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Vulcanize

Reduce an HTML file and its dependent HTML Imports into one file

Named for the Vulcanization process that turns polymers into more durable materials.

Web pages that use multiple HTML Imports to load dependencies may end up making lots of network round-trips. In many cases, this can lead to long initial load times and unnecessary bandwidth usage. The Vulcanize tool follows HTML Imports and <script> tags to inline these external assets into a single page, to be used in production.

In the future, technologies such as HTTP/2 and Server Push will likely obsolete the need for a tool like vulcanize for production uses.

Installation

vulcanize is available on npm. For maximium utility, vulcanize should be installed globally.

npm install -g vulcanize

This will install vulcanize to /usr/local/bin/vulcanize (you may need sudo for this step).

Options

  • -h|--help: print this message
  • -v|--version: print version number
  • -p <arg>|--abspath <arg>: use as the "webserver root", make all adjusted urls absolute
  • --exclude <path>: exclude a subpath from root. Use multiple times to exclude multiple paths. Tags (imports/scripts/etc) that reference an excluded path are left in-place, meaning the resources are not inlined. ex: --exclude=elements/x-foo.html --exclude=elements/x-bar.html
  • --strip-exclude: Exclude a subpath and remove any links referencing it.
  • --inline-scripts: Inline external scripts.
  • --inline-css: Inline external stylesheets.
  • --add-import <path>: Add this import to the target HTML before vulcanizing. Can be used multiple times.
  • --redirect <uri>|<path>: Takes an argument in the form of URI|PATH where url is a URI composed of a protocol, hostname, and path and PATH is a local filesystem path to replace the matched URI part with. Multiple redirects may be specified; the earliest ones have the highest priority.
  • --strip-comments: Strips all HTML comments not containing an @license from the document.
  • --no-implicit-strip: DANGEROUS! Avoid stripping imports of the transitive dependencies of imports specified with --exclude. May result in duplicate javascript inlining.
  • --out-html <path>: If specified, output will be written to instead of stdout.

Usage

The command

vulcanize target.html

will inline the HTML Imports of target.html and print the resulting HTML to standard output.

The command

vulcanize target.html > build.html

will inline the HTML Imports of target.html and print the result to build.html.

The command

vulcanize -p "path/to/target/" /target.html

will inline the HTML Imports of target.html, treat path/to/target/ as the webroot of target.html, and make all urls absolute to the provided webroot.

The command

vulcanize --exclude "path/to/target/subpath/" --exclude "path/to/target/subpath2/" target.html

will inline the HTML Imports of target.html that are not in the directory path/to/target/subpath nor path/to/target/subpath2.

If the --strip-exclude flag is used, the HTML Import <link> tags that point to resources in path/totarget/subpath and path/to/target/subpath2/ will also be removed.

The command

vulcanize --inline-scripts target.html

will inline scripts in target.html as well as HTML Imports. Exclude flags will apply to both Imports and Scripts.

The command

vulcanize --inline-css target.html

will inline Polymerized stylesheets, <link rel="import" type="css">

The command

vulcanize --strip-comments target.html

will remove HTML comments, except for those that begin with @license. License comments will be deduplicated.

Using vulcanize programmatically

Vulcanize as a library has two exported function.

vulcanize constructor takes an object of options similar to the command line options.

  • abspath: A folder to treat as "webroot".
    • When specified, use an absolute path to target.
  • excludes: An array of strings with regular expressions to exclude paths from being inlined.
  • stripExcludes: Similar to excludes, but strips the imports from the output entirely.
    • If stripExcludes is empty, it will be set the value of excludes by default.
  • inlineScripts: Inline external scripts.
  • inlineCss: Inline external stylesheets.
  • addedImports: Additional HTML imports to inline, added to the end of the target file
  • redirects: An array of strings with the format URI|PATH where url is a URI composed of a protocol, hostname, and path and PATH is a local filesystem path to replace the matched URI part with. Multiple redirects may be specified; the earliest ones have the highest priority.
  • stripComments: Remove non-license HTML comments.
  • inputUrl: A URL string that will override the target argument to vulcanize.process(). By design, gulp and grunt plugins expect to work on the given file path. vulcanize has its own file loader, and expects to be given URLs. In instances where the filename cannot be used as a URL inputUrl will override the filename.
  • loader: A hydrolysis loader. This loader is generated with the target argument to vulcan.process and the exclude paths. A custom loader can be given if more advanced setups are necesssary.

vulcanize.process takes a target path to target.html and a callback.

Example:

var Vulcanize = require('vulcanize');
var hydrolysis = require('hydrolysis');

/* a Hydrolysis loader object (optional) */
var loader = new hydrolysis.loader(...)

var vulcan = new Vulcanize({
  abspath: '',
  excludes: [
    '\\.css$'
  ],
  stripExcludes: [
  ],
  inlineScripts: false,
  inlineCss: false,
  addedImports: [
  ],
  redirects: [
  ],
  implicitStrip: true,
  stripComments: false
  // optional
  loader: loader,
  inputUrl: ''
});

vulcan.process(target, function(err, inlinedHtml) {
});

Caveats

Because HTML Imports changes the order of execution scripts can have, Vulcanize has to make a few compromises to achieve that same script execution order.

  1. Contents of all HTML Import documents will be moved to <body>

  2. Any scripts after a <link rel="import"> node in <head> will be moved to <body> after the contents of the HTML Import.

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