grunt-filerev
Static asset revisioning through file content hash
Getting Started
If you haven't used grunt before, be sure to check out the Getting Started guide, as it explains how to create a gruntfile as well as install and use grunt plugins. Once you're familiar with that process, install this plugin with this command:
$ npm install --save-dev grunt-filerev
Overview
This task will revision your files based on its contents. You should then set the files to expire far into the future for better caching and it will only update when it changes.
Example
grunt.initConfig({
filerev: {
options: {
encoding: 'utf8',
algorithm: 'md5',
length: 8
},
images: {
src: 'img/**/*.{jpg,jpeg,gif,png,webp}'
}
},
});
Options
options.encoding
Type: string
Default: 'utf8'
The file encoding.
options.algorithm
Type: string
Default: 'md5'
algorithm
is dependent on the available algorithms supported by the version of OpenSSL on the platform. Examples are 'sha1'
, 'md5'
, 'sha256'
, 'sha512'
, etc. On recent releases, openssl list-message-digest-algorithms
will display the available digest algorithms.
options.length
Type: number
Default: 8
The number of characters of the file hash to prefix the file name with.
Destination
It will overwrite the src
files if you don't specify a dest
:
filerev: {
images: {
src: ['img1.png', 'img2.png'],
dest: 'tmp'
}
}
Summary
The task keeps track of all files created and its sources in a summary that is
exposed through the grunt.filerev.summary
object. It can be used to replace
references to the revved files or debugging purposes. The key of the object is
the original filename, the value is the new revved path.
For a configuration like this
filerev: {
images: {
src: ['img1.png', 'img2.png'],
dest: 'tmp'
}
}
the content grunt.filerev.summary
could look like that:
{
'img1.png': 'tmp/img1.59bcc3ad.png',
'img2.png': 'tmp/img2.060b1aa6.png'
}
License
BSD license and copyright Google