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68publishers-cookie-consent

Cookie consent wrapper based on orestbida/cookieconsent with GTM integration.

  • 0.4.8
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Cookie Consent Logo

An extended integration of orestbida/cookieconsent with support of the Google Tag Manager.


  • :white_check_mark: Easy configurable GTM template
  • :white_check_mark: Five configurable storages standardized by Google
  • :white_check_mark: Possibility to synchronize consents between more storages
  • :white_check_mark: Default translations

Table of contents

Integration into the GTM

Open Google Tag Manager web administration and select a container for your website. Next, go through the Templates link in the left navigation and click on the button New inside a section Tag Templates.

All you need is a file gtm_template.tpl from the root directory of this package. Download the file and import it in the Template editor:

Right dropdown

After successful import click on the button Save, leave the Template editor, and go through the Tags link in the left navigation. Then create the new tag with the imported Template, as trigger set an option Consent Initialization - All Pages and save it.

Cookie consent tag

Now you can open a preview of the website and as you can see the cookie widget is here! But let's configure it a bit.

Configuration

:exclamation: Locking the package version is highly recommended (see the field Package version below) after you successfully configure the template. Avoid using the latest version in production containers!

The plugin is configurable using fields inside the tag definition.

Basic options

FieldDescription
Package versionVersion of the package 68publishers/cookie-consent. Valid inputs are the latest or a version in formats x.x.x, x.x.x-beta.x and x.x.x-alpha-x. For available versions see the releases.
Make consent requiredThe page will be blocked until a user action.
Show the widget as soon as possibleThe widget will be displayed automatically on the page load. You must trigger the widget manually by calling CookieConsentWrapper.unwrap().show() if the option is disabled.
Hide from botsEnable if you don't want the plugin to run when a bot/crawler/webdriver is detected.
RevisionRevision number of your terms of use of cookies. For more information see below.
DelayNumber of milliseconds before showing the consent modal.

Both sections contain these fields: Layout, Position, Transition. These settings affect where modals appear and what shape they take. The behavior of the consent modal buttons can be configured through fields Primary button role, Secondary button role (accept necessary cookies or open the settings modal), and Buttons order. See the widget documentation for more details.

The consent modal has also an option Show third button that adds the third button to the modal. If the secondary button's role is Open settings the third button's role is Accept necessary and vice versa.

The settings modal has one special option with the name Settings modal trigger selector. A value of the option can be CSS selector for automatic creation of the trigger button that opens the modal. Check the example.

Cookies options

FieldDescription
Cookie nameThe name of a cookie value that holds information about the user's consent.
Cookie domainThe domain name for the cookie that holds information about the user's consent, for example ".example.com". If the value is empty, it is automatically set in a browser using the "window.location.hostname" variable.
Cookie expirationExpiration of the cookie in days.
Enable cookies auto-clearAll cookies will be deleted based on the user's consent and a selected strategy if the option is enabled.
Cookies auto-clear strategyStrategy for cookies auto-clear feature.
Cookie namesNames of the cookies that will be deleted or kept (based on a selected strategy).

The following strategies are implemented:

  1. Clear all except defined* - All cookies except those you define in the field Cookie names will be deleted when the user denies any storage.
  2. Clear defined only* - All cookies you defined in the field Cookie names will be deleted when the user denies any storage.
  3. Use cookie tables - Cookie clearing is based on cookie tables from the original plugin. Integration of CMP application is required for this option.

* There is no need to define a name from the Cookie name field because this cookie is never automatically deleted.

Storage options

Five types of storage are available:

  • Functionality storage
  • Security storage
  • Personalization storage
  • Ad storage
  • Analytics storage

Each storage defines the name of a trigger that will be invoked if the user provides consent. It is not necessary to use or display each storage in the widget. Also, the consent for the storage can be synchronized with the consent of another storage.

FieldDescription
Enabled by defaultA storage has granted consent by default if the option is checked. Triggers will be invoked as soon as possible.
Display in the widgetA storage will be displayed inside the settings modal if the option is checked.
ReadonlyA toggle button for storage inside the settings modal will be disabled if the option is checked. Commonly used for functionality storage. The option is available only if the option Display in the widget is checked.
Synchronize consent withThe consent can be synchronized with another storage. The option is available only if the option Display in the widget is not checked.
Show the modal again if storage is deniedThe settings modal will be opened again after the specified number of days if the storage is denied. The option is available only if the option Display in the widget is not checked.
Event trigger nameThe name of an event trigger that will be invoked on granted consent with storage. The name may not be unique for each storage (unique triggers are invoked only). No trigger is invoked if the option has an empty value.

As mentioned above, each storage can define a trigger that is invoked when consent with the storage has been granted. In some situations, you may want some trigger to be fired only if the user gives consent with multiple storage types. For example, if you have a trigger called fb_pixel_trigger and you want to fire it only if the user gives consent with the analytics_storage and the ad_stroage. Then your configuration may look like this:

Revision message translation

Translation settings

The package comes with the default translations for the following languages:

Translations that will be loaded and accessible for the widget are taken from the field Locales. Each locale must be defined on a new line. If you want to rewrite default translations or you want to add translations for a new locale then you can define them in a table Translations.

Locale detection

Locale detection can be affected with the following fields:

FieldDescription
Locale detection strategyBrowser to get user's browser language or Document to read a value from <html lang="..."> of the current page.
LocaleYou must define the website locale when the detection strategy is disabled. The locale must be one of the previously defined locales in the field Locales.

How to manage revisions

The default revision number is 0 and the number can be changed through the field Revision. When you change the value the consent modal will be displayed for all users again. You can define a message that will be displayed in the consent modal's description. If you want to do that define custom translation with the key consent_modal_revision_message and rewrite a translation with the key consent_modal_description. The plugin will replace the placeholder [[revision_message]] in the consent modal description with your revision message.

Revision message translation

Note: the cookieconsent plugin uses the placeholder {{revision_message}} but this notation is used by GTM for variables so the package comes with the placeholder [[revision_message]] instead.

Stylesheets

FieldDescription
Include default stylesheetsThe default stylesheet for the widget will be loaded into the page if the option is checked. We recommend keeping the option checked and adding custom stylesheets through the next options.
External stylesheetsThe list of custom CSS stylesheets. One URL per line.
Internal stylesheetCustom CSS rules that will be injected into the page after default stylesheets and other external stylesheets.

Page scripts

FieldDescription
Manage page scriptsEnable if you want to easily manage existing <script> tags.
Script selectorThe name of a data attribute that is used for managed

Managing page scripts is disabled by default. When the feature is enabled then the following notation can be used for scripts you want to manage:

<script type="text/plain" data-cookiecategory="analytics_storage" src="analytics.js" defer></script>

<script type="text/plain" data-cookiecategory="ad_storage" defer>
    console.log('Ad storage enabled!');
</script>

Settings modal trigger

When the user dismisses the consent modal then the modal is not displayed until the consent cookie expires. But you want to give the ability to change preferences later. This can be done automatically with the configuration field Settings modal trigger selector. For example, if you have this HTML code on your website:

<footer>
    <div class="footer-container">
        <div class="footer-item">
            <a href="/terms-of-use">
                <span class="footer-item-text">Terms of use</span>
            </a>
        </div>
        <div class="footer-item">
            <a href="/faq">FAQ</a>
        </div>
        <div class="footer-item">
            <a href="/contact">
                <span class="footer-item-text">Contact</span>
            </a>
        </div>
    </div>
</footer>

And the field Settings modal trigger selector is configured like this:

Settings modal trigger selector field

Then the plugin injects a new item into the footer automatically:

<footer>
    <div class="footer-container">
        <div class="footer-item">
            <a href="/terms-of-use">
                <span class="footer-item-text">Terms of use</span>
            </a>
        </div>
        <div class="footer-item">
            <a href="/faq">FAQ</a>
        </div>
        <div class="footer-item">
            <a href="/contact">
                <span class="footer-item-text">Contact</span>
            </a>
        </div>
        <div class="footer-item">
            <a href="#cookie-settings" data-cc="c-settings">
                <span class="footer-item-text">Cookie settings</span>
            </a>
        </div>
    </div>
</footer>

However, it is not always possible to achieve the right result with this automation (depending on the website layout). In this case, leave the Settings modal trigger selector field blank and define the link in your layout manually. Opening of the settings modal will be triggered automatically to the link.

Tags are triggered after the consent with event triggers that are defined for each storage. For example, if you have the analytics_storage configured like this:

Analytics storage options

Then create a custom trigger with the following options:

Analytics storage trigger

And a tag that is fired with the trigger:

Analytics storage trigger

Accessing the wrapper in the JavaScript

The wrapper is accessible in the window under the name CookieConsentWrapper. The recommended way how to manipulate with it is through event callbacks because the wrapper may not be fully initialized at the time your script is executed. Callbacks are attached with calling of the method CookieConsentWrapper.on().

Init event

A callback is invoked when the wrapper is fully initialized or directly if everything has been already initialized.

<script>
    CookieConsentWrapper.on('init', function () {
        if (CookieConsentWrapper.allowedCategory('analytics_storage')) {
            // check if the analytics_storage is granted
        }

        CookieConsentWrapper.unwrap(); // get the original cookie consent plugin
    });
</script>
<script>
    CookieConsentWrapper.on('consent:first-action', function (consent) {
        // called on the first user's action
    });
    CookieConsentWrapper.on('consent:accepted', function (consent) {
      // called on every page load after the first user's action
    });
    CookieConsentWrapper.on('consent:changed', function (consent, changedCategories) {
      // called when preferences changed
    });
</script>

Locale event

<script>
    CookieConsentWrapper.on('locale:change', function (locale) {
        // called when the plugin locale is changed through method `CookieConsentWrapper.changeLocale()`
        console.log(locale + '!');
    });

    // ...

    CookieConsentWrapper.changeLocale('cs', true) // cs!
    CookieConsentWrapper.changeLocale('en', true) // en!
</script>

Integration with CMP application

The widget can be integrated with the CMP application.

The first thing to do is to set up the user information under the Integration section. Each user must have an identity (ID). The default option is Generated UUID, however you can set a custom GTM variable that will return the ID of the current user of your website.

The ID will be accessible in all your translations with placeholder [[user_identity]].

You can also set other attributes that will be sent to the CMP application along with the consents.

User integration

Configuration of the CMP application is easy, just set the URL of your application and the project code (if you leave it blank, the site domain is used as the code).

CMP integration

The configuration includes two options

  • Consent API enabled
  • Cookies API enabled

If you check the Cookies API enabled option, the widget will automatically send consents to the CMP application.

If you check the Cookies API enabled option then the widget will automatically pull all cookies from the CMP application for the project and creates cookie tables from them. Below this field you can define which columns the cookie table should contain.

Widget with cookie tables

How the GTM integration works

  • :fire: A tag that is associated with the Cookie Consent Template is fired
    • :gear: A configuration for CookieConsentWrapper object is created from values defined inside the tag
    • :ballot_box_with_check: The default consent is resolved according to the configuration and already existent user preferences
    • :arrows_counterclockwise: The default consent is sent into native Google Consent API
    • :hourglass_flowing_sand: Custom triggers for granted storage types are scheduled into a gtag function
    • :arrow_double_down: A script with the wrapper initialization is injected into a page
GTM Container loaded
  • :fire: Custom triggers for granted storage types are fired
Page loaded
  • :fast_forward: The CookieConsentWrapper object is fully initialized
    • :fast_forward: The original plugin is initialized
    • :fire: Callbacks for an event CookieConsentWrapper.on('init') are fired
    • :eye: The consent modal is shown if a user has not yet agreed to the use of cookies
      • :fire: After user's action, callbacks for an event CookieConsentWrapper.on('consent:first-action') are fired
      • :arrows_counterclockwise: The consent is sent into the CMP application
    • :fire: Callbacks for an event CookieConsentWrapper.on('consent:accepted') are fired
User updates his preferences through the setting modal
  • :arrows_counterclockwise: The consent update is sent into native Google Consent API
  • :fire: Custom triggers for newly granted storage types are fired
  • :fire: Callbacks for an event CookieConsentWrapper.on('consent:changed') are fired
  • :arrows_counterclockwise: The consent is sent into the CMP application

How to update already published containers

If you want to update to the newer version please firstly look into releases to see what has changed until the release that you using.

For update, you must reimport the Template in your GTM in the same way how you imported it for the first time. The template will be updated but existing configurations inside tags will be kept. Of course, if the Template wasn't changed between releases then you can skip this step.

Then open the associated tag and update the value of the field Package version.

Development

Firstly download the package and install dependencies:

$ git clone https://github.com/68publishers/cookie-consent.git
$ cd cookie-consent
$ npm install

Use predefined commands for the package build:

$ npm run build:dev # or prod

Paths of output files are:

  • ~/build/cookie-consent.js (dev mode)
  • ~/dist/cookie-consent.min.js (production mode)

A simple demo page without real GTM is located in ~/build/index.html. To show the demo in your browser run:

$ npm run start:dev

Then visit the page http://localhost:3000.

License

The package is distributed under the MIT License. See LICENSE for more information.

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Package last updated on 15 Feb 2024

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