Command Line Interface (CLI)
Stencil's command line interface (CLI) is how developers can build their projects, run tests, and more.
Stencil's CLI is included in the compiler, and can be invoked with the stencil
command in a project where @stencil/core
is installed.
stencil build
Builds a Stencil project. The flags below are the available options for the build
command.
Flag | Description | Alias |
---|---|---|
--ci | Run a build using recommended settings for a Continuous Integration (CI) environment. Defaults the number of workers to 4, allows for extra time if taking screenshots via the tests and modifies the console logs. | |
--config | Path to the stencil.config.ts file. This flag is not needed in most cases since Stencil will find the config. Additionally, a Stencil config is not required. | -c |
--debug | Adds additional runtime code to help debug, and sets the log level for more verbose output. | |
--dev | Runs a development build. | |
--docs | Generate all docs based on the component types, properties, methods, events, JSDocs, CSS Custom Properties, etc. | |
--es5 | Creates an ES5 compatible build. By default ES5 builds are not created during development in order to improve build times. However, ES5 builds are always created during production builds. Use this flag to create ES5 builds during development. | |
--log | Write logs for the stencil build into stencil-build.log . The log file is written in the same location as the config. | |
--prerender | Prerender the application using the www output target after the build has completed. | |
--prod | Runs a production build which will optimize each file, improve bundling, remove unused code, minify, etc. A production build is the default, this flag is only used to override the --dev flag. | |
--max-workers | Max number of workers the compiler should use. Defaults to use the same number of CPUs the Operating System has available. | |
--next | Opt-in to test the "next" Stencil compiler features. | |
--no-cache | Disables using the cache. | |
--no-open | By default the --serve command will open a browser window. Using the --no-open command will not automatically open a browser window. | |
--port | Port for the Integrated Dev Server. Defaults to 3333 . | -p |
--serve | Starts the Integrated Dev Server. | |
--stats | Write stats about the project to stencil-stats.json . The stats file is written in the same location as the config. | |
--verbose | Logs additional information about each step of the build. | |
--watch | Watches files during development and triggers a rebuild when files are updated. |
stencil docs
Performs a one-time generation of documentation for your project. For more information on documentation generation, please see the Documentation Generation section.
stencil generate
Alias: stencil g
Starts the interactive generator for a new Stencil component. The generator will ask you for a name for your component, and whether any stylesheets or testing files should be generated.
If you wish to skip the interactive generator, a component tag name may be provided on the command line:
stencil generate my-new-component
All components will be generated within the src/components
folder.
Within src/components
, a directory will be created with the same name as the component tag name you provided containing the generated files.
For example, if you specify page-home
as the component tag name, the files will be generated in src/components/page-home
:
src
└── components
└── page-home
├── page-home.css
├── page-home.e2e.ts
├── page-home.spec.ts
└── page-home.tsx
It is also possible to specify one or more sub-folders to generate the component in.
For example, if you specify pages/page-home
as the component tag name, the files will be generated in src/components/pages/page-home
:
stencil generate pages/page-home
The command above will result in the following directory structure:
src
└── components
└── pages
└── page-home
├── page-home.css
├── page-home.e2e.ts
├── page-home.spec.ts
└── page-home.tsx
stencil help
Aliases: stencil --help
, stencil -h
Prints various tasks that can be run and their associated flags to the terminal.
stencil test
Tests a Stencil project. The flags below are the available options for the test
command.
Flag | Description |
---|---|
--spec | Tests .spec.ts files using Jest. |
--e2e | Tests .e2e.ts files using Puppeteer and Jest. |
--no-build | Skips the build process before running end-to-end tests. When using this flag, it is assumed that your Stencil project has been built prior to running stencil test . Unit tests do not require this flag. |
--devtools | Opens the dev tools panel in Chrome for end-to-end tests. Setting this flag will disable --headless |
--headless | Sets the headless mode to use in Chrome for end-to-end tests. --headless and --headless=true will enable the "old" headless mode in Chrome, that was used by default prior to Chrome v112. --headless=new will enable the new headless mode introduced in Chrome v112. See this article for more information on Chrome's new headless mode. |
stencil version
Aliases: stencil -v
, stencil --version
Prints the version of Stencil to the terminal.