LiveReload Server in Python Version.
Web Developers need to refresh a browser everytime when he saved a file (css, javascript, html), it is really boring. LiveReload will take care of that for you. When you saved a file, your browser will refresh itself. And what's more, it can do some tasks like compiling less to css before the browser refreshing.
Python LiveReload is designed for web developers who know Python.
Install Python LiveReload with pip:
$ pip install livereload
If you don't have pip installed, try easy_install:
$ easy_install livereload
A browser extension is not required, you can insert a script into your html page manually:
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://127.0.0.1:35729/livereload.js"></script>
But a browser extension will make your life easier, available extensions:
- Chrome Extension
- Safari Extension
- Firefox Extension
Visit: http://help.livereload.com/kb/general-use/browser-extensions
LiveReload is designed for more complex tasks, not just for refreshing a browser. But you can still do the simple task.
Assume you have livereload and its extension installed, and now you are in your working directory. With command:
$ livereload [-p port]
your browser will reload, if any file in the working directory changed.
Livereload server can be a SimpleHTTPServer:
$ livereload -p 8000
It will set up a server at port 8000, take a look at http://127.0.0.1:8000. Oh, it can livereload!
IF YOU ARE NOT USING IT AS A HTTP SERVER, DO NOT ADD THE PORT OPTION.
More complex tasks can be done by Guardfile. Write a Guardfile in your working directory, the basic syntax:
#!/usr/bin/env python from livereload.task import Task Task.add('static/style.css') Task.add('*.html')
Now livereload will only guard static/style.css and html in your workding directory.
But python-livereload is more than that, you can specify a task before refreshing the browser:
#!/usr/bin/env python from livereload.task import Task from livereload.compiler import lessc Task.add('style.less', lessc('style.less', 'style.css'))
And it will compile less css before refreshing the browser now.
If you're using python-livereload under Linux, you should also install pyinotify, as it will greatly improve responsiveness and reduce CPU load.
You may see errors such as:
[2013-06-19 11:11:07,499 pyinotify ERROR] add_watch: cannot watch somefile WD=-1, Errno=No space left on device (ENOSPC)
If so, you need to increase the number of "user watches". You can either do this temporarily by running (as root):
echo 51200 > /proc/sys/fs/inotify/max_user_watches
To make this change permanent, add the following line to /etc/sysctl.conf and reboot:
fs.inotify.max_user_watches = 51200
If you are on a Mac, you can buy LiveReload2.
If you are a rubist, you can get guard-livereload.