The bun-plugin-html
is a plugin for the Bun build tool that enables .html
file entrypoints. This document instructions on how to install, use, and configure the plugin.
Important
With bun v1.2 the html loader will be stabilized. This plugin will still be updated if any issues occur, but it is recommended that you use the built-in loader.
You can install bun-plugin-html
using the following command:
bun add -d bun-plugin-html
Ensure Bun is upgraded to v1.1.34
, as a bug fix was introduced in this version of Bun.
To use this plugin, import it into your code and add it to the list of plugins when building your project with Bun. Here's an example:
import html from 'bun-plugin-html';
await Bun.build({
entrypoints: ['./src/index.html', './src/other.html'],
outdir: './dist', // Specify the output directory
plugins: [
html()
],
});
This code snippet builds HTML files from the specified entrypoints and places them in the specified output directory, along with their associated scripts and links.
Here is an example of an HTML file (index.html
) that serves as an input:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="main.css">
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="./style.scss" />
<link rel="icon" type="image/x-icon" href="./images/favicon.ico">
<title>Hello World!</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Hello World</h1>
<p id="js-target">This should be changed by JS</p>
<script src="main.ts"></script>
<script src="./js/secondary.ts"></script>
</body>
Along with a file structure like the one below, the plugin generates the output as described:
.
└── src/
├── index.html
├── main.css
├── style.scss
├── main.ts
├── js/
│ └── secondary.ts
└── images/
└── favicon.ico
The plugin generates the output in the specified output directory. If certain files are missing, the console will indicate the issue while generating the rest of the files. The generated output would look like this:
.
└── src/
└── ...
└── dist/
├── index.html
├── main.css
├── style.scss
├── main.js
├── js/
│ └── secondary.js
└── images/
└── favicon.ico
Here's the transformed HTML file in the output directory (dist/index.html
):
<!DOCTYPE html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="main.css">
<link rel="icon" type="image/x-icon" href="./images/favicon.ico">
<title>Hello World!</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Hello World</h1>
<p id="js-target">This should be changed by JS</p>
<script src="main.js"></script>
<script src="./js/secondary.js"></script>
</body>
Note that sass
and scss
files are transpiled by default.
You can customize the behavior of the bun-plugin-html
by providing options. Here's the available configuration:
type BunPluginHTMLOptions = {
inline?: boolean | {
css?: boolean;
js?: boolean;
};
naming?: {
css?: string;
};
minifyOptions?: HTMLTerserOptions;
includeExtensions?: string[];
excludeExtensions?: string[];
excludeSelectors?: string[];
preprocessor?: (processor: Processor) => void | Promise<void>;
keepOriginalPaths?: boolean | string[];
};
By setting the inline
option to true
, you can choose to inline CSS and/or JS files within your HTML. Here's an example:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<style>
body {
background-color: #000;
color: #fff;
}
</style>
<link rel="icon" type="image/x-icon" href="./images/favicon.ico">
<title>Hello World!</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Hello World</h1>
<p id="js-target">This should be changed by JS</p>
<script>
// Content of main.ts
console.log("Running JS for browser");
document.querySelector("#js-target").innerHTML = "Changed!";
</script>
<script>
// Content of js/secondary.ts
console.log("in secondary.ts");
</script>
</body>
Use minifyOptions
to configure html-minifier-terser
.
The minifyCSS
and minifyJS
fields enable further configuration of
clean-css
and
terser
, respectively.
The following default options are exported as defaultMinifyOptions
:
{
collapseWhitespace: true,
collapseInlineTagWhitespace: true,
caseSensitive: true,
minifyCSS: {},
minifyJS: true,
removeComments: true,
removeRedundantAttributes: true,
}
minifyCSS
and minifyJS
can both be set to either true
, false
, a configuration object, or a callback function. The different
values of minifyCSS
and minifyJS
behave as follows:
Value | Result |
---|---|
false |
CSS minification is skipped |
true or undefined |
CSS minification is performed with default options using clean-css |
{ opts } |
CSS minification is performed with the provided options using clean-css |
((text: string, type: string) => string) |
Your function is called for every CSS element encountered and should return minified content. |
Value | Result |
---|---|
false |
JS minification is skipped |
true or undefined |
JS minification is performed by Bun.build and inlined scripts will also be processed with default options using terser |
{ opts } |
JS minification is performed with the provided options using terser . No minification is performed by Bun.build |
((text: string, inline: boolean) => string) |
Your function is called for every JS element encoutered and should return minified content. |
The includeExtensions
option takes an array of strings. Any files whose extensions match any of those strings will be passed to
Bun.build
(in addition to ['.js', '.jsx', '.ts', '.tsx']
).
Note: you must ensure an appropriate plugin is included for each file extension.
The excludeExtensions
option takes an array of strings. Any files whose extensions match any of those strings will be ignored by
the plugin.
The extension name follows the same format as the path.extname return.
The excludeSelectors
option takes an array of strings. Any HTML elements matched by a selector will be ignored by the plugin.
The naming
option takes in an optional template to name css files with. By default css files follow the chunk
naming rules. This overrides that default behavior, following the same syntax.
The example below shows spliting the js, assets, and css into different directories.
await Bun.build({
entrypoints: ['index.html'],
outdir: 'dist',
naming: {
chunk: 'js/[dir]/[name]-[hash].[ext]',
asset: 'assets/[name].[ext]',
entry: 'main.html'
},
plugins: [html({
naming: {
css: 'css/[name].[ext]'
}
})],
})
The preprocessor
option takes in a funciton which will be provided a Processor
class, in which you can modify the files provided to it, before they are processed by bun-plugin-html
.
The example below shows processing the css files with tailwind. By default sass
is transpiled.
await Bun.build({
entrypoints: ['src/index.html'],
outdir: 'dist',
minify: true,
plugins: [html({
async preprocessor(processor) {
const files = processor.getFiles();
for (const file of files) {
if (file.extension == '.css') {
const contents = await $`bun run tailwindcss -i ${file.path} --content 'src/**/*.{html,js,ts}'`.quiet().text();
processor.writeFile(file.path, contents);
}
}
// Add hello.txt to the out dir.
// The path provided to writeFile must be an absolute path.
processor.writeFile(path.resolve('src/hello.txt'), 'Hello World!')
},
})]
})
Determines whether file paths in the source code are replaced by new paths.
Value | Result |
---|---|
true |
Path replacement is completely skipped. |
string[] |
Only the specified file paths are excluded from replacement. |
false or undefined |
All paths are replaced within the source code. |
This plugin is licensed under MIT.