2.3.0 • Published 4 years ago

@mole-inc/nuxt-optimized-images v2.3.0

Weekly downloads
4
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
4 years ago

:sunrise: :rocket: Nuxt Optimized Images

Automatically optimizes images used in Nuxt.js projects (JPEG, PNG, SVG, WebP and GIF).

This module is inspired by the work of Cyril Wanner in next-optimized-images.

codecov

Features

Image sizes can often get reduced up to 60%, but this is not the only thing @mole-inc/nuxt-optimized-images does:

  • Reduces image size by optimizing images during build.
  • Improves loading speed by providing progressive images (for formats that support it).
  • JPEG/PNG images can be converted to WebP on the fly for an even smaller size.
  • Can resize images or generate low-quality image placeholders (lqip) and extract the dominant colors of it.
  • Provides query params for file-specific handling/settings.
  • And supports these features already included in Nuxt.js:
    • Content hash to the file name so images can get cached on CDN level and in the browser for a long time.
    • Inlined small images to save HTTP requests and additional roundtrips.
    • Same URLs for unchanged images over multiple builds for long time caching.

Installation

:warning: node >= 10 and nuxt >= 2 are required.

npm install --save-dev @mole-inc/nuxt-optimized-images

or

yarn add --dev @mole-inc/nuxt-optimized-images

Add @mole-inc/nuxt-optimized-images to buildModules section of nuxt.config.js:

:warning: If you are using Nuxt < 2.9.0, use modules instead.

{
  buildModules: [
    '@mole-inc/nuxt-optimized-images',
  ],

  optimizedImages: {
    optimizeImages: true
  }
}

See the configuration section for all available options.

:warning: Images won't get optimized out of the box. You have to install the optimization packages you really need in addition to this module. This doesn't force you to download big optimization libraries you don't even use. Please check out the table of all optional optimization packages.

Optimization Packages

You have to install the optimization packages you need in your project in addition to this module. Then, @mole-inc/nuxt-optimized-images detects all the supported packages and uses them.

So you only have to install these packages with npm, there is no additional step needed after that.

The following optimization packages are available and supported:

Optimization PackageDescriptionProject Link
@mole-inc/imagemin-mozjpegOptimizes JPEG imagesLink
@mole-inc/imagemin-jpegoptimOptimizes JPEG imagesLink
@mole-inc/imagemin-pngquantOptimizes PNG imagesLink
@mole-inc/imagemin-optipngAlternative for optimizing PNG imagesLink
imagemin-gifsicleOptimizes GIF imagesLink
imagemin-svgoOptimizes SVG images and iconsLink
@mole-inc/webp-loaderOptimizes WebP images and can convert JPEG/PNG images to WebP on the fly (WebP resource query)Link
@mole-inc/lqip-loaderGenerates low quality image placeholders of an image (lqip resource query)Link
responsive-loaderCan resize images on the fly and create multiple versions of it for a srcSet. Important: You need to additionally install either jimp (node implementation, slower) or sharp (binary, faster)Link
@mole-inc/sqip-loaderLoads images and exports tiny SQIP previews as image/svg+xml URL-encoded dataLink

Example: If you have JPG, PNG, and SVG images in your project, you would then need to run

npm install --save-dev @mole-inc/imagemin-mozjpeg @mole-inc/imagemin-pngquant imagemin-svgo

# or

yarn add --dev @mole-inc/imagemin-mozjpeg @mole-inc/imagemin-pngquant imagemin-svgo

To install all optional packages, run:

npm install --save-dev @mole-inc/imagemin-mozjpeg @mole-inc/imagemin-jpegoptim @mole-inc/imagemin-pngquant imagemin-gifsicle imagemin-svgo @mole-inc/webp-loader @mole-inc/lqip-loader responsive-loader sqip-loader sharp

# or

yarn add --dev @mole-inc/imagemin-mozjpeg @mole-inc/imagemin-jpegoptim @mole-inc/imagemin-pngquant imagemin-gifsicle imagemin-svgo @mole-inc/webp-loader @mole-inc/lqip-loader responsive-loader sqip-loader sharp

:warning: Please note that by default, images are only optimized for production builds, not development builds. However, this can get changed with the optimizeImagesInDev config.

Documentation

License

Code released under the MIT License.