[![NPM version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/clean-css.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/clean-css) [![Linux Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/master.svg?style=flat&label=Linux%20build)](https://travis-ci.org/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css) [![Windows Build status](https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/master.svg?style=flat&label=Windows%20build)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/branch/master) [![Dependency Status](https://img.shields.io/david/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css.svg?style=flat)](https://david-dm.org/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css) [![devDependency Status](https://img.shields.io/david/dev/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css.svg?style=flat)](https://david-dm.org/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css#info=devDependencies) ## What is clean-css? Clean-css is a fast and efficient [Node.js](http://nodejs.org/) library for minifying CSS files. According to [tests](http://goalsmashers.github.io/css-minification-benchmark/) it is one of the best available. ## Usage ### What are the requirements? ``` Node.js 0.10+ (tested on CentOS, Ubuntu, OS X 10.6+, and Windows 7+) or io.js 3.0+ ``` ### How to install clean-css? ``` npm install clean-css ``` ### How to use clean-css CLI? Clean-css accepts the following command line arguments (please make sure you use `` as the very last argument to avoid potential issues): ``` cleancss [options] source-file, [source-file, ...] -h, --help output usage information -v, --version output the version number -b, --keep-line-breaks Keep line breaks -c, --compatibility [ie7|ie8] Force compatibility mode (see Readme for advanced examples) -d, --debug Shows debug information (minification time & compression efficiency) -o, --output [output-file] Use [output-file] as output instead of STDOUT -r, --root [root-path] Set a root path to which resolve absolute @import rules -s, --skip-import Disable @import processing -t, --timeout [seconds] Per connection timeout when fetching remote @imports (defaults to 5 seconds) --rounding-precision [n] Rounds to `N` decimal places. Defaults to 2. -1 disables rounding --s0 Remove all special comments, i.e. /*! comment */ --s1 Remove all special comments but the first one --semantic-merging Enables unsafe mode by assuming BEM-like semantic stylesheets (warning, this may break your styling!) --skip-advanced Disable advanced optimizations - ruleset reordering & merging --skip-aggressive-merging Disable properties merging based on their order --skip-import-from [rules] Disable @import processing for specified rules --skip-media-merging Disable @media merging --skip-rebase Disable URLs rebasing --skip-restructuring Disable restructuring optimizations --skip-shorthand-compacting Disable shorthand compacting --source-map Enables building input's source map --source-map-inline-sources Enables inlining sources inside source maps ``` #### Examples: To minify a **public.css** file into **public-min.css** do: ``` cleancss -o public-min.css public.css ``` To minify the same **public.css** into the standard output skip the `-o` parameter: ``` cleancss public.css ``` More likely you would like to concatenate a couple of files. If you are on a Unix-like system: ```bash cat one.css two.css three.css | cleancss -o merged-and-minified.css ``` On Windows: ```bat type one.css two.css three.css | cleancss -o merged-and-minified.css ``` Or even gzip the result at once: ```bash cat one.css two.css three.css | cleancss | gzip -9 -c > merged-minified-and-gzipped.css.gz ``` ### How to use clean-css API? ```js var CleanCSS = require('clean-css'); var source = 'a{font-weight:bold;}'; var minified = new CleanCSS().minify(source).styles; ``` CleanCSS constructor accepts a hash as a parameter, i.e., `new CleanCSS(options)` with the following options available: * `advanced` - set to false to disable advanced optimizations - selector & property merging, reduction, etc. * `aggressiveMerging` - set to false to disable aggressive merging of properties. * `benchmark` - turns on benchmarking mode measuring time spent on cleaning up (run `npm run bench` to see example) * `compatibility` - enables compatibility mode, see [below for more examples](#how-to-set-a-compatibility-mode) * `debug` - set to true to get minification statistics under `stats` property (see `test/custom-test.js` for examples) * `inliner` - a hash of options for `@import` inliner, see [test/protocol-imports-test.js](https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/blob/master/test/protocol-imports-test.js#L372) for examples, or [this comment](https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/issues/612#issuecomment-119594185) for a proxy use case. * `keepBreaks` - whether to keep line breaks (default is false) * `keepSpecialComments` - `*` for keeping all (default), `1` for keeping first one only, `0` for removing all * `mediaMerging` - whether to merge `@media` at-rules (default is true) * `processImport` - whether to process `@import` rules * `processImportFrom` - a list of `@import` rules, can be `['all']` (default), `['local']`, `['remote']`, or a blacklisted path e.g. `['!fonts.googleapis.com']` * `rebase` - set to false to skip URL rebasing * `relativeTo` - path to **resolve** relative `@import` rules and URLs * `restructuring` - set to false to disable restructuring in advanced optimizations * `root` - path to **resolve** absolute `@import` rules and **rebase** relative URLs * `roundingPrecision` - rounding precision; defaults to `2`; `-1` disables rounding * `semanticMerging` - set to true to enable semantic merging mode which assumes BEM-like content (default is false as it's highly likely this will break your stylesheets - **use with caution**!) * `shorthandCompacting` - set to false to skip shorthand compacting (default is true unless sourceMap is set when it's false) * `sourceMap` - exposes source map under `sourceMap` property, e.g. `new CleanCSS().minify(source).sourceMap` (default is false) If input styles are a product of CSS preprocessor (Less, Sass) an input source map can be passed as a string. * `sourceMapInlineSources` - set to true to inline sources inside a source map's `sourcesContent` field (defaults to false) It is also required to process inlined sources from input source maps. * `target` - path to a folder or an output file to which **rebase** all URLs The output of `minify` method (or the 2nd argument to passed callback) is a hash containing the following fields: * `styles` - optimized output CSS as a string * `sourceMap` - output source map (if requested with `sourceMap` option) * `errors` - a list of errors raised * `warnings` - a list of warnings raised * `stats` - a hash of statistic information (if requested with `debug` option): * `originalSize` - original content size (after import inlining) * `minifiedSize` - optimized content size * `timeSpent` - time spent on optimizations * `efficiency` - a ratio of output size to input size (e.g. 25% if content was reduced from 100 bytes to 75 bytes) #### How to make sure remote `@import`s are processed correctly? In order to inline remote `@import` statements you need to provide a callback to minify method, e.g.: ```js var CleanCSS = require('clean-css'); var source = '@import url(http://path/to/remote/styles);'; new CleanCSS().minify(source, function (errors, minified) { // minified.styles }); ``` This is due to a fact, that, while local files can be read synchronously, remote resources can only be processed asynchronously. If you don't provide a callback, then remote `@import`s will be left intact. ### How to use clean-css with build tools? * [Broccoli](https://github.com/broccolijs/broccoli#broccoli): [broccoli-clean-css](https://github.com/shinnn/broccoli-clean-css) * [Brunch](http://brunch.io/): [clean-css-brunch](https://github.com/brunch/clean-css-brunch) * [Grunt](http://gruntjs.com): [grunt-contrib-cssmin](https://github.com/gruntjs/grunt-contrib-cssmin) * [Gulp](http://gulpjs.com/): [gulp-minify-css](https://github.com/jonathanepollack/gulp-minify-css) * [Gulp](http://gulpjs.com/): [using vinyl-map as a wrapper - courtesy of @sogko](https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/issues/342) * [component-builder2](https://github.com/component/builder2.js): [builder-clean-css](https://github.com/poying/builder-clean-css) * [Metalsmith](http://metalsmith.io): [metalsmith-clean-css](https://github.com/aymericbeaumet/metalsmith-clean-css) * [Lasso](https://github.com/lasso-js/lasso): [lasso-clean-css](https://github.com/yomed/lasso-clean-css) ### What are the clean-css' dev commands? First clone the source, then run: * `npm run bench` for clean-css benchmarks (see [test/bench.js](https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/blob/master/test/bench.js) for details) * `npm run browserify` to create the browser-ready clean-css version * `npm run check` to check JS sources with [JSHint](https://github.com/jshint/jshint/) * `npm test` for the test suite ## How to contribute to clean-css? See [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md). ## Tips & Tricks ### How to preserve a comment block? Use the `/*!` notation instead of the standard one `/*`: ```css /*! Important comments included in minified output. */ ``` ### How to rebase relative image URLs? Clean-css will handle it automatically for you (since version 1.1) in the following cases: * When using the CLI: 1. Use an output path via `-o`/`--output` to rebase URLs as relative to the output file. 2. Use a root path via `-r`/`--root` to rebase URLs as absolute from the given root path. 3. If you specify both then `-r`/`--root` takes precendence. * When using clean-css as a library: 1. Use a combination of `relativeTo` and `target` options for relative rebase (same as 1 in CLI). 2. Use a combination of `relativeTo` and `root` options for absolute rebase (same as 2 in CLI). 3. `root` takes precendence over `target` as in CLI. ### How to generate source maps? Source maps are supported since version 3.0. Additionally to mapping original CSS files, clean-css also supports input source maps, so minified styles can be mapped into their [Less](http://lesscss.org/) or [Sass](http://sass-lang.com/) sources directly. Source maps are generated using [source-map](https://github.com/mozilla/source-map/) module from Mozilla. #### Using CLI To generate a source map, use `--source-map` switch, e.g.: ``` cleancss --source-map --output styles.min.css styles.css ``` Name of the output file is required, so a map file, named by adding `.map` suffix to output file name, can be created (styles.min.css.map in this case). #### Using API To generate a source map, use `sourceMap: true` option, e.g.: ```js new CleanCSS({ sourceMap: true, target: pathToOutputDirectory }) .minify(source, function (minified) { // access minified.sourceMap for SourceMapGenerator object // see https://github.com/mozilla/source-map/#sourcemapgenerator for more details // see https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/blob/master/bin/cleancss#L114 on how it's used in clean-css' CLI }); ``` Using API you can also pass an input source map directly: ```js new CleanCSS({ sourceMap: inputSourceMapAsString, target: pathToOutputDirectory }) .minify(source, function (minified) { // access minified.sourceMap to access SourceMapGenerator object // see https://github.com/mozilla/source-map/#sourcemapgenerator for more details // see https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/blob/master/bin/cleancss#L114 on how it's used in clean-css' CLI }); ``` Or even multiple input source maps at once (available since version 3.1): ```js new CleanCSS({ sourceMap: true, target: pathToOutputDirectory }).minify({ 'path/to/source/1': { styles: '...styles...', sourceMap: '...source-map...' }, 'path/to/source/2': { styles: '...styles...', sourceMap: '...source-map...' } }, function (minified) { // access minified.sourceMap as above }); ``` ### How to minify multiple files with API? #### Passing an array ```js new CleanCSS().minify(['path/to/file/one', 'path/to/file/two']); ``` #### Passing a hash ```js new CleanCSS().minify({ 'path/to/file/one': { styles: 'contents of file one' }, 'path/to/file/two': { styles: 'contents of file two' } }); ``` ### How to set a compatibility mode? Compatibility settings are controlled by `--compatibility` switch (CLI) and `compatibility` option (library mode). In both modes the following values are allowed: * `'ie7'` - Internet Explorer 7 compatibility mode * `'ie8'` - Internet Explorer 8 compatibility mode * `''` or `'*'` (default) - Internet Explorer 9+ compatibility mode Since clean-css 3 a fine grained control is available over [those settings](https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/blob/master/lib/utils/compatibility.js), with the following options available: * `'[+-]colors.opacity'` - - turn on (+) / off (-) `rgba()` / `hsla()` declarations removal * `'[+-]properties.backgroundClipMerging'` - turn on / off background-clip merging into shorthand * `'[+-]properties.backgroundOriginMerging'` - turn on / off background-origin merging into shorthand * `'[+-]properties.backgroundSizeMerging'` - turn on / off background-size merging into shorthand * `'[+-]properties.colors'` - turn on / off any color optimizations * `'[+-]properties.ieBangHack'` - turn on / off IE bang hack removal * `'[+-]properties.iePrefixHack'` - turn on / off IE prefix hack removal * `'[+-]properties.ieSuffixHack'` - turn on / off IE suffix hack removal * `'[+-]properties.merging'` - turn on / off property merging based on understandability * `'[+-]properties.spaceAfterClosingBrace'` - turn on / off removing space after closing brace - `url() no-repeat` into `url()no-repeat` * `'[+-]properties.urlQuotes'` - turn on / off `url()` quoting * `'[+-]properties.zeroUnits'` - turn on / off units removal after a `0` value * `'[+-]selectors.adjacentSpace'` - turn on / off extra space before `nav` element * `'[+-]selectors.ie7Hack'` - turn on / off IE7 selector hack removal (`*+html...`) * `'[+-]selectors.special'` - a regular expression with all special, unmergeable selectors (leave it empty unless you know what you are doing) * `'[+-]units.ch'` - turn on / off treating `ch` as a proper unit * `'[+-]units.in'` - turn on / off treating `in` as a proper unit * `'[+-]units.pc'` - turn on / off treating `pc` as a proper unit * `'[+-]units.pt'` - turn on / off treating `pt` as a proper unit * `'[+-]units.rem'` - turn on / off treating `rem` as a proper unit * `'[+-]units.vh'` - turn on / off treating `vh` as a proper unit * `'[+-]units.vm'` - turn on / off treating `vm` as a proper unit * `'[+-]units.vmax'` - turn on / off treating `vmax` as a proper unit * `'[+-]units.vmin'` - turn on / off treating `vmin` as a proper unit * `'[+-]units.vm'` - turn on / off treating `vm` as a proper unit For example, using `--compatibility 'ie8,+units.rem'` will ensure IE8 compatibility while enabling `rem` units so the following style `margin:0px 0rem` can be shortened to `margin:0`, while in pure IE8 mode it can't be. To pass a single off (-) switch in CLI please use the following syntax `--compatibility *,-units.rem`. In library mode you can also pass `compatibility` as a hash of options. ### What advanced optimizations are applied? All advanced optimizations are dispatched [here](https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/blob/master/lib/selectors/advanced.js#L59), and this is what they do: * `recursivelyOptimizeBlocks` - does all the following operations on a block (think `@media` or `@keyframe` at-rules); * `recursivelyOptimizeProperties` - optimizes properties in rulesets and "flat at-rules" (like @font-face) by splitting them into components (e.g. `margin` into `margin-(*)`), optimizing, and rebuilding them back. You may want to use `shorthandCompacting` option to control whether you want to turn multiple (long-hand) properties into a shorthand ones; * `removeDuplicates` - gets rid of duplicate rulesets with exactly the same set of properties (think of including the same Sass / Less partial twice for no good reason); * `mergeAdjacent` - merges adjacent rulesets with the same selector or rules; * `reduceNonAdjacent` - identifies which properties are overridden in same-selector non-adjacent rulesets, and removes them; * `mergeNonAdjacentBySelector` - identifies same-selector non-adjacent rulesets which can be moved (!) to be merged, requires all intermediate rulesets to not redefine the moved properties, or if redefined to be either more coarse grained (e.g. `margin` vs `margin-top`) or have the same value; * `mergeNonAdjacentByBody` - same as the one above but for same-rules non-adjacent rulesets; * `restructure` - tries to reorganize different-selector different-rules rulesets so they take less space, e.g. `.one{padding:0}.two{margin:0}.one{margin-bottom:3px}` into `.two{margin:0}.one{padding:0;margin-bottom:3px}`; * `removeDuplicateMediaQueries` - removes duplicated `@media` at-rules; * `mergeMediaQueries` - merges non-adjacent `@media` at-rules by same rules as `mergeNonAdjacentBy*` above; ## Acknowledgments (sorted alphabetically) * Anthony Barre ([@abarre](https://github.com/abarre)) for improvements to `@import` processing, namely introducing the `--skip-import` / `processImport` options. * Simon Altschuler ([@altschuler](https://github.com/altschuler)) for fixing `@import` processing inside comments. * Isaac ([@facelessuser](https://github.com/facelessuser)) for pointing out a flaw in clean-css' stateless mode. * Jan Michael Alonzo ([@jmalonzo](https://github.com/jmalonzo)) for a patch removing node.js' old `sys` package. * Luke Page ([@lukeapage](https://github.com/lukeapage)) for suggestions and testing the source maps feature. Plus everyone else involved in [#125](https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/issues/125) for pushing it forward. * Timur Kristóf ([@Venemo](https://github.com/Venemo)) for an outstanding contribution of advanced property optimizer for 2.2 release. * Vincent Voyer ([@vvo](https://github.com/vvo)) for a patch with better empty element regex and for inspiring us to do many performance improvements in 0.4 release. * [@XhmikosR](https://github.com/XhmikosR) for suggesting new features (option to remove special comments and strip out URLs quotation) and pointing out numerous improvements (JSHint, media queries). ## License Clean-css is released under the [MIT License](https://github.com/jakubpawlowicz/clean-css/blob/master/LICENSE).