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browserify-banner
Advanced tools
--debug
option)Here's an example banner template (can be in a file, passed via command-line, or set programmatically):
<%= _.startCase(pkg.name) %> v<%= pkg.version %> (<%= moment().format('MMMM Do YYYY') %>)
<%= pkg.description %>
<%= pkg.homepage %>
@author <%= pkg.author.name %> (<%= pkg.author.url %>)
@license <%= pkg.license %>
And here's what the banner would look like at the top of the Browserify bundle:
/*!
* My Library v1.23.456 (November 24th 2016)
* Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing malesuada ac elit.
*
* http://mycompany.com/my-library
*
* @author John Doe (http://linkedin.com/john-doe)
* @license MIT
*/
Install using npm:
npm install browserify-banner
If used without any options, then it will automatically search for a file named "banner.txt".
browserify -p browserify-banner
Or you can use Browserify's sub-argument command-line syntax to specify a different file:
browserify -p [ browserify-banner --file src/license.txt ]
Or you can specify the banner template directly:
browserify -p [ browserify-banner --template "<%= pkg.name %> v<%= pkg.version %>" ]
Use the plugin programmatically like this:
var browserify = require('browserify');
var banner = require('browserify-banner');
browserify({debug: true})
.plugin(banner, {
// Custom object to use instead of the package.json file
pkg: {
name: 'My Library',
version: '1.23.456',
author: {
name: 'John Doe'
}
},
// Path to template file (defaults to "banner.txt")
file: 'path/to/my/banner/file.txt',
// Or just set the template directly (will be wrapped in a comment block)
template: '<%= pkg.name %> v<%= pkg.version %>\n' +
'<%= moment().format('MMMM Do YYYY') %>',
// Or set the banner directly (will NOT be wrapped in a comment block)
banner: '// This banner is NOT a template, so <%= this.doesnt.do.anything %>.\n' +
'// But I can inject custom code at the top of the bundle...\n' +
'window.myCustomVariable = Date.now();\n'
})
.bundle()
.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('bundle.js', 'utf8'));
file
(string)The path of a file to load the banner template from. The contents of this file are read and assigned to the template
option. By default, browserify-banner
will search for a file named "banner.txt", starting in the directory of your bundle's entry file, and crawling up the directory tree from there.
package
(string or object)The path of the package.json file to apply to the banner template. Or you can set it to an object that will be applied as-is to the template. By default, browserify-banner
will use the first package.json file that is loaded by Browserify, which is usually the one associated with your bundle's entry file.
template
(string)A Lodash template that will be used to create your bundle's banner. By default, this property is automatically set to the contents of the file
option, but if you set template
option, then it overrides the file
option.
This template can use <%= code.blocks %>
to inject variables into the banner. The template has access to the package.json file (e.g. pkg.name
, pkg.version
, etc). It also has access to all Lodash methods (e.g. _.filter()
, _.map()
, etc.) and the Moment.js library (e.g. moment.format()
, moment().startOf()
, etc).
Note: The template will automatically be wrapped in a comment block, unless it already starts with a comment. If your template contains JavaScript code that you want to be executed at the top of your bundle, then make sure that you start your code with a comment.
banner
(string)If this option is set, then all other options are ignored and this banner is injected as-is at the top of your bundle. No modification is made to this text, so it's up to you to make sure that it contains valid comments and/or code.
I welcome any contributions, enhancements, and bug-fixes. File an issue on GitHub and submit a pull request.
To build the project locally on your computer:
Clone this repo
git clone https://github.com/JS-DevTools/browserify-banner.git
Install dependencies
npm install
Link the module to itself (so Browserify can find the plugin)
npm link
npm link browserify-banner
Run the tests
npm test
browserify-banner is 100% free and open-source, under the MIT license. Use it however you want.
FAQs
Add a comment (and/or code) to the top of your Browserify bundle
The npm package browserify-banner receives a total of 1,011 weekly downloads. As such, browserify-banner popularity was classified as popular.
We found that browserify-banner demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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