How to configure Webpack and Vite for Storybook

Storybook allows you to customize the webpack configuration and your vite configuration. For that, it offers two fields you can add in your .storybook/main.js|ts file, called webpackFinal and viteFinal. These fields are functions that take the default configuration as an argument, and return the modified configuration. You can read more about them in the Storybook documentation for webpack and the Storybook documentation for vite.

You can use these fields in your Nx workspace Storybook configurations normally, following the Storybook docs. However, let's see how you can create a global configuration for every project in your workspace, and how you can override it for specific projects.

Global configuration

If you want to add a global configuration for Webpack or Vite in your workspace, you may create a .storybook/main.js file at the root of your workspace. In that root .storybook/main.js|ts file, you can add the webpackFinal or viteFinal field, and return the modified configuration. This will be applied to every project in your workspace.

webpack and webpackFinal

The webpackFinal field would look like this:

.storybook/main.js
webpackFinal: async (config, { configType }) => { // Make whatever fine-grained changes you need that should apply to all storybook configs // Return the altered config return config; },

vite and viteFinal

The viteFinal field would look like this:

.storybook/main.js
async viteFinal(config, { configType }) { if (configType === 'DEVELOPMENT') { // Your development configuration goes here } if (configType === 'PRODUCTION') { // Your production configuration goes here. } return mergeConfig(config, { // Your environment configuration here }); },

In the viteFinal case, you would have to import the mergeConfig function from vite. So, on the top of your root .storybook/main.js|ts file, you would have to add:

.storybook/main.js
const { mergeConfig } = require('vite');

Project-specific configuration

webpack and webpackFinal

You can customize the webpack configuration for a specific project by adding a webpackFinal field in your project-specific .storybok/main.js|ts file, like this:

apps/my-react-webpack-app/.storybook/main.js
module.exports = { ... webpackFinal: async (config, { configType }) => { // add your own webpack tweaks if needed return config; }, };

If you are using a global, root-level, webpack configuration in your project, you can customize or extend that for a specific project like this:

apps/my-react-webpack-app/.storybook/main.js
const rootMain = require('../../../.storybook/main'); module.exports = { ...rootMain, ... webpackFinal: async (config, { configType }) => { // apply any global webpack configs that might have been specified in .storybook/main.js if (rootMain.webpackFinal) { config = await rootMain.webpackFinal(config, { configType }); } // add your own webpack tweaks if needed return config; }, };

Take note how, in this case, we are first applying the global webpack configuration, and then adding our own tweaks. If you don't want to apply any global configuration, you can just return your own configuration, and skip the rootMain.webpackFinal check.

vite and viteFinal

You can customize the vite configuration for a specific project by adding a viteFinal field in your project-specific .storybok/main.js|ts file, like this:

apps/my-react-vite-app/.storybook/main.js
const { mergeConfig } = require('vite'); const viteTsConfigPaths = require('vite-tsconfig-paths').default; module.exports = { ... async viteFinal(config, { configType }) { return mergeConfig(config, { plugins: [ viteTsConfigPaths({ root: '../../../', }), ], }); }, };

If you are using a global, root-level, vite configuration in your workspace, you can customize or extend that for a specific project like this:

apps/my-react-vite-app/.storybook/main.js
const { mergeConfig } = require('vite'); const viteTsConfigPaths = require('vite-tsconfig-paths').default; const rootMain = require('../../../.storybook/main'); module.exports = { ... async viteFinal(config, { configType }) { return mergeConfig(config, { ...((await rootMain.viteFinal(config, { configType })) ?? {}), plugins: [ viteTsConfigPaths({ root: '../../../', }), ], }); }, };
Don't forget the vite-tsconfig-paths plugin

For Vite.js to work on monorepos, and specifically on Nx workspaces, you need to use the 'vite-tsconfig-paths' plugin! Starting Storybook version 7, however, Storybook will automatically read your project's vite.config.ts file, so you don't need to add the plugin to your Storybook Vite configuration anymore. You will only have to specify the path to your project's vite.config.ts file in your project's Storybook configuration.

It's important to note here that for Vite.js to work on monorepos, and specifically on Nx workspaces, you need to use the 'vite-tsconfig-paths' plugin, just like you must already do in your project's vite.config.ts file. Storybook does not read your project's Vite configuration automatically, so you have to manually add the plugin to your project's Storybook Vite configuration.

So, a full project-level .storybook/main.js|ts file for a Vite.js project would look like this:

apps/my-react-vite-app/.storybook/main.js
const { mergeConfig } = require('vite'); const viteTsConfigPaths = require('vite-tsconfig-paths').default; module.exports = { core: { builder: '@storybook/builder-vite' }, stories: [ '../src/app/**/*.stories.mdx', '../src/app/**/*.stories.@(js|jsx|ts|tsx)', ], addons: ['@storybook/addon-essentials'], async viteFinal(config, { configType }) { return mergeConfig(config, { plugins: [ viteTsConfigPaths({ root: '../../../', }), ], }); }, };