grunt-asset-version-json

0.1.4 • Public • Published

grunt-asset-version-json

Rename assets files with hash and store in a JSON file

Getting Started

This plugin requires Grunt ~0.4.1

If you haven't used Grunt before, be sure to check out the Getting Started guide, as it explains how to create a Gruntfile as well as install and use Grunt plugins. Once you're familiar with that process, you may install this plugin with this command:

npm install grunt-asset-version-json --save-dev

Once the plugin has been installed, it may be enabled inside your Gruntfile with this line of JavaScript:

grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-asset-version-json');

NOTE

This plugin is a modified version of grunt-wp-assets by Hariadi Hinta (Thank you, Hariadi Hinta!). Much is carried over from his plugin, but instead of modifying a WordPress-specific functions.php file with file hashes, the file hashes are saved to a JSON file like so: { "path/to/file.ext": "SOMEHASH", "path/to/other-file.ext": "SOMEHASH" }.

The idea is to remove the burden of storing file hashes from a WordPress-specific file and into a more universal and single-purpose JSON file so this plugin should be usable outside the context of WordPress projects. To access the JSON file from WordPress/PHP, I use something like:

$json = file_get_contents(get_template_directory() . '/filerevs.json');
$filerevs = json_decode($json, true);
wp_register_script('mysite-scripts', get_template_directory_uri() . '/assets/js/scripts.min.' . $filerevs['assets/js/scripts.min.js'] . '.js', false, null, true);
wp_register_style('mysite-style', get_template_directory_uri() . '/assets/css/style.min.' . $filerevs['assets/css/style.min.css'] . '.css', false, null);

(the above example assumes that the file hashes are stored to a JSON file named filerevs.json. The JSON file is defined in the dest property of the asset_version_json task config)

Usage Example

asset_version_json: {
  assets: {
    options: {
      algorithm: 'sha1',
      length: 8,
      format: false,
      rename: true
    },
    src: 'assets/css/main.min.css',
    dest: 'filerevs.json'
  }
},

This example task will rename assets/css/main.min.css to assets/css/main.min.{sha1hash}.css and update assets reference in filerevs.json which would look something like { "assets/css/main.min.css": "SOMEHASH" };

Caveats

If the JSON file defined by the dest property does not exist, then it will fail. Also if the file exists but does not already contain a JSON object (at least {}), then it will fail.

Options

rename

Type: Boolean Default: false

It will rename the src target instead of copy.

format

Type: Boolean Default: true

File name format.

true: {hash}.{filename}.{ext}
false: {filename}.{hash}.{ext}

encoding

Type: String Default: 'utf8'

The file encoding.

algorithm

Type: String Default: 'md5'

algorithm is dependent on the available algorithms supported by the version of OpenSSL on the platform. Examples are 'sha1', 'md5', 'sha256', 'sha512', etc. On recent releases, openssl list-message-digest-algorithms will display the available digest algorithms.

length

Type: Number Default: 4

The number of characters of the file hash to prefix the file name with.

Release History

  • 2013-11-21   v0.1.4   Update readme php/wordpress example
  • 2013-11-21   v0.1.3   track full file pathnames as supplied to the 'src' property rather than using the base filename
  • 2013-11-21   v0.1.2   Track hashes by individual file rather than by filetype
  • 2013-11-21   v0.1.1   Update readme
  • 2013-11-21   v0.1.0   Initial commit.

Readme

Keywords

none

Package Sidebar

Install

npm i grunt-asset-version-json

Weekly Downloads

23

Version

0.1.4

License

none

Last publish

Collaborators

  • andyford