Minimal, unopinionated static site generator powered by webpack.
Bring the world of server rendering to your static build process. Either provide an array of paths to be rendered, or crawl your site automatically, and a matching set of index.html
files will be rendered in your output directory by executing your own custom, webpack-compiled render function.
This plugin works particularly well with universal libraries like React and React Router since it allows you to pre-render your routes at build time, rather than requiring a Node server in production.
$ npm install --save-dev static-site-generator-webpack-plugin
Ensure you have webpack installed, e.g. npm install -g webpack
const StaticSitePlugin = require('static-site-generator-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
entry: './index.js',
output: {
filename: 'index.js',
path: 'dist',
/* IMPORTANT!
* You must compile to UMD or CommonJS
* so it can be required in a Node context: */
libraryTarget: 'umd'
},
plugins: [
new StaticSitePlugin({
paths: [
'/hello/',
'/world/'
],
locals: {
// Properties here are merged into `locals`
// passed to the exported render function
greet: 'Hello'
}
})
]
};
Sync rendering:
module.exports = function render(locals) {
return '<html>' + locals.greet + ' from ' + locals.path + '</html>';
};
Async rendering via callbacks:
module.exports = function render(locals, callback) {
callback(null, '<html>' + locals.greet + ' from ' + locals.path + '</html>');
};
Async rendering via promises:
module.exports = function render(locals) {
return Promise.resolve('<html>' + locals.greet + ' from ' + locals.path + '</html>');
};
If you need to generate multiple files per render, or you need to alter the path, you can return an object instead of a string, where each key is the path, and the value is the file contents:
module.exports = function render() {
return {
'/': '<html>Home</html>',
'/hello': '<html>Hello</html>',
'/world': '<html>World</html>'
};
};
Note that this will still be executed for each entry in your paths
array in your plugin config.
// The path currently being rendered:
locals.path;
// An object containing all assets:
locals.assets;
// Advanced: Webpack's stats object:
locals.webpackStats;
Any additional locals provided in your config are also available.
Rather than manually providing a list of paths, you can use the crawl
option to automatically crawl your site. This will follow all relative links and iframes, executing your render function for each:
module.exports = {
...
plugins: [
new StaticSitePlugin({
crawl: true
})
]
};
Note that this can be used in conjunction with the paths
option to allow multiple crawler entry points:
module.exports = {
...
plugins: [
new StaticSitePlugin({
crawl: true,
paths: [
'/',
'/uncrawlable-page/'
]
})
]
};
By providing paths that end in .html
, you can generate custom file names other than the default index.html
. Please note that this may break compatibility with your router, if you're using one.
module.exports = {
...
plugins: [
new StaticSitePlugin({
paths: [
'/index.html',
'/news.html',
'/about.html'
]
})
]
};
If required, you can provide an object that will exist in the global scope when executing your render function. This is particularly useful if certain libraries or tooling you're using assumes a browser environment.
For example, when using Webpack's require.ensure
, which assumes that window
exists:
module.exports = {
...,
plugins: [
new StaticSitePlugin({
globals: {
window: {}
}
})
]
}
template.ejs
<% css.forEach(function(file){ %>
<link href="<%- file %>" rel="stylesheet">
<% }); %>
<% js.forEach(function(file){ %>
<script src="<%- file %>" async></script>
<% }); %>
index.js
if (typeof global.document !== 'undefined') {
const rootEl = global.document.getElementById('outlay');
React.render(
<App />,
rootEl,
);
}
export default (data) => {
const assets = Object.keys(data.webpackStats.compilation.assets);
const css = assets.filter(value => value.match(/\.css$/));
const js = assets.filter(value => value.match(/\.js$/));
return template({ css, js, ...data});
}
This plugin defaults to the first chunk found. While this should work in most cases, you can specify the entry name if needed:
module.exports = {
...,
plugins: [
new StaticSitePlugin({
entry: 'main'
})
]
}
Generated files can be compressed with compression-webpack-plugin, but first ensure that this plugin appears before compression-webpack-plugin in your plugins array:
const StaticSitePlugin = require('static-site-generator-webpack-plugin');
const CompressionPlugin = require('compression-webpack-plugin');
module.exports = {
...
plugins: [
new StaticSitePlugin(...),
new CompressionPlugin(...)
]
};
- react-router-to-array - useful for avoiding hardcoded lists of routes to render
- gatsby - opinionated static site generator built on top of this plugin