PostCSS-Debug

Debug your postcss workflow with ease! Contains a simple, but interactive web
inspector. Creates snapshots of your CSS files before/after each postcss plugin is run.
See what transformations where done when things stopped working as expected.
Consider this a beta release. Everything documented here should work, though.

Usage
CLI
You can use the postcss-debug command line interface to run PostCSS on files
of your choice and let the debugger analyze it. It will automatically open the
PostCSS debugger's web inspector, so you can browse through the debugging data.
npm install -g postcss-debug
postcss-debug path/to/styles/*.css
You need a configuration file for postcss plugin setup. The name of this file
defaults to .postcss.js. This is a sample config using postcss-calc and
postcss-nested plugins:
var calc = require('postcss-calc')
var nested = require('postcss-nested')
module.exports = function (postcss) {
return postcss([ calc, nested ])
}
If you need further information how to use the postcss-debug CLI:
postcss-debug --help
gulp-postcss
This is a modified version of the gulp-postcss sample usage code. Adapt your
code like shown here (very simple, three lines of code: require debugger,
wrap your plugins, call .inspect()) and run gulp css-debug in order to
debug your PostCSS process. The PostCSS-Debug web inspector will be opened in
your browser automatically.
var postcss = require('gulp-postcss')
var gulp = require('gulp')
var autoprefixer = require('autoprefixer')
var cssnano = require('cssnano')
var debug = require('postcss-debug').createDebugger()
gulp.task('css', function () {
var processors = [
autoprefixer({browsers: ['last 1 version']}),
cssnano()
];
return gulp.src('./src/*.css')
.pipe(postcss(debug(processors)))
.pipe(gulp.dest('./dest'))
})
gulp.task('css-debug', ['css'], function () {
debug.inspect()
})
JS Code
import { createDebugger, matcher } from 'postcss-debug'
const debug = createDebugger()
const plugins = [
plugin1,
plugin2
]
postcss(debug(plugins))
.process(css, {
from: 'src/app.css',
to: 'app.css'
})
.then(result => {
debug.inspect()
})
Contributing
Contributions welcome! Feel free to write code, documentation, tests, ...
Optionally open an issue first or just create a pull request :)
The web inspector is a rather loosely coupled stand-alone application. Have a
look at directory webdebugger.
Changelog
Have a look at file
CHANGELOG.md.
License
This plugin is released under the terms of the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.