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See sprocket-based alternatives like sinatra-asset-pipeline and sprockets-helpers.

Sinatra AssetPack

The most convenient way to manage your assets in Sinatra.

Build Status Gem Version Dependency Status Code Climate

Installation

# Gemfile
gem 'sinatra-assetpack', :require => 'sinatra/assetpack'

Setup

Register the extension and set your assets configuration.

require 'sinatra/base'
require 'sinatra/assetpack'

class App < Sinatra::Base
  set :root, File.dirname(__FILE__) # You must set app root

  register Sinatra::AssetPack

  assets {
    serve '/js',     from: 'app/js'        # Default
    serve '/css',    from: 'app/css'       # Default
    serve '/images', from: 'app/images'    # Default

    # The second parameter defines where the compressed version will be served.
    # (Note: that parameter is optional, AssetPack will figure it out.)
    # The final parameter is an array of glob patterns defining the contents
    # of the package (as matched on the public URIs, not the filesystem)
    js :app, '/js/app.js', [
      '/js/vendor/**/*.js',
      '/js/lib/**/*.js'
    ]

    css :application, '/css/application.css', [
      '/css/screen.css'
    ]

    js_compression  :jsmin    # :jsmin | :yui | :closure | :uglify
    css_compression :simple   # :simple | :sass | :yui | :sqwish
  }
end

Usage

  1. Drop your assets into /app/css, /app/js, /app/images.
  2. Add register Sinatra::AssetPack (see setup options).
  3. Use <%= js :app %> and <%= css :application %> in your layout.
  4. You now have proper assets management!

Using in layouts

In your layouts, use the css and js helpers:

# layout.erb
<%= css :application, :media => 'screen' %>
<%= js  :app %>
# layout.haml
!= css :application, :media => 'screen'
!= js :app

Results

Development mode

If you're on development mode, it serves each of the files as so:

<link rel='stylesheet' href='/css/screen.849289.css' media='screen' type='text/css' />
<script type='text/javascript' src='/js/vendor/jquery.283479.js'></script>
<script type='text/javascript' src='/js/vendor/underscore.589491.js'></script>
<script type='text/javascript' src='/js/app/main.589491.js'></script>

Production mode

If you're on production mode, it serves a compressed version in the URLs you specify:

<link rel='stylesheet' href='/css/application.849289.css' media='screen' type='text/css' />
<script type='text/javascript' src='/js/app.589491.js'></script>

Features

Compressors

By default, AssetPack uses JSMin for JS compression, and simple regexes for CSS compression. You can specify other compressors in the assets block:

assets {
  js_compression  :jsmin    # :jsmin | :yui | :closure | :uglify
  css_compression :simple   # :simple | :sass | :yui | :sqwish
}

YUI Compressor

This uses Yahoo's Java-powered YUI compressor.

assets {
  js_compression  :yui
  js_compression  :yui, :munge => true   # Munge variable names

  css_compression :yui
}

Note: This depends on the yui-compressor gem :

# Gemfile
gem 'yui-compressor', :require => 'yui/compressor'

SASS compression

This treats the CSS files as Scss files and uses Sass's :output => :compressed.

assets {
  css_compression :sass
}

Note: This depends on the sass gem :

# Gemfile
gem 'sass'

Sqwish CSS compression

Sqwish is a NodeJS-based CSS compressor. To use Sqwish with AssetPack, install it using npm install -g sqwish. You need NodeJS and NPM installed.

assets {
  css_compression :sqwish
  css_compression :sqwish, :strict => true
}

Google Closure compression

This uses the Google closure compiler service to compress your JavaScript. Available levels are:

assets {
  js_compression :closure
  js_compression :closure, :level => "SIMPLE_OPTIMIZATIONS"
}

UglifyJS compression

This uses the UglifyJS compressor to compress your JavaScript. You will need to install the uglifier gem.

For options, refer to the Uglifier documentation.

assets {
  js_compression :uglify
  js_compression :uglify, [options]
}

Note: This depends on the uglifier gem :

# Gemfile
gem 'uglifier'

Images

To show images, use the img helper. This automatically adds width, height, and a cache buster thingie. ImageMagick is required to generate full image tags with width and height.

<!-- Original: --> <%= img '/images/email.png' %>
<!-- Output:   --> <img src='/images/email.873842.png' width='16' height='16' />

URL translation

In your CSS files, url()'s will automatically be translated.

/* Original: */    .email { background: url(/images/email.png); }
/* Output:   */    .email { background: url(/images/email.6783478.png); }

Image embedding

Want to embed images as data: URI's? Sure! Just add ?embed at the end of the URL.

/* Original: */    .email { background: url(/images/email.png?embed); }
/* Output:   */    .email { background: url(data:image/png;base64,NF8dG3I...); }

Precompile

# Rakefile
APP_FILE  = 'app.rb'
APP_CLASS = 'App'

# For Padrino users, do not forget to add your application namspace
# APP_CLASS = '<Project>::App'

require 'sinatra/assetpack/rake'

Invoking

Now you have the following tasks to precompile assets.

rake assetpack:precompile           # Precompile all assets
rake assetpack:precompile:files     # Precompile files only
rake assetpack:precompile:packages  # Precompile packages only

Settings

Assets block

All configuration happens in the assets block. You may invoke it in 2 ways:

class App < Sinatra::Base
  register Sinatra::AssetPack

  # Style 1
  assets do
    css :hello, [ '/css/*.css' ]
    css_compression :yui
  end

  # Style 2
  assets do |a|
    a.css :hello, ['/css/*.css' ]
    a.css_compression :yui
  end
end

Getting options

Invoking it without a block allows you to access the options. This works for almost all the options, with the exception for css, js and serve.

App.assets
App.assets.css_compression   #=> :yui

assets.serve

Serves files from LOCALPATH in the URI path PATH. Both parameters are required.

# Usage
serve 'PATH', :from => 'LOCALPATH'

Example

This makes /app/javascripts/vendor/jquery.js available as http://localhost:4567/js/vendor/jquery.js.

serve '/js', from: '/app/javascripts'

assets.js_compression<br>assets.css_compression

Sets the compression engine to use for JavaScript or CSS. This defaults to :jsmin and :simple, respectively.

If OPTIONS_HASH is given as a hash, it sets options for the engine to use.

# Usage:
assets {
  js_compression :ENGINE
  js_compression :ENGINE, OPTIONS_HASH
  css_compression :ENGINE
  css_compression :ENGINE, OPTIONS_HASH
}

Examples

Yo seriously check this out: the first line uses Sqwish with it's defaults, and the second line uses Sqwish with it's magic.

assets {
  css_compression :sqwish
  css_compression :sqwish, :strict => true
}

assets.js_compression_options<br>assets.css_compression_options

Sets the options for the compression engine to use. This is usually not needed as you can already set options using js_compression and css_compression.

# Usage:
assets {
  js_compression_options HASH
  css_compression_options HASH
}

Example

This sets the option for :munge for the CSS compression engine.

css_compression_options :munge => true

assets.css<br>assets.js

Adds packages to be used.

The NAME is a symbol defines the ID for that given package that you can use for the helpers. That is, If a CSS package was defined as css :main, [ ... ], then you will need to use <%= css :main %> to render it in views.

the URI is a string that defines where the compressed version will be served. It is optional. If not provided, it will default to "/assets/name.type" (eg: /assets/main.css).

the PATHs is an array that defines files that will be served. Take note that this is an array of URI paths, not local paths.

If a PATH contains wildcards, it will be expanded in alphabetical order. Redundancies will be taken care of.

# Usage:
assets {
  css :NAME, [ PATH1, PATH2, ... ]
  css :NAME, 'URI', [ PATH1, PATH2, ... ]
  js :NAME, [ PATH1, PATH2, ... ]
  js :NAME, 'URI', [ PATH1, PATH2, ... ]
}

Example

In this example, JavaScript files will be served compressed as /js/application.js (default since no URI is given). The files will be taken from ./app/javascripts/vendor/jquery*.js.

class App < Sinatra::Base
  assets {
    serve '/js', from: '/app/javascripts'
    js :application, [
      '/js/vendor/jquery.*.js',
      '/js/vendor/jquery.js'
    ]
  }
end

# In views: <%= js :application %>

assets.ignore

Excludes any URL paths that match the given spec.

These files will not show up in packages, and they will not be accessible.

By default, .* and _* are ignored. The former protects folders such as .svn from being accessed, and the latter protects Sass partial files from being accessed directly.

Note that this matches against URL paths, not local file paths. This means something like *.scss will not work, as all stylesheet files will be compiled to .css.

# Usage:
assets {
  ignore FILESPEC
}

Example

Here's an example.

class App < Sinatra::Base
  assets {
    # Ignores all files matching *.private.js in any folder.
    ignore '*.private.js'

    # Ignores all files in `/app/js/foo/**/*`
    ignore '/js/foo'
  }
end

Advanced usage

By default, .* and _* are ignored. To disable this behavior, you can use clear_ignores! before your ignore lines.

assets {
  clear_ignores!
  ignore '*.private.js'
}

To check if a certain file is ignored, use assets.ignore?

assets.ignored?("/css/_chrome.css")   #=> true

assets.prebuild

Caches the built packages on application startup.

If this is not used, the packages will be minified when they are first requested. This only has an effect in the production environment (or when Sinatra's reload_templates is otherwise set to false).

# Usage:
prebuild {true|false}

Example

In this example, the package for :application will be built when the application is started in the production environment.

class App < Sinatra::Base
  assets {
    js_compression :closure

    js :application, [
      '/js/vendor/jquery.*.js',
      '/js/vendor/jquery.js'
    ]
    prebuild true
  }
end

# $ RACK_ENV=production ruby app.rb
# ** Building /assets/application.js...
# == Sinatra/1.2.6 has taken the stage on 4567 for production
# >> Thin web server (v1.2.11 codename Bat-Shit Crazy)
# >> Maximum connections set to 1024
# >> Listening on 0.0.0.0:4567, CTRL+C to stop

assets.expires

Sets cache control headers for all assets handled by AssetPack. Defaults to expires 86400*30, :public. Passes the arguments to Sinatras #expires.

# Usage:
expires amount, *values

Example

In this example all assets get cached for a year.

class App < Sinatra::Base
  assets {
    js_compression :closure

    js :application, [
      '/js/vendor/jquery.*.js',
      '/js/vendor/jquery.js'
    ]
    expires 86400*365, :public
  }
end

assets.cache_dynamic_assets

Caches dynamic files unless they have been modified.

Useful during development if asset compilation of all dynamic assets on each request is slow. If set to true, dynamic assets will be compiled on the initial asset request, but only be re-compiled when the asset's mtime changes.

# Usage:
cache_dynamic_assets {true|false}

Example

In this example, all dynamic files will be compiled on first request, but later requests will be served from a cache unless the file is modified

class App < Sinatra::Base
  assets {
    js_compression :closure

    js :application, [
      '/js/vendor/jquery.*.js',
      '/js/vendor/jquery.js'
    ]
    cache_dynamic_assets true
  }
end

assets.asset_hosts

Adds asset hosts to be used in production.

Useful for hosting your assets on CDNs.

# Usage:
assets {
  asset_hosts ['URL1', 'URL2']
}

Example

In this example, all assets are served from multiple CDN subdomains:

class App < Sinatra::Base
  assets {
    serve '/css',     :from => 'app/css'
    serve '/js',      :from => 'app/js'

    asset_hosts [
      '//cdn-0.example.org',
      '//cdn-1.example.org'
    ]

    css :a, ["/css/style.css"]
    js :b, ["/js/hello.js"]
  }
end

Helpers

These are helpers you can use in your views.

<%= css %>

Shows a CSS package named PACKAGE. If OPTIONS_HASH is given, they will we passed onto the <link> tag to be generated as attributes.

You may specify as many packages as you need, as shown in the second usage line.

# Usage:
<%= css :PACKAGE %>
<%= css :PACKAGE_1, :PACKAGE_2, ...  :PACKAGE_N, OPTIONS_HASH %>
<%= css :PACKAGE, OPTIONS_HASH %>

Example 1

This links to the main stylesheet for screen media.

<%= css :main, media: 'screen' %>

<!-- Output: -->
<link rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' href='/css/main.873984.css' media='screen' />

Example 2

You may also invoke it with multiple packages.

<%= css :base, :app, :main, media: 'screen' %>

<!-- Output: -->
<link rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' href='/css/base.873984.css' media='screen' />
<link rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' href='/css/app.873984.css' media='screen' />
<link rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' href='/css/main.873984.css' media='screen' />

<%= js %>

Same as css, but obviously for JavaScript. You may also specify as many packages as you need, just with css.

# Usage:
<%= js :PACKAGE %>
<%= js :PACKAGE_1, :PACKAGE_2, ...  :PACKAGE_N, OPTIONS_HASH %>
<%= js :PACKAGE, OPTIONS_HASH %>

Example

This example embeds the main package with an ID.

<%= js :main, id: 'main_script' %>

<!-- Output: -->
<script type='text/javascript' src='/js/main.783439.js' id='main_script'></script>

<%= img %>

Shows an <img> tag from the given SRC. If the images is found in the asset directories (and ImageMagick is available), width and height attributes will be added.

# Usage:
img 'SRC'
img 'SRC', OPTIONS_HASH

If OPTIONS_HASH is given, they will we passed onto the <img> tag to be generated as attributes.

Example

This example renders an image with an alt tag.

<%= img '/images/icon.png', alt: 'Icon' %>

<!-- Output: -->
<img src='/images/icon.834782.png' width='24' height='24' alt='Icon' />`

Compass

AssetPack doesn't have built-in Compass support, but you can include it easily with Sinatra Support.

See also the Compass example application.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md for details on contributing and running test.

Acknowledgements

© 2011-2013, Rico Sta. Cruz. Released under the MIT License.

Sinatra-AssetPack is authored by Rico Sta. Cruz with help from it's contributors. It is sponsored by Sinefunc, Inc.

Sinatra-AssetPack is maintained by Jean-Philipe Doyle at Hookt Studios.

Github : @rstacruz, @j15e

Twitter : @rstacruz, @j15e