Security News
JSR Working Group Kicks Off with Ambitious Roadmap and Plans for Open Governance
At its inaugural meeting, the JSR Working Group outlined plans for an open governance model and a roadmap to enhance JavaScript package management.
html-webpack-plugin
Advanced tools
Simplifies creation of HTML files to serve your webpack bundles
The html-webpack-plugin is a plugin for webpack that simplifies the creation of HTML files to serve your webpack bundles. It is especially useful for webpack bundles that include a hash in the filename which changes every compilation. You can let the plugin generate an HTML file for you, include your webpack bundles in the file, or generate multiple HTML files with different configurations.
Generating a default HTML file
This feature automatically generates a default HTML file that includes all your webpack bundles.
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
plugins: [new HtmlWebpackPlugin()]
};
Custom template
This feature allows you to provide a custom HTML template for the generated file.
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
template: 'src/index.html'
})
]
};
Injecting assets
This feature automatically injects all necessary webpack bundles into the HTML file.
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
inject: true
})
]
};
Generating multiple HTML files
This feature allows you to generate multiple HTML files with different names and templates.
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
filename: 'index.html',
template: 'src/index.html'
}),
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
filename: 'about.html',
template: 'src/about.html'
})
]
};
This package provides a pluggable template for the html-webpack-plugin, offering additional features like meta tags, links to CDN-hosted libraries, and more. It is more opinionated than the base html-webpack-plugin, which allows for more customization.
This is a webpack plugin that generates a 'manifest.json' for your Progressive Web Application, with auto icon resizing and fingerprinting support. It serves a different purpose than html-webpack-plugin but is often used alongside it to set up web app manifests.
This plugin for webpack uses the favicons library to automatically generate favicons for different platforms and insert them into an HTML file generated by html-webpack-plugin. It complements the html-webpack-plugin by managing favicon generation.
npm i --save-dev html-webpack-plugin
yarn add --dev html-webpack-plugin
This is a webpack plugin that simplifies creation of HTML files to serve your webpack
bundles. This is especially useful for webpack
bundles that include a hash in the filename which changes every compilation. You can either let the plugin generate an HTML file for you, supply
your own template using lodash
templates or use your own loader.
Thanks for supporting the ongoing improvements to the html-webpack-plugin!
The html-webpack-plugin
works without configuration.
It's a great addition to the ⚙️ webpack-config-plugins.
The html-webpack-plugin
provides hooks to extend it to your needs. There are already some really powerful plugins which can be integrated with zero configuration
async
, defer
or module
attributes to your <script>
elements, or even inline them<link>
s to external stylesheets into <style>
elements containing internal CSShead
or body
(different locations ) of same html document.<link rel='preload'>
and <link rel='prefetch'>
<link rel='preload'>
helping with lazy-loading<link />
tags to have their media attribute set automatically; useful for providing specific desktop/mobile/print etc. stylesheets that the browser will conditionally download<head>
nomodule
attribute to specific injected scripts, which prevents the scripts from being loaded by newer browsers. Good for limiting loads of polyfills.The plugin will generate an HTML5 file for you that includes all your webpack
bundles in the body using script
tags. Just add the plugin to your webpack
config as follows:
webpack.config.js
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin')
module.exports = {
entry: 'index.js',
output: {
path: __dirname + '/dist',
filename: 'index_bundle.js'
},
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin()
]
}
This will generate a file dist/index.html
containing the following
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Webpack App</title>
</head>
<body>
<script src="index_bundle.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
If you have multiple webpack
entry points, they will all be included with script
tags in the generated HTML.
If you have any CSS assets in webpack's output (for example, CSS extracted with the mini-css-extract-plugin)
then these will be included with <link>
tags in the HTML head.
If you have plugins that make use of it, html-webpack-plugin
should be ordered first before any of the integrated Plugins.
You can pass a hash of configuration options to html-webpack-plugin
.
Allowed values are as follows:
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
title | {String} | Webpack App | The title to use for the generated HTML document |
filename | {String|Function} | 'index.html' | The file to write the HTML to. Defaults to index.html . You can specify a subdirectory here too (eg: assets/admin.html ). The [name] placeholder will be replaced with the entry name. Can also be a function e.g. (entryName) => entryName + '.html' . |
template | {String} | `` | webpack relative or absolute path to the template. By default it will use src/index.ejs if it exists. Please see the docs for details |
templateContent | {string|Function|false} | false | Can be used instead of template to provide an inline template - please read the Writing Your Own Templates section |
templateParameters | {Boolean|Object|Function} | false | Allows to overwrite the parameters used in the template - see example |
inject | {Boolean|String} | true | true || 'head' || 'body' || false Inject all assets into the given template or templateContent . When passing true or 'body' all javascript resources will be placed at the bottom of the body element. 'head' will place the scripts in the head element - see the inject:false example |
publicPath | {String|'auto'} | 'auto' | The publicPath used for script and link tags |
scriptLoading | {'blocking'|'defer'} | 'blocking' | Modern browsers support non blocking javascript loading ('defer' ) to improve the page startup performance. |
favicon | {String} | `` | Adds the given favicon path to the output HTML |
meta | {Object} | {} | Allows to inject meta -tags. E.g. meta: {viewport: 'width=device-width, initial-scale=1, shrink-to-fit=no'} |
base | {Object|String|false} | false | Inject a base tag. E.g. base: "https://example.com/path/page.html |
minify | {Boolean|Object} | true if mode is 'production' , otherwise false | Controls if and in what ways the output should be minified. See minification below for more details. |
hash | {Boolean} | false | If true then append a unique webpack compilation hash to all included scripts and CSS files. This is useful for cache busting |
cache | {Boolean} | true | Emit the file only if it was changed |
showErrors | {Boolean} | true | Errors details will be written into the HTML page |
chunks | {?} | ? | Allows you to add only some chunks (e.g only the unit-test chunk) |
chunksSortMode | {String|Function} | auto | Allows to control how chunks should be sorted before they are included to the HTML. Allowed values are 'none' | 'auto' | 'manual' | {Function} |
excludeChunks | {Array.<string>} | `` | Allows you to skip some chunks (e.g don't add the unit-test chunk) |
xhtml | {Boolean} | false | If true render the link tags as self-closing (XHTML compliant) |
Here's an example webpack config illustrating how to use these options
webpack.config.js
{
entry: 'index.js',
output: {
path: __dirname + '/dist',
filename: 'index_bundle.js'
},
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
title: 'My App',
filename: 'assets/admin.html'
})
]
}
To generate more than one HTML file, declare the plugin more than once in your plugins array
webpack.config.js
{
entry: 'index.js',
output: {
path: __dirname + '/dist',
filename: 'index_bundle.js'
},
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin(), // Generates default index.html
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({ // Also generate a test.html
filename: 'test.html',
template: 'src/assets/test.html'
})
]
}
If the default generated HTML doesn't meet your needs you can supply
your own template. The easiest way is to use the template
option and pass a custom HTML file.
The html-webpack-plugin will automatically inject all necessary CSS, JS, manifest
and favicon files into the markup.
Details of other template loaders are documented here.
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
title: 'Custom template',
// Load a custom template (lodash by default)
template: 'index.html'
})
]
index.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8"/>
<title><%= htmlWebpackPlugin.options.title %></title>
</head>
<body>
</body>
</html>
If you already have a template loader, you can use it to parse the template.
Please note that this will also happen if you specify the html-loader and use .html
file as template.
webpack.config.js
module: {
loaders: [
{ test: /\.hbs$/, loader: "handlebars-loader" }
]
},
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
title: 'Custom template using Handlebars',
template: 'index.hbs'
})
]
You can use the lodash
syntax out of the box. If the inject
feature doesn't fit your needs and you want full control over the asset placement use the default template of the html-webpack-template project as a starting point for writing your own.
The following variables are available in the template by default (you can extend them using the templateParameters
option):
htmlWebpackPlugin
: data specific to this plugin
htmlWebpackPlugin.options
: the options hash that was passed to
the plugin. In addition to the options actually used by this plugin,
you can use this hash to pass arbitrary data through to your template.
htmlWebpackPlugin.tags
: the prepared headTags
and bodyTags
Array to render the <base>
, <meta>
, <script>
and <link>
tags.
Can be used directly in templates and literals. For example:
<html>
<head>
<%= htmlWebpackPlugin.tags.headTags %>
</head>
<body>
<%= htmlWebpackPlugin.tags.bodyTags %>
</body>
</html>
htmlWebpackPlugin.files
: direct access to the files used during the compilation.
publicPath: string;
js: string[];
css: string[];
manifest?: string;
favicon?: string;
webpackConfig
: the webpack configuration that was used for this compilation. This
can be used, for example, to get the publicPath
(webpackConfig.output.publicPath
).
compilation
: the webpack compilation object.
This can be used, for example, to get the contents of processed assets and inline them
directly in the page, through compilation.assets[...].source()
(see the inline template example).
The template can also be directly inlined directly into the options object.
⚠️ templateContent
does not allow to use webpack loaders for your template and will not watch for template file changes
webpack.config.js
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
templateContent: `
<html>
<body>
<h1>Hello World</h1>
</body>
</html>
`
})
The templateContent
can also access all templateParameters
values.
⚠️ templateContent
does not allow to use webpack loaders for your template and will not watch for template file changes
webpack.config.js
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
inject: false,
templateContent: ({htmlWebpackPlugin}) => `
<html>
<head>
${htmlWebpackPlugin.tags.headTags}
</head>
<body>
<h1>Hello World</h1>
${htmlWebpackPlugin.tags.bodyTags}
</body>
</html>
`
})
To include only certain chunks you can limit the chunks being used
webpack.config.js
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
chunks: ['app']
})
]
It is also possible to exclude certain chunks by setting the excludeChunks
option
webpack.config.js
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
excludeChunks: [ 'dev-helper' ]
})
]
If the minify
option is set to true
(the default when webpack's mode
is 'production'
),
the generated HTML will be minified using html-minifier-terser
and the following options:
{
collapseWhitespace: true,
removeComments: true,
removeRedundantAttributes: true,
removeScriptTypeAttributes: true,
removeStyleLinkTypeAttributes: true,
useShortDoctype: true
}
To use custom html-minifier options
pass an object to minify
instead. This object will not be merged with the defaults above.
To disable minification during production mode set the minify
option to false
.
If the meta
option is set the html-webpack-plugin will inject meta tags.
For the default template the html-webpack-plugin will already provide a default for the viewport
meta tag.
Please take a look at this well maintained list of almost all possible meta tags.
Most meta tags are configured by setting a name
and a content
attribute.
To add those use a key/value pair:
webpack.config.js
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
'meta': {
'viewport': 'width=device-width, initial-scale=1, shrink-to-fit=no',
// Will generate: <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1, shrink-to-fit=no">
'theme-color': '#4285f4'
// Will generate: <meta name="theme-color" content="#4285f4">
}
})
]
The http-equiv attribute is essentially used to simulate a HTTP response header.
This format is supported using an object notation which allows you to add any attribute:
webpack.config.js
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
'meta': {
'Content-Security-Policy': { 'http-equiv': 'Content-Security-Policy', 'content': 'default-src https:' },
// Will generate: <meta http-equiv="Content-Security-Policy" content="default-src https:">
// Which equals to the following http header: `Content-Security-Policy: default-src https:`
'set-cookie': { 'http-equiv': 'set-cookie', content: 'name=value; expires=date; path=url' },
// Will generate: <meta http-equiv="set-cookie" content="value; expires=date; path=url">
// Which equals to the following http header: `set-cookie: value; expires=date; path=url`
}
})
]
When the base
option is used,
html-webpack-plugin will inject a base tag.
By default, a base tag will not be injected.
The following two are identical and will both insert <base href="http://example.com/some/page.html">
:
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
'base': 'http://example.com/some/page.html'
})
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
'base': { 'href': 'http://example.com/some/page.html' }
})
The target
can be specified with the corresponding key:
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
'base': {
'href': 'http://example.com/some/page.html',
'target': '_blank'
}
})
which will inject the element <base href="http://example.com/some/page.html" target="_blank">
.
For long term caching add contenthash/templatehash
to the filename.
Example:
plugins: [
new HtmlWebpackPlugin({
filename: 'index.[contenthash].html'
})
]
contenthash/templatehash
is the hash of the content of the output file.
Optionally, You can configure like [<hashType>:contenthash:<digestType>:<length>]
hashType
- one of sha1
, md5
, sha256
, sha512
or any other node.js supported hash typedigestType
- one of hex
, base26
, base32
, base36
, base49
, base52
, base58
, base62
, base64
maxlength
- maximum length of the generated hash in charsDefaults: [md5:contenthash:hex:9999]
To allow other plugins to alter the HTML this plugin executes tapable hooks.
The lib/hooks.js contains all information about which values are passed.
beforeAssetTagGeneration
hook AsyncSeriesWaterfallHook<{
assets: {
publicPath: string,
js: Array<{string}>,
css: Array<{string}>,
favicon?: string | undefined,
manifest?: string | undefined
},
outputName: string,
plugin: HtmlWebpackPlugin
}>
alterAssetTags
hook AsyncSeriesWaterfallHook<{
assetTags: {
scripts: Array<HtmlTagObject>,
styles: Array<HtmlTagObject>,
meta: Array<HtmlTagObject>,
},
outputName: string,
plugin: HtmlWebpackPlugin
}>
alterAssetTagGroups
hook AsyncSeriesWaterfallHook<{
headTags: Array<HtmlTagObject | HtmlTagObject>,
bodyTags: Array<HtmlTagObject | HtmlTagObject>,
outputName: string,
plugin: HtmlWebpackPlugin
}>
afterTemplateExecution
hook AsyncSeriesWaterfallHook<{
html: string,
headTags: Array<HtmlTagObject | HtmlTagObject>,
bodyTags: Array<HtmlTagObject | HtmlTagObject>,
outputName: string,
plugin: HtmlWebpackPlugin,
}>
beforeEmit
hook AsyncSeriesWaterfallHook<{
html: string,
outputName: string,
plugin: HtmlWebpackPlugin,
}>
afterEmit
hook AsyncSeriesWaterfallHook<{
outputName: string,
plugin: HtmlWebpackPlugin
}>
Example implementation: webpack-subresource-integrity
plugin.js
// If your plugin is direct dependent to the html webpack plugin:
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('html-webpack-plugin');
// If your plugin is using html-webpack-plugin as an optional dependency
// you can use https://github.com/tallesl/node-safe-require instead:
const HtmlWebpackPlugin = require('safe-require')('html-webpack-plugin');
class MyPlugin {
apply (compiler) {
compiler.hooks.compilation.tap('MyPlugin', (compilation) => {
console.log('The compiler is starting a new compilation...')
// Static Plugin interface |compilation |HOOK NAME | register listener
HtmlWebpackPlugin.getHooks(compilation).beforeEmit.tapAsync(
'MyPlugin', // <-- Set a meaningful name here for stacktraces
(data, cb) => {
// Manipulate the content
data.html += 'The Magic Footer'
// Tell webpack to move on
cb(null, data)
}
)
})
}
}
module.exports = MyPlugin
webpack.config.js
plugins: [
new MyPlugin({ options: '' })
]
Note that the callback must be passed the HtmlWebpackPluginData in order to pass this onto any other plugins listening on the same beforeEmit
event
Jan Nicklas |
Thomas Sileghem |
Thank you to all our backers!
If you want to support the project as well become a sponsor or a a backer.
This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute.
You're free to contribute to this project by submitting issues and/or pull requests. This project is test-driven, so keep in mind that every change and new feature should be covered by tests.
This project uses the semistandard code style.
FAQs
Simplifies creation of HTML files to serve your webpack bundles
The npm package html-webpack-plugin receives a total of 9,946,484 weekly downloads. As such, html-webpack-plugin popularity was classified as popular.
We found that html-webpack-plugin demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers 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.
Security News
At its inaugural meeting, the JSR Working Group outlined plans for an open governance model and a roadmap to enhance JavaScript package management.
Security News
Research
An advanced npm supply chain attack is leveraging Ethereum smart contracts for decentralized, persistent malware control, evading traditional defenses.
Security News
Research
Attackers are impersonating Sindre Sorhus on npm with a fake 'chalk-node' package containing a malicious backdoor to compromise developers' projects.