Grunt is the tool of choice for many client side web projects. But, often the gruntfiles look like a mess. I believe the reason for this is that many people don't care about keeping it clean.
On top of that, the file is often generated by a tool, such as Yeoman, and not cleaned up after. I happen to think that the gruntfile should be clean and here is a how to do it.
Here is how the project structure looks in development mode. I keep all my
client side code in an app
directory and I use Bower to install external
components into app/components
app components jquery jquery.js momentjs moment.js images bower-logo.png grunt-logo.svg index.html scripts main.js model.js view.js styles images.css main.css
I will use less, watch, concat, uglify, filerev
and usemin
to
optimize it and turn it into this.
dist app images bower-logo.fd05710aa2cb9502dc90.png grunt-logo.16c32bb187681923d5a7.svg index.html scripts main.359737238b7dc0972e52.js styles main.6873d02f25d2385b9ec8.css
The above structure is good because it serves one CSS file, one Javascript
file, and everything apart from index.html
is named with an MD5 checksum that
allow me to cache everything infinitely!
Loading External Tasks
Loading tasks in Grunt is done with grunt.loadNpmTasks
but since all
dependenciies is already declared in package.json
there is no need to name
them again. So instead we use matchdep
to load all Grunt dependencies
automatically.
// Load all files starting with `grunt-` require('matchdep').filterDev('grunt-*').forEach(grunt.loadNpmTasks);
The relevant section in package.json
contains these files. All Grunt plugins
follow the grunt-
naming convention.
"devDependencies": { "bower": "~1.2.8", "grunt": "~0.4.2", "matchdep": "", "grunt-contrib-jshint": "", "grunt-contrib-less": "", "grunt-contrib-copy": "", "grunt-contrib-clean": "", "grunt-contrib-watch": "", "grunt-express-server": "", "grunt-contrib-cssmin": "", "grunt-usemin": "", "grunt-filerev": "", "grunt-contrib-concat": "", "grunt-contrib-uglify": "" } }
JsHint
I think it is a good idea to run JsHint for all my files including the Gruntfile and here is how I configure it.
// JsHint configuration is read from packages.json var pkg = grunt.file.readJSON('package.json'); grunt.initConfig({ pkg: pkg, // JsHint jshint: { options: pkg.jshintConfig, all: [ 'Gruntfile.js', 'app/scripts/**/*.js', 'test/**/*.js' ] } }
Newer versions of JsHint can pick up configuration from package.json
and I
take advantage of this so I don't have a duplicate configuration in a .jshint
file that is normally added when using a generated project.
The relevant section in package.json
is defined like this:
"jshintConfig": { ... "maxparams": 4, "maxdepth": 2, "maxcomplexity": 6, ... }
I truncated the section for brevity but I kept my favorite configuration options that deal with complexity and forces me to keep my code simple.
Less
As I wrote in CSS Good Practices,
I think using a CSS preprocessor is a really good idea and I use Less in this
project. Since Less is a superset of CSS all I have to do to use less is to
change the extension from .css
to .less
and configure Grunt to convert Less
files into CSS. In development mode I like to have the CSS files in the same
place I would have put them if I wasn't using Less. To avoid accidentally
checking the generated files into source control I add the following line to
.gitignore
# .gitignore app/styles/*.css
Here is the configuration for generating a CSS file. I add two targets, one for development and one for release which is compressed.
// Less less: { dev: { src: 'app/styles/main.css', dest: 'app/styles/main.less' }, release: { src: 'app/styles/main.css', dest: 'dist/app/styles/main.less', options: { compress: true } } }
As you can see I only name one less file. I think it is a good idea to include all less files via import statements.
// Less files are automatically included and don't generate new requests. @import 'other-less-file.less';
Watch
In development mode I also like to have a file watcher that generates the CSS files automatically when I change a less file. Here is the configuration.
// Watch watch: { // watch:less invokes less:dev when less files change less: { files: ['app/styles/*.less'], tasks: ['less:dev'] } }
Clean
It is also a good idea to be able to remove generated files with one command
clean
will do that for me.
// Clean clean: { // clean:release removes generated files release: [ 'dist', 'app/styles/*.css' ] }
Concat, Uglify and Usemin Prepare
To concatenate and minify the Javascript files, I use concat
and uglify
.
But I don't want the files used in index.html
to be automatically included.
To do this I need to use useminPrepare
. It is one of two tasks included in
grunt-usemin
, the other is unsuprisingly called usemin
and I will describe
it later.
useminPrepare
parses HTML files, looking for tags that follow a distinct
pattern, <!-- build:js outputfile.js -->
and extracts the filenames from
script tags. These files are then injected into the concat
and uglify
tasks. So, there is no need to provide a configuration for those tasks.
<!-- app/index.html --> <!-- build:js scripts/main.js --> <script src="components/jquery/jquery.js" defer></script> <script src="components/momentjs/moment.js" defer></script> <script src="scripts/model.js" defer></script> <script src="scripts/view.js" defer></script> <script src="scripts/main.js" defer></script> <!-- endbuild -->
/// userminPrepare useminPrepare: { html: 'app/index.html', options: { dest: 'dist/app' } }, // Concat concat: { options: { separator: ';' }, // dist configuration is provided by useminPrepare dist: {} }, // Uglify uglify: { // dist configuration is provided by useminPrepare dist: {} }
There are a few things that are noteworthy above. useminPrepare.options.dest
works in conjunction with the value defined in the build:js
comment in the
html file. I always designate the root directory of the generated code in the
Gruntfile and I keep the relative path to the file in the HTML file. I do this
because this configuration is reused by the usemin
task later and configuring
it this way in useminPrepare
keeps it simpler later.
Also note that concat
and uglify
needs to have an empty dist
property.
Otherwise, useminPrepare
cannot inject configuration into it.
Running grunt useminPrepare
shows the generated configuration.
concat: { options: { separator: ';' }, dist: {}, generated: { files: [ { dest: '.tmp/concat/scripts/main.js', src: [ 'app/components/momentjs/moment.js', 'app/components/jquery/jquery.js', 'app/scripts/model.js', 'app/scripts/view.js', 'app/scripts/main.js' ] } ] } } uglify: dist: {}, generated: { files: [ { dest: 'dist/app/scripts/main.js', src: [ '.tmp/concat/scripts/main.js' ] } ] } }
Alright, now we have minified both CSS and Javascript, it is time to move the files that don't need minification, images and html files.
Copy
// Copy HTML and fonts copy: { // copy:release copies all html and image files to dist // preserving the structure release: { files: [ { expand: true, cwd: 'app', src: [ 'images/*.{png,gif,jpg,svg}', '*.html' ], dest: 'dist/app' } ] } }
Here I use a different configuration for the files. The expand
option is what
is important. I tells grunt to copy the files preserving the structure.
OK, now all the files have been moved into their proper place and all that is left is to checksum them and rename all the references.
Filerev, checksumming
filerev
is my task of choice for adding the checksum of a file to its name. I
use MD5 to checksum all assets, javascript, css and images with this
configuration.
// Filerev filerev: { options: { encoding: 'utf8', algorithm: 'md5', length: 20 }, release: { // filerev:release hashes(md5) all assets (images, js and css ) // in dist directory files: [{ src: [ 'dist/app/images/*.{png,gif,jpg,svg}', 'dist/app/scripts/*.js', 'dist/app/styles/*.css', ] }] } }
Usemin
The final task is to change all the references in the HTML and CSS files to use
the checksummed filenames and to change the script
tags to reference the
minified file. usemin
is the task for this job.
// Usemin // Replaces all assets with their revved version in html and css files. // options.assetDirs contains the directories for finding the assets // according to their relative paths usemin: { html: ['dist/app/*.html'], css: ['dist/app/styles/*.css'], options: { assetsDirs: ['dist/app', 'dist/app/styles'] } }
The only difficult thing about this is that usemin
uses the paths from the
files it parses when it searches for assets to replace references to. This
means that options.assetsDirs
must designate the directories where the
parsed files are located. In my case the CSS files are in dist/app/styles
and
the HTML files are in dist/app
. Hoohaah! Only one more thing before were
done. Calling all the tasks in order.
Release
I register the release
task and tell it to invoke all the other files in
the correct order.
// Invoked with grunt release, creates a release structure grunt.registerTask('release', 'Creates a release in /dist', [ 'clean', 'jshint', 'less:release', 'useminPrepare', 'concat', 'uglify', 'copy', 'filerev', 'usemin' ]);
Example Code
This example comes from a workshop I give. If you are interested in one send me a note. If you would like to give one yourself you are welcome to use my example code. I also give a Grunt presentation
That's all folks!
7 comments:
Thanks for clearing things up! My grunt build wouldn't replace filenames by their revved version, almost works now thanks to your clarifications about usemin's assetsDirs
I'm glad it helped you out
Would your usemin target still work if you pulled it out into it's own task and ran it separately, after you ran the 'rel' task?
Say grunt.registerTask('replace','usemin')?
@snekse, Yes, it will work if you have already run the filerev task to MD5 the asset names.
I would like to thank you for the efforts you've made in writing this posting. I'm hoping the same very best function from you inside future too.
Nice post and explanation! And a question about usemin replacement:
usemin: {
html: ['dist/app/*.html'],
css: ['dist/app/styles/*.css'],
options: {
assetsDirs: ['dist/app', 'dist/app/styles']
}
}
Why don't we also specify js: ['dist/app/scripts/*.js'], and options: { assetsDirs: ['dist/app', 'dist/app/styles', 'dist/app/scripts']} ?
I mean, if we omit the js part, the js files in *.html wouldn't be replaced by usemin right? But in my experiment, they actually are replaced....
@jonnyhsy, Usemin replaces all filereved files that match the specified patterns, including the js and css files since they match the pattern.
The js files don't include any references to other files that are filereved and don't need to be included. The only files needed are the files that references other files. assetDirs contain the directory with the revved files.
The js and css files are filereved in a different target, filerev
filerev: {
options: {
encoding: 'utf8',
algorithm: 'md5',
length: 20
},
release: {
// filerev:release hashes(md5) all assets (images, js and css )
// in dist directory
files: [{
src: [
'dist/app/images/*.{png,gif,jpg,svg}',
'dist/app/scripts/*.js',
'dist/app/styles/*.css',
]
}]
}
}
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