Let's make an example:

import { Button } from '@shopify/polaris';

The pre-bundled version looks like this:

import hoistStatics from 'hoist-non-react-statics';

function Button(_ref) {
  // ...
}

function merge() {
  var _final = {};

  for (
    var _len = arguments.length, objs = new Array(_len), _key = 0;
    _key < _len;
    _key++
  ) {
    objs[_key] = arguments[_key];
  }

  for (var _i = 0, _objs = objs; _i < _objs.length; _i++) {
    var obj = _objs[_i];
    mergeRecursively(_final, obj);
  }

  return _final;
}

function withAppProvider() {
  return function addProvider(WrappedComponent) {
    var WithProvider =
      /*#__PURE__*/
      (function (_React$Component) {
        // ...
        return WithProvider;
      })(Component);

    WithProvider.contextTypes = WrappedComponent.contextTypes
      ? merge(WrappedComponent.contextTypes, polarisAppProviderContextTypes)
      : polarisAppProviderContextTypes;
    var FinalComponent = hoistStatics(WithProvider, WrappedComponent);
    return FinalComponent;
  };
}

var Button$1 = withAppProvider()(Button);

export {
  // ...,
  Button$1,
};

When Button is unused you can effectively remove the export { Button$1 }; which leaves all the remaining code. So the question is "Does this code have any side effects or can it be safely removed?". Difficult to say, especially because of this line withAppProvider()(Button). withAppProvider is called and the return value is also called. Are there any side effects when calling merge or hoistStatics? Are there side effects when assigning WithProvider.contextTypes (Setter?) or when reading WrappedComponent.contextTypes (Getter?).

Terser actually tries to figure it out, but it doesn't know for sure in many cases. This doesn't mean that terser is not doing its job well because it can't figure it out. It's too difficult to determine it reliably in a dynamic language like JavaScript.

But we can help terser by using the /*#__PURE__*/ annotation. It flags a statement as side effect free. So a small change would make it possible to tree-shake the code:

var Button$1 = /*#__PURE__*/ withAppProvider()(Button);

This would allow to remove this piece of code. But there are still questions with the imports which need to be included/evaluated because they could contain side effects.

To tackle this, we use the "sideEffects" property in package.json.

It's similar to /*#__PURE__*/ but on a module level instead of a statement level. It says ("sideEffects" property): "If no direct export from a module flagged with no-sideEffects is used, the bundler can skip evaluating the module for side effects.".

In the Shopify's Polaris example, original modules look like this:

index.js

import './configure';
export * from './types';
export * from './components';

components/index.js

// ...
export { default as Breadcrumbs } from './Breadcrumbs';
export { default as Button, buttonFrom, buttonsFrom } from './Button';
export { default as ButtonGroup } from './ButtonGroup';
// ...

package.json

// ...
"sideEffects": [
  "**/*.css",
  "**/*.scss",
  "./esnext/index.js",
  "./esnext/configure.js"
],
// ...

For import { Button } from "@shopify/polaris"; this has the following implications:

  • include it: include the module, evaluate it and continue analysing dependencies
  • skip over: don't include it, don't evaluate it but continue analysing dependencies
  • exclude it: don't include it, don't evaluate it and don't analyse dependencies

Specifically per matching resource(s):

  • index.js: No direct export is used, but flagged with sideEffects -> include it
  • configure.js: No export is used, but flagged with sideEffects -> include it
  • types/index.js: No export is used, not flagged with sideEffects -> exclude it
  • components/index.js: No direct export is used, not flagged with sideEffects, but reexported exports are used -> skip over
  • components/Breadcrumbs.js: No export is used, not flagged with sideEffects -> exclude it. This also excluded all dependencies like components/Breadcrumbs.css even if they are flagged with sideEffects.
  • components/Button.js: Direct export is used, not flagged with sideEffects -> include it
  • components/Button.css: No export is used, but flagged with sideEffects -> include it

In this case only 4 modules are included into the bundle:

  • index.js: pretty much empty
  • configure.js
  • components/Button.js
  • components/Button.css

After this optimization, other optimizations can still apply. For example: buttonFrom and buttonsFrom exports from Button.js are unused too. usedExports optimization will pick it up and terser may be able to drop some statements from the module.

Module Concatenation also applies. So that these 4 modules plus the entry module (and probably more dependencies) can be concatenated. index.js has no code generated in the end.

Mark a function call as side-effect-free

It is possible to tell webpack that a function call is side-effect-free (pure) by using the /*#__PURE__*/ annotation. It can be put in front of function calls to mark them as side-effect-free. Arguments passed to the function are not being marked by the annotation and may need to be marked individually. When the initial value in a variable declaration of an unused variable is considered as side-effect-free (pure), it is getting marked as dead code, not executed and dropped by the minimizer. This behavior is enabled when optimization.innerGraph is set to true.

file.js

/*#__PURE__*/ double(55);

Minify the Output

So we've cued up our "dead code" to be dropped by using the import and export syntax, but we still need to drop it from the bundle. To do that, set the mode configuration option to production.

webpack.config.js

const path = require('path');

module.exports = {
  entry: './src/index.js',
  output: {
    filename: 'bundle.js',
    path: path.resolve(__dirname, 'dist'),
  },
- mode: 'development',
- optimization: {
-   usedExports: true,
- }
+ mode: 'production',
};

With that squared away, we can run another npm run build and see if anything has changed.

Notice anything different about dist/bundle.js? The whole bundle is now minified and mangled, but, if you look carefully, you won't see the square function included but will see a mangled version of the cube function (function r(e){return e*e*e}n.a=r). With minification and tree shaking, our bundle is now a few bytes smaller! While that may not seem like much in this contrived example, tree shaking can yield a significant decrease in bundle size when working on larger applications with complex dependency trees.

Conclusion

What we've learned is that in order to take advantage of tree shaking, you must...

  • Use ES2015 module syntax (i.e. import and export).
  • Ensure no compilers transform your ES2015 module syntax into CommonJS modules (this is the default behavior of the popular Babel preset @babel/preset-env - see the documentation for more details).
  • Add a "sideEffects" property to your project's package.json file.
  • Use the production mode configuration option to enable various optimizations including minification and tree shaking.

You can imagine your application as a tree. The source code and libraries you actually use represent the green, living leaves of the tree. Dead code represents the brown, dead leaves of the tree that are consumed by autumn. In order to get rid of the dead leaves, you have to shake the tree, causing them to fall.

If you are interested in more ways to optimize your output, please jump to the next guide for details on building for production.

15 Contributors

simon04zacangeralexjovermavant1dmitriidprobablyupgishlumo10byzykpnevaresEugeneHlushkoAnayaDesigntorifatrahul3v