Yii2 Bootstrap 3
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

271 lines
9.6 KiB

Managing assets
===============
An asset in Yii is a file that is included into the page. It could be CSS, JavaScript or
any other file. Framework provides many ways to work with assets from basics such as adding `<script src="` tag
for a file that is [handled by View](view.md) section to advanced usage such as publishing files that are not
under webserve document root, resolving JavaScript dependencies or minifying CSS.
Declaring asset bundle
----------------------
In order to publish some assets you should declare an asset bundle first. The bundle defines a set of asset files or
directories to be published and their dependencies on other asset bundles.
Both basic and advanced application templates contain `AppAsset` asset bundle class that defines assets required
application wide. Let's review basic application asset bundle class:
```php
class AppAsset extends AssetBundle
{
public $basePath = '@webroot';
public $baseUrl = '@web';
public $css = [
'css/site.css',
];
public $js = [
];
public $depends = [
'yii\web\YiiAsset',
'yii\bootstrap\BootstrapAsset',
];
}
```
In the above `$basePath` specifies web-accessible directory assets are served from. It is a base for relative
`$css` and `$js` paths i.e. `@webroot/css/site.css` for `css/site.css`. Here `@webroot` is an alias that points to
application's `web` directory.
`$baseUrl` is used to specify base URL for the same relative `$css` and `$js` i.e. `@web/css/site.css` where `@web`
is an alias that corresponds to your website base URL such as `http://example.com/`.
In case you have asset files under non web accessible directory, that is the case for any extension, you need
11 years ago
to additionally specify `$sourcePath`. Files will be copied or symlinked from source path to base path prior to being
registered. In case source path is used `baseUrl` is generated automatically at the time of publishing asset bundle.
Dependencies on other asset bundles are specified via `$depends` property. It is an array that contains fully qualified
names of bundle classes that should be published in order for this bundle to work properly.
Here `yii\web\YiiAsset` adds Yii's JavaScript library while `yii\bootstrap\BootstrapAsset` includes
[Bootstrap](http://getbootstrap.com) frontend framework.
Asset bundles are regular classes so if you need to define another one, just create alike class with unique name. This
class can be placed anywhere but the convention for it is to be under `assets` directory of the application.
Registering asset bundle
------------------------
Asset bundle classes are typically registered in views or, if it's main application asset, in layout. Doing it is
as simple as:
```php
use app\assets\AppAsset;
AppAsset::register($this);
```
Since we're in a view context `$this` refers to `View` class.
Overriding asset bundles
------------------------
Sometimes you need to override some asset bundles application wide. A good example is loading jQuery from CDN instead
of your own server. In order to do it we need to configure `assetManager` application component via config file. In case
of basic application it is `config/web.php`:
```php
return [
// ...
'components' => [
'assetManager' => [
'bundles' => [
'yii\web\JqueryAsset' => [
'sourcePath' => null,
'js' => ['//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.8.3/jquery.min.js']
],
],
],
],
];
```
In the above we're adding asset bundle definitions to `bundles` property of asset manager. Keys there are fully
qualified class paths to asset bundle classes we want to override while values are key-value arrays of class properties
and corresponding values to set.
Setting `sourcePath` to `null` tells asset manager not to copy anything while `js` overrides local files with a link
to CDN.
Enabling symlinks
-----------------
Asset manager is able to use symlinks instead of copying files. It is turned off by default since symlinks are often
disabled on shared hosting. If your hosting environment supports symlinks you certainly should enable the feature via
application config:
```php
return [
// ...
'components' => [
'assetManager' => [
'linkAssets' => true,
],
],
];
```
There are two main benefits in enabling it. First it is faster since no copying is required and second is that assets
will always be up to date with source files.
Compressing and combining assets
--------------------------------
To improve application performance you can compress and then combine several CSS or JS files into lesser number of files
therefore reducing number of HTTP requests and overall download size needed to load a web page. Yii provides a console
command that allows you to do both.
### Preparing configuration
In order to use `asset` command you should prepare a configuration first. A template for it can be generated using
```
yii asset/template /path/to/myapp/config.php
```
The template itself looks like the following:
```php
<?php
/**
* Configuration file for the "yii asset" console command.
* Note that in the console environment, some path aliases like '@webroot' and '@web' may not exist.
* Please define these missing path aliases.
*/
return [
// The list of asset bundles to compress:
'bundles' => [
// 'yii\web\YiiAsset',
// 'yii\web\JqueryAsset',
],
// Asset bundle for compression output:
'targets' => [
'app\config\AllAsset' => [
'basePath' => 'path/to/web',
'baseUrl' => '',
'js' => 'js/all-{ts}.js',
'css' => 'css/all-{ts}.css',
],
],
// Asset manager configuration:
'assetManager' => [
'basePath' => __DIR__,
'baseUrl' => '',
],
];
```
In the above keys are `properties` of `AssetController`. `bundles` list contains bundles that should be compressed. These are typically what's used by application.
`targets` contains a list of bundles that define how resulting files will be written. In our case we're writing
everything to `path/to/web` that can be accessed like `http://example.com/` i.e. it is website root directory.
> Note: in the console environment some path aliases like '@webroot' and '@web' may not exist,
so corresponding paths inside the configuration should be specified directly.
JavaScript files are combined, compressed and written to `js/all-{ts}.js` where {ts} is replaced with current UNIX
timestamp.
### Providing compression tools
The command relies on external compression tools that are not bundled with Yii so you need to provide CSS and JS
compressors which are correspondingly specified via `cssCompressor` and `jsCompression` properties. If compressor is
specified as a string it is treated as a shell command template which should contain two placeholders: `{from}` that
is replaced by source file name and `{to}` that is replaced by output file name. Another way to specify compressor is
to use any valid PHP callback.
By default for JavaScript compression Yii tries to use
[Google Closure compiler](https://developers.google.com/closure/compiler/) that is expected to be in a file named
`compiler.jar`.
For CSS compression Yii assumes that [YUI Compressor](https://github.com/yui/yuicompressor/) is looked up in a file
named `yuicompressor.jar`.
In order to compress resources with these two you need to download both and place where your `yii` console bootstrap
file is using named mentioned above. Since both are Java tools you need JRE installed.
### Performing compression
After configuration is adjusted you can run the `compress` action, using created config:
```
yii asset /path/to/myapp/config.php /path/to/myapp/config/assets_compressed.php
```
Now processing takes some time and finally finished. You need to adjust your web application config to use compressed
assets file like the following:
```php
'components' => [
// ...
'assetManager' => [
'bundles' => require /path/to/myapp/config/assets_compressed.php,
],
],
```
Using asset converter
---------------------
Instead of using CSS and JavaScript directly often developers are using their improved versions such as LESS or SCSS
for CSS or Microsoft TypeScript for JavaScript. Using these with Yii is easy.
First of all, corresponding compression tools should be installed and should be available from where `yii` console
bootstrap file is. The following lists file extensions and their corresponding conversion tool names that Yii converter
recognizes:
- LESS: `less` - `lessc`
- SCSS: `scss`, `sass` - `sass`
- Stylus: `styl` - `stylus`
- CoffeeScript: `coffee` - `coffee`
- TypeScript: `ts` - `tsc`
So if the corresponding tool is installed you can specify any of these in asset bundle:
```php
class AppAsset extends AssetBundle
{
public $basePath = '@webroot';
public $baseUrl = '@web';
public $css = [
'css/site.less',
];
public $js = [
'js/site.ts',
];
public $depends = [
'yii\web\YiiAsset',
'yii\bootstrap\BootstrapAsset',
];
}
```
In order to adjust conversion tool call parameters or add new ones you can use application config:
```php
// ...
'components' => [
'assetManager' => [
'converter' => [
'class' => 'yii\web\AssetConverter',
'commands' => [
'less' => ['css', 'lessc {from} {to} --no-color'],
'ts' => ['js', 'tsc --out {to} {from}'],
],
],
],
],
```
In the above we've left two types of extra file extensions. First one is `less` that can be specified in `css` part
of an asset bundle. Conversion is performed via running `lessc {from} {to} --no-color` where `{from}` is replaced with
LESS file path while `{to}` is replaced with target CSS file path. Second one is `ts` that can be specified in `js` part
of an asset bundle. The command that is run during conversion is in the same format that is used for `less`.