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Broccoli is a JavaScript build tool that allows you to define a build pipeline using a series of plugins. It is particularly well-suited for front-end development, enabling tasks such as file transformation, concatenation, and minification.
File Transformation
This code demonstrates how to use Broccoli to transform files. It uses the Funnel plugin to include only JavaScript files from the 'app' and 'vendor' directories and then merges these trees into a single output tree.
const Broccoli = require('broccoli');
const Funnel = require('broccoli-funnel');
const MergeTrees = require('broccoli-merge-trees');
let appTree = new Funnel('app', {
include: ['**/*.js']
});
let vendorTree = new Funnel('vendor', {
include: ['**/*.js']
});
let finalTree = new MergeTrees([appTree, vendorTree]);
module.exports = finalTree;
File Concatenation
This code demonstrates how to concatenate JavaScript files using the broccoli-concat plugin. It takes all JavaScript files in the 'app' directory and concatenates them into a single file, 'app.js', in the 'assets' directory.
const Broccoli = require('broccoli');
const Concat = require('broccoli-concat');
let appJs = new Concat('app', {
outputFile: '/assets/app.js',
inputFiles: ['**/*.js'],
sourceMapConfig: { enabled: true }
});
module.exports = appJs;
File Minification
This code demonstrates how to minify JavaScript files using the broccoli-uglify-sourcemap plugin. It takes all JavaScript files in the 'app' directory and minifies them, with source maps enabled.
const Broccoli = require('broccoli');
const UglifyJS = require('broccoli-uglify-sourcemap');
let appJs = new UglifyJS('app', {
mangle: true,
compress: true,
sourceMapConfig: { enabled: true }
});
module.exports = appJs;
Gulp is a toolkit for automating painful or time-consuming tasks in your development workflow. It uses a code-over-configuration approach, making it flexible and easy to use. Compared to Broccoli, Gulp has a larger ecosystem and more plugins available.
Webpack is a module bundler that takes modules with dependencies and generates static assets representing those modules. It is highly configurable and supports a wide range of plugins and loaders. Webpack is more powerful and complex compared to Broccoli, making it suitable for larger projects.
Grunt is a JavaScript task runner that automates repetitive tasks like minification, compilation, unit testing, and linting. It uses a configuration-over-code approach, which can be less flexible but easier to understand for beginners. Grunt has been largely superseded by Gulp and Webpack in recent years.
A fast, reliable asset pipeline, supporting constant-time rebuilds and compact build definitions. Comparable to the Rails asset pipeline in scope, though it runs on Node and is backend-agnostic. For background and architecture, see the introductory blog post.
For the command line interface, see broccoli-cli.
This is 0.x beta software.
Windows support is still spotty. Our biggest pain point is unreliable file deletion (see rimraf#72).
npm install --save-dev broccoli
npm install --global broccoli-cli
Check out broccoli-sample-app.
A Brocfile.js
file in the project root contains the build specification. It
should export a tree which may simply be the directory path (as a string). To
build more advanced output trees you may want to use some of the plugins listed
below.
The following would export the app/
subdirectory as a tree:
module.exports = 'app'
Alternatively, the following would export the app/
subdirectory as appkit/
:
var pickFiles = require('broccoli-static-compiler')
module.exports = pickFiles('app', {
srcDir: '/',
destDir: 'appkit'
})
You can find plugins on broccoliplugins.com or under the broccoli-plugin-keyword on npm.
Shared code for writing plugins.
Broccoli defines a single plugin API: a tree. A tree object represents a tree (directory hierarchy) of files that can be regenerated on each build.
By convention, plugins will export a function that takes one or more input trees, and returns an output tree object.
A tree object must supply two methods that will be called by Broccoli:
tree.read(readTree)
The .read
method must return a path or a promise for a path, containing the
tree contents.
It receives a readTree
function argument from Broccoli. If .read
needs to
read other trees, it must not call otherTree.read
directly. Instead, it must
call readTree(otherTree)
, which returns a promise for the path containing
otherTree
's contents. It must not call readTree
again until the promise
has resolved; that is, it cannot call readTree
on multiple trees in
parallel.
Broccoli will call the .read
method repeatedly to rebuild the tree, but at
most once per rebuild; that is, if a tree is used multiple times in a build
definition, Broccoli will reuse the path returned instead of calling .read
again.
The .read
method is responsible for creating a new temporary directory to
store the tree contents in. Subsequent invocations of .read
should remove
temporary directories created in previous invocations.
tree.cleanup()
For every tree whose .read
method was called one or more times, the
.cleanup
method will be called exactly once. No further .read
calls will
follow .cleanup
. The .cleanup
method should remove all temporary
directories created by .read
.
When it is known which file caused a given error, plugin authors can make errors
easier to track down by setting the .file
property on the generated error.
This .file
property is used by both the console logging, and the server middleware
to display more helpful error messages.
As of 0.11 Broccoli prints a log of any trees that took a significant amount of the total build time to assist in finding which trees are consuming the largest build times.
To determine the name to be printed Broccoli will first look for a .description
property on the plugin instance then fall back to using the plugin constructor's name.
broccoli serve
on a production server. While this is
theoretically safe, it exposes a needlessly large amount of attack surface
just for serving static assets. Instead, use broccoli build
to precompile
your assets, and serve the static files from a web server of your choice.#broccolijs
on Freenode. Ask your question and stick around for a few
hours. Someone will see your message eventually.Broccoli was originally written by Jo Liss and is licensed under the MIT license.
The Broccoli logo was created by Samantha Penner (Miric) and is licensed under CC0 1.0.
0.15.3
FAQs
Fast client-side asset builder
The npm package broccoli receives a total of 115,696 weekly downloads. As such, broccoli popularity was classified as popular.
We found that broccoli demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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