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@cagov/11ty-build-system
Advanced tools
An 11ty plugin to implement @cagov's standard build system for 11ty sites.
Adds CSS, Javascript, and other pre-processing powers to your 11ty build.
No need to worry about setting up long, multi-step npm scripts. Say goodbye to task runners. Let go of your attachment to bespoke watchers. We'll take care of the details.
🚧 Work in progress! Use at your peril! 🚧
Note: this plugin only works correctly with newer 1.0.0-beta versions of 11ty.
First, install this plugin into your 11ty project.
npm install @cagov/11ty-build-system
Next, drop the plugin into your .eleventy.js
file.
const cagovBuildSystem = require('@cagov/11ty-build-system');
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(cagovBuildSystem, {
// Your buildConfig options go here, see below.
});
// ...the rest of your project's 11ty config code...
};
TL;DR: here's an example of the plugin's options.
const cagovBuildSystem = require('@cagov/11ty-build-system');
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(cagovBuildSystem, {
processors: {
postcss: {
file: 'src/css/postcss.config.js',
watch: ['src/css/**/*']
},
rollup: {
file: 'src/js/rollup.config.js',
watch: ['src/js/**/*']
}
},
beforeBuild: () => {
// Download files, check APIs, etc.
}
});
// ...the rest of your project's 11ty config code...
};
This plugin current supports the following pre-processors for building and bundling your CSS and/or Javascirpt.
Note that you may supply multiple configurations for any of the above processors as an array. For example, both of the PostCSS entries in the following example will be honored.
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(cagovBuildSystem, {
processors: {
postcss: [
{
file: 'src/css/postcss.home.config.js',
watch: ['src/css/home/**/*']
},
{
file: 'src/css/postcss.page.config.js',
watch: [
'src/css/page/**/*',
'src/css/page-widget/**/*'
]
}
]
}
});
For your CSS needs, this plugin picks up PostCSS files.
The following example will process a single postcss.config.js
file in the src/css
folder of your project.
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(cagovBuildSystem, {
processors: {
postcss: {
file: 'src/css/postcss.config.js',
watch: ['src/css/**/*']
}
}
});
Name | Description |
---|---|
file | Path to the `postcss.config.js' file. |
watch | An array of glob expressions to watch for changes within 11ty's serve mode. |
Here's an example postcss.config.js
file for use alongside the above PostCSS configuration.
const purgecss = require('@fullhuman/postcss-purgecss');
const cssnano = require('cssnano');
const { purgeCssDefaults } = require('@cagov/11ty-build-system/src/postcss.js');
module.exports = {
to: 'pages/_buildoutput/built.css',
from: 'docs/css/build/development.css',
plugins: [
purgecss({
content: [
'pages/**/*.njk',
'pages/**/*.html',
'pages/**/*.js',
'pages/wordpress-posts/banner*.html',
'pages/@(translated|wordpress)-posts/new*.html'
],
...purgeCssDefaults
}),
cssnano
]
};
PostCSS config files should include the following required fields.
Name | Description |
---|---|
to | Path to the destination CSS file. |
from | Path to the source CSS (or Sass) file. |
plugins | An array of PostCSS plugins. |
You may also set map
, parser
, syntax
, and/or stringifier
options as described in the PostCSS docs.
For Javascript processing, this plugin provides Rollup.
The following example will process a single rollup.config.js
file.
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(cagovBuildSystem, {
processors: {
rollup: {
file: 'src/js/rollup.config.js',
watch: ['src/js/**/*']
}
}
});
Name | Description |
---|---|
file | Path to the `rollup.config.js' file. |
watch | An array of glob expressions to watch for changes within 11ty's serve mode. |
Here's an example rollup.config.js
file.
import resolve from '@rollup/plugin-node-resolve';
import { terser } from 'rollup-plugin-terser';
export default {
input: 'src/js/index.js',
output: {
file: 'dist/js/bundle.js',
format: 'esm'
},
plugins: [resolve(), terser()]
};
Check the Rollup documentation for more details.
For Sass processing, this plugin provides Dart Sass.
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(cagovBuildSystem, {
processors: {
sass: {
watch: ['src/css/**/*'],
output: 'docs/css/build/development.css',
options: {
file: 'src/css/index.scss',
includePaths: [ 'src/css' ]
},
postcss: {
file: 'src/css/postcss.built.config.js'
}
}
}
});
Name | Description |
---|---|
output | Destination file path for Sass output. |
watch | An array of glob expressions to watch for changes within 11ty's serve mode. |
options | Processing options to pass to Dart Sass. See the Sass JS API documentation for a full list of options. |
options.file | Path to the source Sass file. See Sass JS API documentation for more info. |
postcss | A PostCSS configuration for post-processing the Sass output. |
The plugin now supports Esbuild.
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(cagovBuildSystem, {
processors: {
esbuild: {
watch: ['src/js/**/*'],
options: {
entryPoints: ['src/js/index.js'],
bundle: true,
minify: true,
outfile: 'dist/js/built.js',
},
}
}
});
Name | Description |
---|---|
watch | An array of glob expressions to watch for changes within 11ty's serve mode. |
options | Processing options to pass to esbuild. See the esbuild Build API documentation for a full list of options. |
The plugin provides a beforeBuild
callback function. You may use this to run any code before the 11ty build.
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(cagovBuildSystem, {
beforeBuild: () => {
// Download files, check APIs, etc.
},
});
beforeBuild
callback runs first.Because this is an 11ty plugin, no special npm
scripts are needed. Just use standard 11ty CLI commands.
# Build
eleventy
# Build in dev mode
NODE_ENV=development eleventy
# Serve and watch in dev mode
NODE_ENV=development eleventy --serve --incremental
FAQs
An 11ty plugin to implement @cagov's standard build system for 11ty sites.
The npm package @cagov/11ty-build-system receives a total of 28 weekly downloads. As such, @cagov/11ty-build-system popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @cagov/11ty-build-system demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 7 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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