An implementation of the LiveReload server in Node.js. It's an alternative to the graphical http://livereload.com/ application, which monitors files for changes and reloads your web browser.
You can use this by using the official browser extension or by adding JavaScript code to your page.
Install the LiveReload browser plugins by visiting http://help.livereload.com/kb/general-use/browser-extensions.
Note: Only Google Chrome supports viewing file:///
URLS, and you have to specifically enable it. If you are using other browsers and want to use file:///
URLs, add the JS code to the page as shown in the next section.
Once you have the plugin installed, start livereload
. Then, in the browser, click the LiveReload icon to connect the browser to the server.
Add this code:
<script>
document.write('<script src="http://' + (location.host || 'localhost').split(':')[0] +
':35729/livereload.js?snipver=1"></' + 'script>')
</script>
Note: If you are using a different port other than 35729
you will
need to change the above script.
You can run LiveReload two ways: using the CLI application or by writing your own server using the API.
To use livereload from the command line:
$ npm install -g livereload
$ livereload [path]
The commandline options are
-p
or--port
to specify the listening port-d
or--debug
to show debug messages when the browser reloads.-e
or--exts
to specify extentions that you want to observe. Example:-e 'jade,scss'
. Removes the default extensions.-ee
or--extraExts
to include additional extentions that you want to observe. Example:-ee 'jade,scss'
.-x
or--exclusions
to specify additional exclusion patterns. Example:-x html, images/
-u
or--usepolling
to poll for file system changes. Set this to true to successfully watch files over a network.-w
or--wait
to add a delay (in miliseconds) between when livereload detects a change to the filesystem and when it notifies the browser
Specify the path when using the options.
$ livereload . -w 1000 -d
To use the api within a project:
$ npm install livereload --save
Then, create a server and fire it up.
var livereload = require('livereload');
var server = livereload.createServer();
server.watch(__dirname + "/public");
You can also use this with a Connect server. Here's an example of a simple server
using connect
and a few other modules just to give you an idea:
var connect = require('connect');
var compiler = require('connect-compiler');
var static = require('serve-static');
var server = connect();
server.use(
compiler({
enabled : [ 'coffee', 'uglify' ],
src : 'src',
dest : 'public'
})
);
server.use( static(__dirname + '/public'));
server.listen(3000);
var livereload = require('livereload');
var lrserver = livereload.createServer();
lrserver.watch(__dirname + "/public");
You can then start up the server which will listen on port 3000
.
The createServer()
method accepts two arguments.
The first are some configuration options, passed as a JavaScript object:
https
is an optional object of options to be passed to https.createServer (if not provided,http.createServer
is used instead)port
is the listening port. It defaults to35729
which is what the LiveReload extensions use currently.exts
is an array of extensions you want to observe. This overrides the default extensions of[
html,
css,
js,
png,
gif,
jpg,
php,
php5,
py,
rb,
erb,
coffee]
.extraExts
is an array of extensions you want to observe. The default extensions are[
html,
css,
js,
png,
gif,
jpg,
php,
php5,
py,
rb,
erb,
coffee]
.applyCSSLive
tells LiveReload to reload CSS files in the background instead of refreshing the page. The default for this istrue
.applyImgLive
tells LiveReload to reload image files in the background instead of refreshing the page. The default for this istrue
. Namely for these extensions: jpg, jpeg, png, gifexclusions
lets you specify files to ignore. By default, this includes.git/
,.svn/
, and.hg/
originalPath
Set URL you use for development, e.g 'http:/domain.com', then LiveReload will proxy this url to local path.overrideURL
lets you specify a different host for CSS files. This lets you edit local CSS files but view a live site. See http://feedback.livereload.com/knowledgebase/articles/86220-preview-css-changes-against-a-live-site-then-uplo for details.usePolling
Poll for file system changes. Set this totrue
to successfully watch files over a network.delay
add a delay (in miliseconds) between when livereload detects a change to the filesystem and when it notifies the browser. Useful if the browser is reloading/refreshing before a file has been compiled, for example, by browserify.noListen
Pass astrue
to indicate that the websocket server should not be started automatically. (useful if you want to start it yourself later)
The second argument is an optional callback
that will be sent to the LiveReload server and called for the listening
event. (ie: when the server is ready to start accepting connections)
Passing an array of paths or glob patterns will allow you to watch multiple directories. All directories have the same configuration options.
server.watch([__dirname + "/js", __dirname + "/css"]);
Command line:
$ livereload "path1, path2, path3"
You can map local CSS files to a remote URL. If your HTML file specifies live CSS files at example.com
like this:
<!-- html -->
<head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="http://domain.com/css/style.css">
</head>
Then you can tell livereload to substitute a local CSS file instead:
// server.js
var server = livereload.createServer({
originalPath: "http://domain.com"
});
server.watch('/User/Workspace/test');
Then run the server:
$ node server.js
When /User/Workspace/test/css/style.css
is modified, the stylesheet will be reloaded on the page.
- Update
ws
dependency to v6.2.1 to close security vulnerability
- Update bundled Livereload.js file to v3.0.0
- Update deps to close security vulnerabilities
- Updates bundled Livereload.js file to v2.3.0 to fix console error.
- BREAKING CHANGE: The
exts
ande
options now replace the default extensions. - Adds the
extraExts
andee
options to preserve the old behavior of adding extensions to watch. - You can now use
server.on 'error'
in your code to catch the "port in use" message gracefully. The CLI now handles this nicely as well.
- Updated to use Chokidar 1.7, which hopefully fixes some memory issues.
- BUGFIX: Check to see if a
watcher
object is actually defined before attempting to close. - Added deprecation warning for
exts
option. In the next version, extensions you specify on the command line will OVERRIDE the default extensions. We'll add a new option for adding your exts to the defaults. - Modified CLI so it trims spaces from the extensions in the array, just in case you put spaces between the commas.
- CLI now properly splits extension list. Previous versions appended a blank entry to the list of extensions.
- CLI now requires extensions to be comma separated instead of space separated.
- Added extra debugging info (protocol version, watched directory, extensions, and exclusions).
- Cleaned up some inconsistencies in the code.
- Fix default exclusions regex
- Implements LiveReload protocol v7 so browser plugins work again.
- Removes support for protocol v6
- Introduces
noListen
option - Introduces optional callback which will be invoked when the LiveReload server is listening
- Updated
ws
library - Fix issues with exclusions
- Allow watching multiple paths from CLI
- Added
delay
option
- Remove some bad JS code *
- Rewritten using Chokidar library and
ws
library - Added
usePolling
option - Added support for specifying additional extensions from the CLI
Older version history not kept.
Copyright (c) 2010-2019 Brian P. Hogan and Joshua Peek
Released under the MIT license. See LICENSE
for details.