Skills2026年5月14日·1 分钟阅读

Turbopack — Rust-Powered Incremental Bundler for JavaScript and TypeScript

Turbopack is a Rust-based incremental bundler for JavaScript and TypeScript projects, designed as the successor to Webpack. It is integrated into Next.js for development builds.

Agent 就绪

这个资产可以被 Agent 直接读取和安装

TokRepo 同时提供通用 CLI 命令、安装契约、metadata JSON、按适配器生成的安装计划和原始内容链接,方便 Agent 判断适配度、风险和下一步动作。

Native · 98/100策略:允许
Agent 入口
任意 MCP/CLI Agent
类型
Skill
安装
Single
信任
信任等级:Established
入口
Turbopack Rust Bundler
通用 CLI 安装命令
npx tokrepo install 606915c7-4f2b-11f1-9bc6-00163e2b0d79

Introduction

Turbopack is a Rust-based incremental bundler built by the creators of Webpack. It ships as the default development bundler in Next.js and aims to provide near-instant hot module replacement regardless of application size. The project leverages Turbo Engine, a computation graph that caches work at the function level.

What Turbopack Does

  • Bundles JavaScript, TypeScript, JSX, TSX, CSS, CSS Modules, and static assets for development and production builds
  • Provides incremental compilation so only changed modules are rebuilt, keeping HMR fast on large codebases
  • Integrates natively with Next.js as the development server bundler
  • Supports React Server Components, server actions, and the Next.js App Router out of the box
  • Handles module resolution compatible with Node.js, including package.json exports and imports fields

Architecture Overview

Turbopack is built on the Turbo Engine, a Rust-based incremental computation framework. Every transformation (parsing, transpiling, bundling) is modeled as a function in a dependency graph. Results are cached at fine granularity so that when a file changes, only the minimal set of dependent computations re-execute. The engine uses a demand-driven model: it only computes what the browser actually requests.

Self-Hosting & Configuration

  • No standalone install needed; Turbopack ships inside Next.js 13+ and is activated with the --turbopack flag
  • For standalone use outside Next.js, the CLI is available via npx turbopack
  • Configure loader rules, aliases, and resolve options in next.config.js under the turbo key
  • Environment variables and .env files are supported the same way as standard Next.js
  • Turbopack respects tsconfig.json paths and compilerOptions for TypeScript resolution

Key Features

  • Written in Rust for native performance with memory safety guarantees
  • Function-level caching via the Turbo Engine means sub-second HMR even on projects with thousands of modules
  • Supports source maps, React Fast Refresh, and error overlays during development
  • Compatible with most Webpack loaders through a compatibility layer
  • Designed to scale: benchmarks show consistent performance as project size grows linearly

Comparison with Similar Tools

  • Webpack — the predecessor Turbopack aims to replace; JavaScript-based, slower on large projects but has a vast plugin ecosystem
  • Vite — uses esbuild for pre-bundling and native ESM for dev; different architecture but similar speed goals
  • esbuild — extremely fast Go-based bundler; lower-level with less framework integration
  • Rspack — Rust-based Webpack-compatible bundler by ByteDance; closer to Webpack's plugin API
  • Parcel — zero-config bundler with a Rust core; focuses on out-of-the-box simplicity

FAQ

Q: Can I use Turbopack without Next.js? A: Yes, there is a standalone turbopack CLI, though it is less mature than the Next.js integration. Most users currently access Turbopack through Next.js.

Q: Does Turbopack support all Webpack plugins? A: Not yet. Turbopack has a compatibility layer for common loaders, but the full Webpack plugin API is not replicated. Check the Next.js docs for the current compatibility list.

Q: Is Turbopack production-ready? A: Turbopack is stable for development builds in Next.js. Production bundling support has been added in recent Next.js versions, though Webpack remains the default for production in some configurations.

Q: How does Turbopack compare to Vite in speed? A: Both are fast for development. Turbopack's incremental caching architecture is designed to maintain constant-time updates as projects grow, while Vite relies on native ESM and esbuild pre-bundling.

Sources

讨论

登录后参与讨论。
还没有评论,来写第一条吧。

相关资产