Jekyll Assets is a drop in asset
pipeline that uses
Sprockets to build specifically
for Jekyll. It utilizes Sprockets,
and Jekyll to try and achieve a clean, and
extensible assets platform that supports plugins, caching, converting your
assets. It even supports proxying of said assets in a way that does not
interfere with either Sprockets,
or Jekyll, or your own source. By default you
can add Jekyll Assets to your Gemfile, as a plugin, and have it act as
a drop-in replacement for Jekyll's basic SASS processors, with you only
having to add it to your Gemfile, and updating your <img>
, and <link>
.
gem "jekyll-assets", group: :jekyll_plugins
gem "jekyll-assets", git: "https://github.com/envygeeks/jekyll-assets", group: :jekyll_plugins
gem "jekyll-assets", "~> x.x.alpha", group: :jekyll_plugins
ruby
: 2.6+sprockets
: 4.0+uglifier
: 4.0jekyll
: 3.5+
The configuration file is the same as Jekyll's, which is _config.yml
.
Except we use the special key called assets
inside of that file.
All values listed below are default, you need not copy these into your
configuration file unless you plan to change a value. Setting a value makes
it explicit, and shared across both production, and development.
# _config.yml
assets:
source_maps: true
destination: "/assets"
compression: false
gzip: false
defaults:
integrity:
{css,img,js}: false
caching:
enabled: true
path: ".jekyll-cache/assets"
type: file
# --
# Assets you wish to always have compiled.
# This can also be combined with raw_precompile which
# copies assets without running through the pipeline
# making them ultra fast.
# --
precompile: []
raw_precompile: [
#
]
# --
# baseurl: whether or not to append site.baseurl
# destination: the folder you store them in on the CDN.
# url: the CDN url (fqdn, or w/ identifier).
# --
cdn:
baseurl: false
destination: false
url: null
# --
# See lib/jekyll/assets/config.rb
# for a list of defaults
# --
sources:
- _assets/custom
plugins:
css: { autoprefixer: {}}
img: { optim: {}}
{% asset src @magick:double alt='This is my alt' %}
{% asset src @magick:double alt='This is my alt' %}
<img src="src" asset="@magick:double" alt="This is my alt">
<img src="src" alt="This is my alt" asset>
We provide several defaults that get set when you run an asset, depending on
content type, this could be anything from type, all the way to integrity.
If there is a default attribute you do not wish to be included, you can
disable the attribute with !attribute
, and it will be skipped over.
{% asset img.png !integrity %}
{% asset bundle.css !type %}
Our tags will take any number of arguments, arbitrary or not... and
convert them to HTML, and even attach them to your output if the
HTML processor you use accepts that kind of data. This applies
to anything but hashes, and arrays. So adding say, a class, or
id, is as easy as doing id="val"
inside of your tag arguments.
Arg | Description | Type | Return Type |
---|---|---|---|
@data |
data URI |
*/* |
text |
@inline |
CSS <style> |
text/css |
text/html |
@path |
Path | */* |
text |
Option | Tag Option | Type | Description |
---|---|---|---|
automatic | @automatic | Boolean | Upscale & Downscale images |
automatic_min_width | @min_width | Integer | Stop scaling before this width |
automatic_scales | scales | String | The scales to use |
discovery_scales | scales | String | The scales to look for |
automatic_upscale | @upscale | Boolean | Upscale, the source instead of downscale |
discovery | @discovery | Boolean | Responsive if an img matching source w/ @x exists |
Each option is in the responsive namespace regardless of whether it's inside of the tag, or configuration.
{% asset img.png @pic
srcset:max-width="200"
srcset:min-width="200"
srcset:scales=1x
srcset:scales=2x
srcset:scales=3x
%}
<img srcset="
img-<hash>.png 3x,
img-<hash>.png 2x,
img-<hash>.png 1x"
>
When using discovery based responsive images, we will only do responsive
images if we can find assets that match your scales based on the source
file. For example if you do {% asset img.png responsive:discovery responsive:scales=1x responsive:scales=1.5x responsive:scales=2x %}
then
we will expect img.png@1.5x
and img.png@2x
to exist. For any image
that doesn't exist it will be skipped, and that scale will not be included!
Automatic responsive images/scaling can either upscale, or downscale. This
is useful if you have a ton of images for blog posts, and you always want to
provide a single most high quality version and then have us downscale those,
or if you have an image and wish us to upscale it! The argv1
of {% asset img.png %}
is where the source is derived from. Given you give 2x
, 1.5x
and 1x
if you choose to downscale, the source will be assumed to be 2x,
and we will downscale to 1.5x and half. If you chose to upscale, the source
will be assumed to be 1x, and we will multiply the width by 1.5
and 2
We support liquid arguments for tag values (but not tag keys), and we also
support Liquid pre-processing (with your Jekyll context) of most files if they
end with .liquid
. This will also give you access to our filters as well as
their filters, and Jekyll's filters, and any tags that are globally available.
{% asset '{{ site.bg_img }}' %}
{% asset '{{ site.bg_img }}' proxy:key='{{ value }}' %}
{% asset {{\ site.bg_img\ }} %}
body {
background-image: asset_url("'{{ site.bg_img }}'");
background-image: asset_url("'{{ site.bg_img }}' proxy:key='{{ value }}'");
background-image: asset_url("{{\ site.bg_img\ }}");
}
- .css
- .sass
- .scss
- .js
- .es6
- .coffee
- .svg
You have full access to your entire global context from any liquid processing
we do. Depending on where you do it, you might or might not also have
access to your local (page) context as well. You can also do whatever you
like, and be as dynamic as you like, including full loops, and conditional
Liquid, since we pre-process your text files. On Sprockets 4.x you can use
.liquid.ext
and .ext.liquid
, but because of the way Sprockets 3.x works, we
have opted to only allow the default extension of .ext.liquid
when running
on "Old Sprockets" (AKA 3.x.) If you would like Syntax + Liquid you should
opt to install Sprockets 4.x so you can get the more advanced features.
**In order to import your Liquid pre-processed assets inside of Liquid or JS
you should use a Sprockets //require=
, Sprockets does not integrate that
deeply into JavaScript and SASS to allow you to @import
and pre-process.
We provide two base helpers, asset_path
to return the path of an asset,
and asset_url
which will wrap asset_path
into a url()
for you,
making it easy for you to extract your assets and their paths inside of
SCSS. All other helpers that Sprockets themselves provide will use our
asset_path
helper, so you can use them like normal, including with Liquid
body {
background-image: asset_url("img.png");
}
Any argument that is supported by our regular tags, is also supported by
our .sass
/.scss
helpers, with a few obvious exceptions (like srcset
).
This means that you can wrap your assets into magick
if you wish, or
imageoptim
or any other proxy that is able to spit out a path for you
to use. The general rule is, that if it returns a path, or @data
then
it's safe to use within .scss
/.sass
, otherwise it will probably throw.
body {
background-image: asset_url("img.png @magick:half")
}
*Note: we do not validate your arguments, so if you send a conflicting
*argument that results in invalid CSS, you are responsible for that, in
*that if you ship us srcset
we might or might not throw, depending on how
*the threads are ran. So it might ship HTML if you do it wrong, and it will
*break your CSS, this is by design so that if possible, in the future, we can
allow more flexibility, or so that plugins can change based on arguments.
We provide all your assets as a hash of Liquid Drops so you can
get basic info that we wish you to have access to without having to
prepare the class. Note: The keys in the assets
array are the
names of the original files, e.g., use *.scss
instead of *.css
.
{{ assets["bundle.css"].content_type }} => "text/css"
{{ assets["images.jpg"].width }} => 62
{{ assets["images.jpg"].height }} => 62
The current list of available accessors:
Method | Description |
---|---|
content_type |
The RFC content type |
filename |
The full path to the asset |
height |
The asset height |
width |
The asset width |
digest_path |
The prefixed path |
integrity |
The SRI hash |
{% for k,v in assets %}
{{ k }}
{% endfor %}
Using Liquid Drop assets
, you can check whether an asset is present.
{% if assets[page.image] %}{% img '{{ page.image }}' %}
{% else %}
{% img default.jpg %}
{% endif %}
{{ src | asset:"@magick:double magick:quality=92" }}
Point | Name | Instance | Args |
---|---|---|---|
:env |
:before_init |
✔ | ✗ |
:env |
:after_init |
✔ | ✗ |
:env |
:after_write |
✔ | ✗ |
:config |
:before_merge |
✗ | Config{} |
:asset |
:before_compile |
✗ | Asset , Manifest |
:asset |
:after_compression |
✗ | input{}, output{}, type=/ |
Jekyll::Assets::Hook.register :env, :before_init do
append_path "myPluginsCustomPath"
end
Jekyll::Assets::Hook.register :config, :init do |c|
c.deep_merge!({
plugins: {
my_plugin: {
opt: true
}
}
})
end
Your plugin can also register it's own hooks on our Hook system, so that you can trigger hooks around your stuff as well, this is useful for extensive plugins that want more power.
Jekyll::Assets::Hook.add_point(
:plugin, :hook
)
Jekyll::Assets::Hook.trigger(:plugin, :hook) { |v| v.call(:arg) }
Jekyll::Assets::Hook.trigger(:plugin, :hook) do |v|
instance_eval(&v)
end
gem "crass"
Once crass is added, we will detect vendor prefixes, and
add /* @alternate */
to them, with or without compression
enabled, and with protections against compression stripping.
gem "font-awesome-sass"
@import "font-awesome-sprockets";
@import "font-awesome";
html {
// ...
}
gem "autoprefixer-rails"
assets:
autoprefixer:
browsers:
- "last 2 versions"
- "IE > 9"
gem "bootstrap-sass" # 3.x
gem "bootstrap" # 4.x
@import 'bootstrap';
html {
// ...
}
//=require _bootstrap.css
//=require bootstrap/_reboot.css
gem "mini_magick"
See the MiniMagick docs
to get an idea what <value>
can be.
Name | Accepts Value |
---|---|
magick:compress |
✔ |
magick:resize |
✔ |
magick:format * |
✔ |
magick:quality |
✔ |
magick:rotate |
✔ |
magick:gravity |
✔ |
magick:crop |
✔ |
magick:extent |
✔ |
magick:flip |
✔ |
magick:background |
✔ |
magick:transparency |
✔ |
@magick:double |
✗ |
@magick:half |
✗ |
* magick:format
requires an ext or a valid MIME content type like image/jpeg
or .jpg
. We will ImageMagick -format
on your behalf with that information by getting the extension.
gem "image_optim"
gem "image_optim_pack" # Optional
assets:
plugins:
img:
optim:
{}
Check the ImageOptim to get idea about configuration options, and to get a list of stuff you need to install on your system to use it, if you do not wish to use "image_optim_pack".
To disable ImageOptim (i.e. for development builds), use following configuration:
assets:
plugins:
img:
optim: false
Name | Accepts Value |
---|---|
optim |
✔ |
@optim |
✗ |
By default @optim
will use the default jekyll
, otherwise you can provide optim=preset
and have it used that preset. ImageOptim provides advanced, and default as their default presets, you can define your own preset via Jekyll Assets configuration listed above.
gem "ruby-vips"
The "ruby-vips" gem requires a functional install of (libvips)[https://github.com/libvips/libvips/].
Name | Accepts Value |
---|---|
vips:crop |
✔ |
vips:resize |
✔ |
vips:format |
✔ |
vips:quality |
✔ |
vips:compression |
✔ |
@vips:near_lossless |
✗ |
@vips:interlace |
✗ |
@vips:lossless |
✗ |
vips:strip |
✔ |
@vips:strip |
✗ |
@vips:double |
✗ |
@vips:half |
✗ |
Accepts an argument of either 'width', 'x' or 'x'. All resize processes keep the original aspect ratio so width and height are used to specify the bounding box for the resize process.
If no height is specified the image is resized to fit withing a bounding box of 'width' x 'width'. Similarly specifying just a height sets the bounding box for the resize to 'height' x 'height'. This form only exists for compatibility with the "magick" plugin.
{% asset img.png vips:resize='x100' %}
{% asset img.png vips:resize='100x50' %}
{% asset img.png vips:resize='100x' %}
Convert the image to the specified format. Format support depends on the compile options of the libvips library. Format is specified as the file extension such as '.jpg', '.webp' or '.png'.
{% asset image.png vips:format='.webp' %}
Only has any effect when combined with "vips:resize". Use the following arguments (all except "fill" are documented here):
- fill: resize the image to the specified size while maintaining the aspect ratio then fills the "empty" background with blurred version of the original image
- entropy: use an entropy measure
- high: position the crop towards the high coordinate
- attention: look for features likely to draw human attention
- low: position the crop towards the low coordinate
- centre: crop from the centre
- none: do nothing
{% asset image.jpg vips:resize='100' vips:crop='fill' %}
Removes metadata from images. This is set "true" by default, but can be disabled by passing "false".
{% asset image.jpg vips:strip=false %}
Name | Class |
---|---|
env |
Jekyll::Assets::Env |
args |
Liquid::Tag::Parser{} |
jekyll |
Jekyll::Site |
asset |
Sprockets::Asset |
Name | Class | Type |
---|---|---|
@doc |
Nokogiri:: XML::Document |
image/svg+xml |
@doc |
Nokogiri::HTML::Document |
image/* |