A free and open source library for publishers to quickly implement header bidding.
This README is for developers who want to contribute to Prebid.js. Additional documentation can be found at the Prebid homepage. Working examples can be found in the developer docs.
Table of Contents
$ git clone https://github.com/prebid/Prebid.js.git
$ cd Prebid.js
$ yarn install
Prebid also supports the yarn
npm client. This is an alternative to using npm
for package management, though npm
will continue to work as before.
For more info, see the Yarn documentation.
To build the project on your local machine, run:
$ gulp serve
This runs some code quality checks, starts a web server at http://localhost:9999
serving from the project root and generates the following files:
./build/dev/prebid.js
- Full source code for dev and debug./build/dev/prebid.js.map
- Source map for dev and debug./build/dist/prebid.js
- Minified production code./prebid.js_<version>.zip
- Distributable zip archive
Note: You need to have node.js
4.x or greater installed to be able to run the gulp build
commands.
The standard build output contains all the available bidder adapters listed in adapters.json
.
You might want to exclude some/most of them from the final bundle. To make sure the build only includes the adapters you want, you can make your own adapters file.
For example, in path/to/your/list-of-adapters.json
, write:
[
"openx",
"rubicon",
"sovrn"
]
Building with just these adapters will result in a smaller bundle which should allow your pages to load faster.
Build standalone prebid.js
Prebid now supports the yarn
npm client. This is an alternative to using npm
for package management, though npm
will continue to work as before.
For more info about yarn see https://yarnpkg.com
-
Clone the repo, run
yarn install
-
Duplicate
adapters.json
to e.g.list-of-adapters.json
-
Remove the unnecessary adapters from
list-of-adapters.json
-
Then run the build:
$ gulp build --adapters path/to/your/list-of-adapters.json
Build prebid.js using Yarn for bundling
In case you'd like to explicitly show that your project uses prebid.js
and want a reproducible build, consider adding it as an yarn
dependency.
-
Add
prebid.js
as ayarn
dependency of your project:yarn add prebid.js
-
Duplicate
node_modules/prebid.js/adapters.json
to under your project path, e.g.path/to/your/list-of-adapters.json
-
Remove the unnecessary adapters
-
Run the
prebid.js
build under thenode_modules/prebid.js/
folder$ gulp build --adapters path/to/your/list-of-adapters.json
Most likely your custom prebid.js
will only change when there's:
- A change in your list of adapters
- A new release of
prebid.js
Having said that, you are probably safe to check your custom bundle into your project. You can also generate it in your build process.
To configure Prebid.js to run locally, edit the example file ./integrationExamples/gpt/pbjs_example_gpt.html
:
- Change
{id}
values appropriately to set up ad units and bidders - Set the path to Prebid.js in your example file as shown below (see
pbs.src
).
For development:
(function() {
var d = document, pbs = d.createElement('script'), pro = d.location.protocol;
pbs.type = 'text/javascript';
pbs.src = ((pro === 'https:') ? 'https' : 'http') + './build/dev/prebid.js';
var target = document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0];
target.insertBefore(pbs, target.firstChild);
})();
For deployment:
(function() {
var d = document, pbs = d.createElement('script'), pro = d.location.protocol;
pbs.type = 'text/javascript';
pbs.src = ((pro === 'https:') ? 'https' : 'http') + './build/dist/prebid.js';
var target = document.getElementsByTagName('head')[0];
target.insertBefore(pbs, target.firstChild);
})();
To run the project locally, use:
$ gulp serve
This runs code quality checks, generates all the necessary files and starts a web server at http://localhost:9999
serving from the project root. Navigate to your example implementation to test, and if your prebid.js
file is sourced from the ./build/dev
directory you will have sourcemaps available in your browser's developer tools.
To run the example file, go to:
http://localhost:9999/integrationExamples/gpt/pbjs_example_gpt.html
To view a test coverage report, go to:
http://localhost:9999/build/coverage/karma_html/report
A watch is also in place that will run continuous tests in the terminal as you edit code and tests.
Many SSPs, bidders, and publishers have contributed to this project. 60+ Bidders are supported by Prebid.js.
For guidelines, see Contributing.
Our PR review process can be found here.
To add a bidder adapter, see the instructions in How to add a bidder adaptor.
Please do NOT load Prebid.js inside your adapter. If you do this, we will reject or remove your adapter as appropriate.
Code quality is defined by .eslintrc
and errors are reported in the terminal.
If you are contributing code, you should configure your editor with the provided .eslintrc
settings.
$ gulp test --watch
This will run tests and keep the Karma test browser open. If your prebid.js
file is sourced from the ./build/dev
directory you will also have sourcemaps available when using your browser's developer tools.
-
To access the Karma debug page, go to
http://localhost:9876/debug.html
-
For test results, see the console
-
To set breakpoints in source code, see the developer tools
Detailed code coverage reporting can be generated explicitly with
$ gulp test --coverage
The results will be in
./build/coverage
Note: Starting in June 2016, all pull requests to Prebid.js need to include tests with greater than 80% code coverage before they can be merged. For more information, see #421.
For instructions on writing tests for Prebid.js, see Testing Prebid.js.
Prebid.js is supported on IE9+ and modern browsers.
Review our governance model here.