Skip to content

A browserify transform which minifies your code using UglifyJS2

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

nolimitcity/uglifyify

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

@browserify/uglifyify

A Browserify transform which minifies your code using terser.

Installation

npm install @browserify/uglifyify

Motivation/Usage

Ordinarily you'd be fine doing this:

browserify index.js | terser -c > bundle.js

But uglifyify is able to yield smaller output by processing files individually instead of just the entire bundle. When using uglifyify you should generally also use Uglify, to achieve the smallest output. Uglifyify provides an additional optimization when used with Uglify, but does not provide all of the optimization that using Uglify on its own does, so it's not a replacement.

Uglifyify gives you the benefit of applying Uglify's "squeeze" transform on each file before it's included in the bundle, meaning you can remove dead code paths for conditional requires. Here's a contrived example:

if (true) {
  module.exports = require('./browser')
} else {
  module.exports = require('./node')
}

module.exports = require('./node') will be excluded by Uglify, meaning that only ./browser will be bundled and required.

If you combine uglifyify with envify, you can make this a little more accessible. Take this code:

if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development') {
  module.exports = require('./development')
} else {
  module.exports = require('./production')
}

And use this to compile:

NODE_ENV=development browserify -t envify -t @browserify/uglifyify index.js -o dev.js &&
NODE_ENV=production browserify -t envify -t @browserify/uglifyify index.js -o prod.js

It should go without saying that you should be hesitant using environment variables in a Browserify module - this is best suited to your own applications or modules built with Browserify's --standalone tag.

File Extensions

Sometimes, you don't want uglifyify to minify all of your files – for example, if you're using a transform to require CSS or HTML, you might get an error as uglify expects JavaScript and will throw if it can't parse what it's given.

This is done using the -x or --exts transform options, e.g. from the command-line:

browserify     \
  -t coffeeify \
  -t [ @browserify/uglifyify -x .js -x .coffee ]

The above example will only minify .js and .coffee files, ignoring the rest.

Global Transforms

You might also want to take advantage of uglifyify's pre-bundle minification to produce slightly leaner files across your entire browserify bundle. By default, transforms only alter your application code, but you can use global transforms to minify module code too. From your terminal:

browserify -g @browserify/uglifyify ./index.js > bundle.js

Or programatically:

var browserify = require('browserify')
var fs = require('fs')

var bundler = browserify(__dirname + '/index.js')

bundler.transform('@browserify/uglifyify', { global: true  })

bundler.bundle()
  .pipe(fs.createWriteStream(__dirname + '/bundle.js'))

Note that this is fine for uglifyify as it shouldn't modify the behavior of your code unexpectedly, but transforms such as envify should almost always stay local – otherwise you'll run into unexpected side-effects within modules that weren't expecting to be modified as such.

Ignoring Files

Sometimes uglifyjs will break specific files under specific settings – it's rare, but does happen – and to work around that, you can use the ignore option. Given one or more glob patterns, you can filter out specific files this way:

browserify -g [ @browserify/uglifyify --ignore '**/node_modules/weakmap/*' ] ./index.js
var bundler = browserify('index.js')

bundler.transform('@browserify/uglifyify', {
  global: true,
  ignore: [
      '**/node_modules/weakmap/*'
    , '**/node_modules/async/*'
  ]
})

bundler.bundle().pipe(process.stdout)

Source Maps

Uglifyify supports source maps, so you can minify your code and still see the original source – this works especially well with a tool such as exorcist when creating production builds.

Source maps are enabled when:

  • You're using another transform, such as coffeeify, that inlines source maps.
  • You've passed the --debug flag (or debug option) to your browserify bundle.

Enabling --debug with browserify is easy:

browserify -t @browserify/uglifyify --debug index.js
var bundler = browserify({ debug: true })

bundler
  .add('index.js')
  .transform('@browserify/uglifyify')
  .bundle()
  .pipe(process.stdout)

If you'd prefer them not to be included regardless, you can opt out using the sourcemap option:

browserify -t [ @browserify/uglifyify --no-sourcemap ] app.js
var bundler = browserify('index.js')

bundler.transform('@browserify/uglifyify', { sourceMap: false })
  .bundle()
  .pipe(process.stdout)

About

A browserify transform which minifies your code using UglifyJS2

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 100.0%