Files
rspade_system/node_modules/@rollup/plugin-replace
root 77b4d10af8 Refactor filename naming system and apply convention-based renames
Standardize settings file naming and relocate documentation files
Fix code quality violations from rsx:check
Reorganize user_management directory into logical subdirectories
Move Quill Bundle to core and align with Tom Select pattern
Simplify Site Settings page to focus on core site information
Complete Phase 5: Multi-tenant authentication with login flow and site selection
Add route query parameter rule and synchronize filename validation logic
Fix critical bug in UpdateNpmCommand causing missing JavaScript stubs
Implement filename convention rule and resolve VS Code auto-rename conflict
Implement js-sanitizer RPC server to eliminate 900+ Node.js process spawns
Implement RPC server architecture for JavaScript parsing
WIP: Add RPC server infrastructure for JS parsing (partial implementation)
Update jqhtml terminology from destroy to stop, fix datagrid DOM preservation
Add JQHTML-CLASS-01 rule and fix redundant class names
Improve code quality rules and resolve violations
Remove legacy fatal error format in favor of unified 'fatal' error type
Filter internal keys from window.rsxapp output
Update button styling and comprehensive form/modal documentation
Add conditional fly-in animation for modals
Fix non-deterministic bundle compilation

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-11-13 19:10:02 +00:00
..

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@rollup/plugin-replace

🍣 A Rollup plugin which replaces targeted strings in files while bundling.

Requirements

This plugin requires an LTS Node version (v14.0.0+) and Rollup v1.20.0+.

Install

Using npm:

npm install @rollup/plugin-replace --save-dev

Usage

Create a rollup.config.js configuration file and import the plugin:

import replace from '@rollup/plugin-replace';

export default {
  input: 'src/index.js',
  output: {
    dir: 'output',
    format: 'cjs'
  },
  plugins: [
    replace({
      'process.env.NODE_ENV': JSON.stringify('production'),
      __buildDate__: () => JSON.stringify(new Date()),
      __buildVersion: 15
    })
  ]
};

Then call rollup either via the CLI or the API.

The configuration above will replace every instance of process.env.NODE_ENV with "production" and __buildDate__ with the result of the given function in any file included in the build.

Note: Values must be either primitives (e.g. string, number) or function that returns a string. For complex values, use JSON.stringify. To replace a target with a value that will be evaluated as a string, set the value to a quoted string (e.g. "test") or use JSON.stringify to preprocess the target string safely.

Typically, @rollup/plugin-replace should be placed in plugins before other plugins so that they may apply optimizations, such as dead code removal.

Options

In addition to the properties and values specified for replacement, users may also specify the options below.

delimiters

Type: Array[String, String]
Default: ['(?<![_$a-zA-Z0-9\\xA0-\\uFFFF])', '(?![_$a-zA-Z0-9\\xA0-\\uFFFF])(?!\\.)']

Specifies the boundaries around which strings will be replaced. By default, delimiters match JavaScript identifier boundaries and also prevent replacements of instances with nested access. See Word Boundaries below for more information. For example, if you pass typeof window in values to-be-replaced, then you could expect the following scenarios:

  • typeof window will be replaced
  • typeof window.document will not be replaced due to the (?!\.) boundary
  • typeof windowSmth will not be replaced due to identifier boundaries

Delimiters will be used to build a Regexp. To match special characters (any of .*+?^${}()|[]\), be sure to escape them.

objectGuards

Type: Boolean
Default: false

When replacing dot-separated object properties like process.env.NODE_ENV, will also replace typeof process object guard checks against the objects with the string "object".

For example:

replace({
  values: {
    'process.env.NODE_ENV': '"production"'
  }
});
// Input
if (typeof process !== 'undefined' && process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production') {
  console.log('production');
}
// Without `objectGuards`
if (typeof process !== 'undefined' && 'production' === 'production') {
  console.log('production');
}
// With `objectGuards`
if ('object' !== 'undefined' && 'production' === 'production') {
  console.log('production');
}

preventAssignment

Type: Boolean
Default: false

Prevents replacing strings where they are followed by a single equals sign. For example, where the plugin is called as follows:

replace({
  values: {
    'process.env.DEBUG': 'false'
  }
});

Observe the following code:

// Input
process.env.DEBUG = false;
if (process.env.DEBUG == true) {
  //
}
// Without `preventAssignment`
false = false; // this throws an error because false cannot be assigned to
if (false == true) {
  //
}
// With `preventAssignment`
process.env.DEBUG = false;
if (false == true) {
  //
}

exclude

Type: String | Array[...String]
Default: null

A picomatch pattern, or array of patterns, which specifies the files in the build the plugin should ignore. By default no files are ignored.

include

Type: String | Array[...String]
Default: null

A picomatch pattern, or array of patterns, which specifies the files in the build the plugin should operate on. By default all files are targeted.

sourceMap or sourcemap

Type: Boolean
Default: false

Enables generating sourcemaps for the bundled code. For example, where the plugin is called as follows:

replace({
  sourcemap: true
});

values

Type: { [key: String]: Replacement }, where Replacement is either a string or a function that returns a string. Default: {}

To avoid mixing replacement strings with the other options, you can specify replacements in the values option. For example, the following signature:

replace({
  include: ['src/**/*.js'],
  changed: 'replaced'
});

Can be replaced with:

replace({
  include: ['src/**/*.js'],
  values: {
    changed: 'replaced'
  }
});

Word Boundaries

By default, values will only match if they are surrounded by word boundaries that respect JavaScript's rules for valid identifiers (including $ and _ as valid identifier characters).

Consider the following options and build file:

module.exports = {
  ...
  plugins: [replace({ changed: 'replaced' })]
};
// file.js
console.log('changed');
console.log('unchanged');

The result would be:

// file.js
console.log('replaced');
console.log('unchanged');

To ignore word boundaries and replace every instance of the string, wherever it may be, specify empty strings as delimiters:

export default {
  ...
  plugins: [
    replace({
      changed: 'replaced',
      delimiters: ['', '']
    })
  ]
};

Meta

CONTRIBUTING

LICENSE (MIT)