Hot Module Replacement

Hot Module Replacement (HMR) is a WebPack feature to update code in a running app without rebuilding it. This results in faster updates and less full page-reloads. In order to get HMR working with Angular CLI we first need to add a new environment and enable it.

Add environment for HMR

In this step will configure the Angular CLI environments and define in which environment we enable HMR. We will start out by adding and changing files in the src/environments/ directory. First we create a file called src/environments/environment.hmr.ts with the following contents:

export const environment = {
  production: false,
  hmr: true
};

Update src/environments/environment.prod.ts and add the hmr: false flag to the environment:

export const environment = {
  production: true,
  hmr: false
};

Lastly we edit src/environments/environment.ts and change the environment to:

export const environment = {
  production: false,
  hmr: false
};

Update angular.json to include an hmr environment as explained here and add configurations within build and serve to enable hmr. Note that here represents the name of the project you are adding this configuration to in angular.json.

  "build": {
    "configurations": {
      ...
      "hmr": {
        "fileReplacements": [
          {
            "replace": "src/environments/environment.ts",
            "with": "src/environments/environment.hmr.ts"
          }
        ]
      }
    }
  },
  ...
  "serve": {
    "configurations": {
      ...
      "hmr": {
        "hmr": true,
        "browserTarget": "<project-name>:build:hmr"
      }
    }
  }

Add the necessary types to src/tsconfig.app.json

{
  ...
  "compilerOptions": {
    ...
    "types": ["node"]
  },
}

Run ng serve with the flag --configuration hmr to enable hmr and select the new environment:

ng serve --configuration hmr

Create a shortcut for this by updating package.json and adding an entry to the script object:

"scripts": {
  ...
  "hmr": "ng serve --configuration hmr"
}

Add dependency for @angularclass/hmr and configure app

In order to get HMR working we need to install the dependency and configure our app to use it.

Install the @angularclass/hmr module as a dev-dependency

Create a file called src/hmr.ts with the following content:

import { NgModuleRef, ApplicationRef } from '@angular/core';
import { createNewHosts } from '@angularclass/hmr';

export const hmrBootstrap = (module: any, bootstrap: () => Promise<NgModuleRef<any>>) => {
  let ngModule: NgModuleRef<any>;
  module.hot.accept();
  bootstrap().then(mod => ngModule = mod);
  module.hot.dispose(() => {
    const appRef: ApplicationRef = ngModule.injector.get(ApplicationRef);
    const elements = appRef.components.map(c => c.location.nativeElement);
    const makeVisible = createNewHosts(elements);
    ngModule.destroy();
    makeVisible();
  });
};

Update src/main.ts to use the file we just created:

import { enableProdMode } from '@angular/core';
import { platformBrowserDynamic } from '@angular/platform-browser-dynamic';

import { AppModule } from './app/app.module';
import { environment } from './environments/environment';

import { hmrBootstrap } from './hmr';

if (environment.production) {
  enableProdMode();
}

const bootstrap = () => platformBrowserDynamic().bootstrapModule(AppModule);

if (environment.hmr) {
  if (module[ 'hot' ]) {
    hmrBootstrap(module, bootstrap);
  } else {
    console.error('HMR is not enabled for webpack-dev-server!');
    console.log('Are you using the --hmr flag for ng serve?');
  }
} else {
  bootstrap().catch(err => console.log(err));
}

Starting the development environment with HMR enabled

Now that everything is set up we can run the new configuration:

npm run hmr

When starting the server Webpack will tell you that it’s enabled:

NOTICE Hot Module Replacement (HMR) is enabled for the dev server.

Now if you make changes to one of your components, those changes should be visible automatically without a complete browser refresh.

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