Brings externally referenced resources, such as js, css and images, into a single file.
For example:
<link href="css/style.css" rel="stylesheet" data-inline >
is replaced with
<style>
/* contents of css/style.css */
</style>
Javascript references are brought inline, and images in the html and css blocks are converted to base-64 data: urls.
By default, all links and scripts are inlined, plus any images under 8KB, however this behavior can be overrided via several options.
npm install web-resource-inliner
For a number of usage examples, see ./test/spec.js and the associated test.* and test_out.* files in ./test/cases/
Expects options.fileContent to be HTML and creates a new HTML document. callback
will be called on completion or error with arguments ( error, result )
.
Expects options.fileContent to be CSS and creates a new CSS document. callback
will be called on completion or error with arguments ( error, result )
.
This is the HTML or CSS content to be inlined, you should provide HTML to the html()
method and CSS to the css()
method or you will get errors or garbage output.
Sets the attribute that is used to include/exclude specific resources based on the default behavior for the resource type. For example, if scripts
is set to false
, an individual script can be inlined by adding the attribute to the script
tag like <script src="myscript.js" data-inline ></script>
. On the other hand, if images
are set to be inlined by default, a specific image can be excluded by adding -ignore
to the end of the inlineAttribute
like <img src="myimg.png" data-inline-ignore >
. In CSS, a comment is required at the end of the line to perform the same thing, such as /*data-inline*/
or /*data-inline-ignore*/
.
When true, inline images unless they have an exclusion attribute (see inlineAttribute option). When false, exclude images unless they have an inclusion attribute (see inlineAttribute option). When a number, inline images only when the base64 content size is less than the number of KBs. For example, the default is to only inline images less than 8KB.
When true, inline SVG <use>
unless they have an exclusion attribute (see inlineAttribute option). When false, exclude SVG <use>
unless they have an inclusion attribute (see inlineAttribute option). When a number, inline SVG <use>
only when the content size is less than the number of KBs. For example, the default is to only inline SVGs less than 8KB.
When true, inline scripts unless they have an exclusion attribute (see inlineAttribute option). When false, exclude scripts unless they have an inclusion attribute (see inlineAttribute option). When a number, inline scripts only when the base64 content size is less than the number of KBs.
When true, inline stylesheet links unless they have an exclusion attribute (see inlineAttribute option). When false, exclude stylesheet links unless they have an inclusion attribute (see inlineAttribute option). When a number, inline stylesheet links only when the base64 content size is less than the number of KBs.
Describes the path relationship between where web-resource-inliner is running and what the relative paths in fileContent
or href/src urls refer to. For example, the tests cases in this package are in test/cases/
so their relative paths start by referring to that folder, but the root of this project and where npm test
runs from is 2 folders up, so relativeTo
is set to test/cases/
in test/spec.js
. Likewise, with href="content.css"
and a relativeTo
of http://github.com/
the resource retrieved would be http://github.com/content.css
.
Describes the path relationship between CSS content and the context it will be loaded in. For example, when a CSS file contains url(some-file.png)
and the file is moved from a location in a folder like /css
to /
then the path to the image needs to be changed to url(css/some-file.png)
. In this case, rebaseRelativeTo
would be css
. You probably don't want to set this when you are using html()
.
When strict is true
, a missing resource will cause the inliner to halt and return an error in the callback. The default behavior is to log a warning to the console and continue inlining with the available resources, which is more similar to how a web page behaves.
Allows to adjust issued requests. E.g., add authentication tokens to requested URLs. The function is called with { uri, encoding, gzip }
object as its parameter. It can replace builtin node-fetch with your own solution.
Allows to make changes to scripts before they are inlined, such as minifying. Callback is standard node error first, second argument is transformed value.
Allows to make changes to links before they are inlined, such as CSS pre-and-post-processors. Callback is standard node error first, second argument is transformed value.
In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Run tests with npm test
.