Awesome
eleventy-plugin-bundle
Little bundles of code, little bundles of joy.
Create minimal per-page or app-level bundles of CSS, JavaScript, or HTML to be included in your Eleventy project.
Makes it easy to implement Critical CSS, in-use-only CSS/JS bundles, SVG icon libraries, or secondary HTML content to load via XHR.
Why?
This project is a minimum-viable-bundler and asset pipeline in Eleventy. It does not perform any transpilation or code manipulation (by default). The code you put in is the code you get out (with configurable transforms
if you’d like to modify the code).
For more larger, more complex use cases you may want to use a more full featured bundler like Vite, Parcel, Webpack, rollup, esbuild, or others.
But do note that a full-featured bundler has a significant build performance cost, so take care to weigh the cost of using that style of bundler against whether or not this plugin has sufficient functionality for your use case—especially as the platform matures and we see diminishing returns on code transpilation (ES modules everywhere).
Installation
No installation necessary. Starting with Eleventy v3.0.0-alpha.10
and newer, this plugin is now bundled with Eleventy.
Usage
By default, Bundle Plugin v2.0 does not include any default bundles. You must add these yourself via eleventyConfig.addBundle
. One notable exception happens when using the WebC Eleventy Plugin, which adds css
, js
, and html
bundles for you.
To create a bundle type, use eleventyConfig.addBundle
in your Eleventy configuration file (default .eleventy.js
):
// .eleventy.js
export default function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addBundle("css");
};
This does two things:
- Creates a new
css
shortcode for adding arbitrary code to this bundle - Adds
"css"
as an eligible type argument to thegetBundle
andgetBundleFileUrl
shortcodes.
Full options list
export default function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addBundle("css", {
// (Optional) Folder (relative to output directory) files will write to
toFileDirectory: "bundle",
// (Optional) File extension used for bundle file output, defaults to bundle name
outputFileExtension: "css",
// (Optional) Name of shortcode for use in templates, defaults to bundle name
shortcodeName: "css",
// shortcodeName: false, // disable this feature.
// (Optional) Modify bundle content
transforms: [],
// (Optional) If two identical code blocks exist in non-default buckets, they’ll be hoisted to the first bucket in common.
hoist: true,
// (Optional) In 11ty.js templates, having a named export of `bundle` will populate your bundles.
bundleExportKey: "bundle",
// bundleExportKey: false, // disable this feature.
});
};
Read more about hoist
and duplicate bundle hoisting.
Universal Shortcodes
The following Universal Shortcodes (available in njk
, liquid
, hbs
, 11ty.js
, and webc
) are provided by this plugin:
getBundle
to retrieve bundled code as a string.getBundleFileUrl
to create a bundle file on disk and retrieve the URL to that file.
Here’s a real-world commit showing this in use on the eleventy-base-blog
project.
Example: Add bundle code in a Markdown file in Eleventy
# My Blog Post
This is some content, I am writing markup.
{% css %}
em { font-style: italic; }
{% endcss %}
## More Markdown
{% css %}
strong { font-weight: bold; }
{% endcss %}
Renders to:
<h1>My Blog Post</h1>
<p>This is some content, I am writing markup.</p>
<h2>More Markdown</h2>
Note that the bundled code is excluded!
There are a few more examples below!
Render bundle code
<!-- Use this *anywhere*: a layout file, content template, etc -->
<style>{% getBundle "css" %}</style>
<!--
You can add more code to the bundle after calling
getBundle and it will be included.
-->
{% css %}* { color: orange; }{% endcss %}
Write a bundle to a file
Writes the bundle content to a content-hashed file location in your output directory and returns the URL to the file for use like this:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{% getBundleFileUrl "css" %}">
Note that writing bundles to files will likely be slower for empty-cache first time visitors but better cached in the browser for repeat-views (and across multiple pages, too).
Asset bucketing
<!-- This goes into a `defer` bucket (the bucket can be any string value) -->
{% css "defer" %}em { font-style: italic; }{% endcss %}
<!-- Pass the arbitrary `defer` bucket name as an additional argument -->
<style>{% getBundle "css", "defer" %}</style>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{% getBundleFileUrl 'css', 'defer' %}">
A default
bucket is implied:
<!-- These two statements are the same -->
{% css %}em { font-style: italic; }{% endcss %}
{% css "default" %}em { font-style: italic; }{% endcss %}
<!-- These two are the same too -->
<style>{% getBundle "css" %}</style>
<style>{% getBundle "css", "default" %}</style>
Examples
Critical CSS
// .eleventy.js
export default function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addBundle("css");
};
Use asset bucketing to divide CSS between the default
bucket and a defer
bucket, loaded asynchronously.
(Note that some HTML boilerplate has been omitted from the sample below)
<!-- … -->
<head>
<!-- Inlined critical styles -->
<style>{% getBundle "css" %}</style>
<!-- Deferred non-critical styles -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{% getBundleFileUrl 'css', 'defer' %}" media="print" onload="this.media='all'">
<noscript>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{% getBundleFileUrl 'css', 'defer' %}">
</noscript>
</head>
<body>
<!-- This goes into a `default` bucket -->
{% css %}/* Inline in the head, great with @font-face! */{% endcss %}
<!-- This goes into a `defer` bucket (the bucket can be any string value) -->
{% css "defer" %}/* Load me later */{% endcss %}
</body>
<!-- … -->
Related:
- Check out the demo of Critical CSS using Eleventy Edge for a repeat view optimization without JavaScript.
- You may want to improve the above code with
fetchpriority
when browser support improves.
SVG Icon Library
Here an svg
is bundle is created.
// .eleventy.js
export default function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addBundle("svg");
};
<svg width="0" height="0" aria-hidden="true" style="position: absolute;">
<defs>{% getBundle "svg" %}</defs>
</svg>
<!-- And anywhere on your page you can add icons to the set -->
{% svg %}
<g id="icon-close"><path d="…" /></g>
{% endsvg %}
And now you can use `icon-close` in as many SVG instances as you’d like (without repeating the heftier SVG content).
<svg><use xlink:href="#icon-close"></use></svg>
<svg><use xlink:href="#icon-close"></use></svg>
<svg><use xlink:href="#icon-close"></use></svg>
<svg><use xlink:href="#icon-close"></use></svg>
React Helmet-style <head>
additions
// .eleventy.js
export default function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addBundle("html");
};
This might exist in an Eleventy layout file:
<head>
{% getBundle "html", "head" %}
</head>
And then in your content you might want to page-specific preconnect
:
{% html "head" %}
<link href="https://v1.opengraph.11ty.dev" rel="preconnect" crossorigin>
{% endhtml %}
Bundle Sass with the Render Plugin
You can render template syntax inside of the {% css %}
shortcode too, if you’d like to do more advanced things using Eleventy template types.
This example assumes you have added the Render plugin and the scss
custom template type to your Eleventy configuration file.
{% css %}
{% renderTemplate "scss" %}
h1 { .test { color: red; } }
{% endrenderTemplate %}
{% endcss %}
Now the compiled Sass is available in your default bundle and will show up in getBundle
and getBundleFileUrl
.
Use with WebC
Starting with @11ty/eleventy-plugin-webc@0.9.0
(track at issue #48) this plugin is used by default in the Eleventy WebC plugin. Specifically, WebC Bundler Mode now uses the bundle plugin under the hood.
To add CSS to a bundle in WebC, you would use a <style>
element in a WebC page or component:
<style>/* This is bundled. */</style>
<style webc:keep>/* Do not bundle me—leave as is */</style>
To add JS to a page bundle in WebC, you would use a <script>
element in a WebC page or component:
<script>/* This is bundled. */</script>
<script webc:keep>/* Do not bundle me—leave as is */</script>
- Existing calls via WebC helpers
getCss
orgetJs
(e.g.<style @raw="getCss(page.url)">
) have been wired up togetBundle
(for"css"
and"js"
respectively) automatically.- For consistency, you may prefer using the bundle plugin method names everywhere:
<style @raw="getBundle('css')">
and<script @raw="getBundle('js')">
both work fine.
- For consistency, you may prefer using the bundle plugin method names everywhere:
- Outside of WebC, the Universal Filters
webcGetCss
andwebcGetJs
were removed in Eleventyv3.0.0-alpha.10
in favor of thegetBundle
Universal Shortcode ({% getBundle "css" %}
and{% getBundle "js" %}
respectively).
Modify the bundle output
You can wire up your own async-friendly callbacks to transform the bundle output too. Here’s a quick example of postcss
integration.
const postcss = require("postcss");
const postcssNested = require("postcss-nested");
export default function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addBundle("css", {
transforms: [
async function(content) {
// this.type returns the bundle name.
// Same as Eleventy transforms, this.page is available here.
let result = await postcss([postcssNested]).process(content, { from: this.page.inputPath, to: null });
return result.css;
}
]
});
};
Advanced
Limitations
Bundles do not support nesting or recursion (yet?). If this will be useful to you, please file an issue!
<!-- Version Two: * Think about Eleventy transform order, scenarios where this transform needs to run first. * JavaScript API independent of eleventy * Clean up the _site/bundle folder on exit? * Example ideas: * App bundle and page bundle * can we make this work for syntax highlighting? or just defer to WebC for this? {% css %} <style> em { font-style: italic; } </style> {% endcss %} * a way to declare dependencies? or just defer to buckets here * What if we want to add code duplicates? Adding `alert(1);` `alert(1);` to alert twice? * sourcemaps (maybe via magic-string module or https://www.npmjs.com/package/concat-with-sourcemaps) -->