GitHub HTML processing filters and utilities. This module includes a small framework for defining DOM based content filters and applying them to user provided content. Read an introduction about this project in this blog post.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'html-pipeline'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install html-pipeline
This library provides a handful of chainable HTML filters to transform user
content into markup. A filter takes an HTML string or
Nokogiri::HTML::DocumentFragment
, optionally manipulates it, and then
outputs the result.
For example, to transform Markdown source into Markdown HTML:
require 'html/pipeline'
filter = HTML::Pipeline::MarkdownFilter.new("Hi **world**!")
filter.call
Filters can be combined into a pipeline which causes each filter to hand its output to the next filter's input. So if you wanted to have content be filtered through Markdown and be syntax highlighted, you can create the following pipeline:
pipeline = HTML::Pipeline.new [
HTML::Pipeline::MarkdownFilter,
HTML::Pipeline::SyntaxHighlightFilter
]
result = pipeline.call <<-CODE
This is *great*:
some_code(:first)
CODE
result[:output].to_s
Prints:
<p>This is <em>great</em>:</p>
<pre><code>some_code(:first)
</code></pre>
To generate CSS for HTML formatted code, use the Rouge CSS Theme #css
method. rouge
is a dependency of the SyntaxHighlightFilter
.
Some filters take an optional context and/or result hash. These are used to pass around arguments and metadata between filters in a pipeline. For example, if you don't want to use GitHub formatted Markdown, you can pass an option in the context hash:
filter = HTML::Pipeline::MarkdownFilter.new("Hi **world**!", :gfm => false)
filter.call
We define different pipelines for different parts of our app. Here are a few paraphrased snippets to get you started:
# The context hash is how you pass options between different filters.
# See individual filter source for explanation of options.
context = {
:asset_root => "http://your-domain.com/where/your/images/live/icons",
:base_url => "http://your-domain.com"
}
# Pipeline providing sanitization and image hijacking but no mention
# related features.
SimplePipeline = Pipeline.new [
SanitizationFilter,
TableOfContentsFilter, # add 'name' anchors to all headers and generate toc list
CamoFilter,
ImageMaxWidthFilter,
SyntaxHighlightFilter,
EmojiFilter,
AutolinkFilter
], context
# Pipeline used for user provided content on the web
MarkdownPipeline = Pipeline.new [
MarkdownFilter,
SanitizationFilter,
CamoFilter,
ImageMaxWidthFilter,
HttpsFilter,
MentionFilter,
EmojiFilter,
SyntaxHighlightFilter
], context.merge(:gfm => true) # enable github formatted markdown
# Define a pipeline based on another pipeline's filters
NonGFMMarkdownPipeline = Pipeline.new(MarkdownPipeline.filters,
context.merge(:gfm => false))
# Pipelines aren't limited to the web. You can use them for email
# processing also.
HtmlEmailPipeline = Pipeline.new [
PlainTextInputFilter,
ImageMaxWidthFilter
], {}
# Just emoji.
EmojiPipeline = Pipeline.new [
PlainTextInputFilter,
EmojiFilter
], context
MentionFilter
- replace@user
mentions with linksAbsoluteSourceFilter
- replace relative image urls with fully qualified versionsAutolinkFilter
- auto_linking urls in HTMLCamoFilter
- replace http image urls with camo-fied https versionsEmailReplyFilter
- util filter for working with emailsEmojiFilter
- everyone loves emoji!HttpsFilter
- HTML Filter for replacing http github urls with https versions.ImageMaxWidthFilter
- link to full size image for large imagesMarkdownFilter
- convert markdown to htmlPlainTextInputFilter
- html escape text and wrap the result in a divSanitizationFilter
- whitelist sanitize user markupSyntaxHighlightFilter
- code syntax highlighterTextileFilter
- convert textile to htmlTableOfContentsFilter
- anchor headings with name attributes and generate Table of Contents html unordered list linking headings
Filter gem dependencies are not bundled; you must bundle the filter's gem
dependencies. The below list details filters with dependencies. For example,
SyntaxHighlightFilter
uses rouge
to detect and highlight languages. For example, to use the SyntaxHighlightFilter
,
add the following to your Gemfile:
gem 'rouge'
AutolinkFilter
-rinku
EmailReplyFilter
-escape_utils
,email_reply_parser
EmojiFilter
-gemoji
MarkdownFilter
-commonmarker
PlainTextInputFilter
-escape_utils
SanitizationFilter
-sanitize
SyntaxHighlightFilter
-rouge
TableOfContentsFilter
-escape_utils
TextileFilter
-RedCloth
Note: See Gemfile :test
block for version requirements.
Full reference documentation can be found here.
To write a custom filter, you need a class with a call
method that inherits
from HTML::Pipeline::Filter
.
For example this filter adds a base url to images that are root relative:
require 'uri'
class RootRelativeFilter < HTML::Pipeline::Filter
def call
doc.search("img").each do |img|
next if img['src'].nil?
src = img['src'].strip
if src.start_with? '/'
img["src"] = URI.join(context[:base_url], src).to_s
end
end
doc
end
end
Now this filter can be used in a pipeline:
Pipeline.new [ RootRelativeFilter ], { :base_url => 'http://somehost.com' }
If you have an idea for a filter, propose it as an issue first. This allows us discuss whether the filter is a common enough use case to belong in this gem, or should be built as an external gem.
Here are some extensions people have built:
- html-pipeline-asciidoc_filter
- jekyll-html-pipeline
- nanoc-html-pipeline
- html-pipeline-bitly
- html-pipeline-cite
- tilt-html-pipeline
- html-pipeline-wiki-link' - WikiMedia-style wiki links
- task_list - GitHub flavor Markdown Task List
- html-pipeline-nico_link - An HTML::Pipeline filter for niconico description links
- html-pipeline-gitlab - This gem implements various filters for html-pipeline used by GitLab
- html-pipeline-youtube - An HTML::Pipeline filter for YouTube links
- html-pipeline-flickr - An HTML::Pipeline filter for Flickr links
- html-pipeline-vimeo - An HTML::Pipeline filter for Vimeo links
- html-pipeline-hashtag - An HTML::Pipeline filter for hashtags
- html-pipeline-linkify_github - An HTML::Pipeline filter to autolink GitHub urls
- html-pipeline-redcarpet_filter - Render Markdown source text into Markdown HTML using Redcarpet
- html-pipeline-typogruby_filter - Add Typogruby text filters to your HTML::Pipeline
- korgi - HTML::Pipeline filters for links to Rails resources
Filters and Pipelines can be set up to be instrumented when called. The pipeline
must be setup with an
ActiveSupport::Notifications
compatible service object and a name. New pipeline objects will default to the
HTML::Pipeline.default_instrumentation_service
object.
# the AS::Notifications-compatible service object
service = ActiveSupport::Notifications
# instrument a specific pipeline
pipeline = HTML::Pipeline.new [MarkdownFilter], context
pipeline.setup_instrumentation "MarkdownPipeline", service
# or set default instrumentation service for all new pipelines
HTML::Pipeline.default_instrumentation_service = service
pipeline = HTML::Pipeline.new [MarkdownFilter], context
pipeline.setup_instrumentation "MarkdownPipeline"
Filters are instrumented when they are run through the pipeline. A
call_filter.html_pipeline
event is published once the filter finishes. The
payload
should include the filter
name. Each filter will trigger its own
instrumentation call.
service.subscribe "call_filter.html_pipeline" do |event, start, ending, transaction_id, payload|
payload[:pipeline] #=> "MarkdownPipeline", set with `setup_instrumentation`
payload[:filter] #=> "MarkdownFilter"
payload[:context] #=> context Hash
payload[:result] #=> instance of result class
payload[:result][:output] #=> output HTML String or Nokogiri::DocumentFragment
end
The full pipeline is also instrumented:
service.subscribe "call_pipeline.html_pipeline" do |event, start, ending, transaction_id, payload|
payload[:pipeline] #=> "MarkdownPipeline", set with `setup_instrumentation`
payload[:filters] #=> ["MarkdownFilter"]
payload[:doc] #=> HTML String or Nokogiri::DocumentFragment
payload[:context] #=> context Hash
payload[:result] #=> instance of result class
payload[:result][:output] #=> output HTML String or Nokogiri::DocumentFragment
end
To make a pipeline work on a plain text document, put the PlainTextInputFilter
at the beginning of your pipeline. This will wrap the content in a div
so the
filters have a root element to work with. If you're passing in an HTML fragment,
but it doesn't have a root element, you can wrap the content in a div
yourself. For example:
EmojiPipeline = Pipeline.new [
PlainTextInputFilter, # <- Wraps input in a div and escapes html tags
EmojiFilter
], context
plain_text = "Gutentag! :wave:"
EmojiPipeline.call(plain_text)
html_fragment = "This is outside of an html element, but <strong>this isn't. :+1:</strong>"
EmojiPipeline.call("<div>#{html_fragment}</div>") # <- Wrap your own html fragments to avoid escaping
SanitizationFilter::WHITELIST
is the default whitelist used if no :whitelist
argument is given in the context. The default is a good starting template for
you to add additional elements. You can either modify the constant's value, or
re-define your own constant and pass that in via the context.
Please review the Contributing Guide.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
To see what has changed in recent versions, see the CHANGELOG.
Thanks to all of these contributors.
Project is a member of the OSS Manifesto.
This section is for gem maintainers to cut a new version of the gem.
- create a new branch named
release-x.y.z
wherex.y.z
follows semver - update lib/html/pipeline/version.rb to next version number X.X.X
- update CHANGELOG.md. Prepare a draft with
script/changelog
- push branch and create a new pull request
- after tests are green, merge to master
- on the master branch, run
script/release