rollup-html-modified v1.0.3
@rollup/plugin-html
🍣 A Rollup plugin which creates HTML files to serve Rollup bundles.
Please see Supported Output Formats for information about using this plugin with output formats other than esm (es), iife, and umd.
Requirements
This plugin requires an LTS Node version (v14.0.0+) and Rollup v1.20.0+.
Install
Using npm:
npm install @rollup/plugin-html --save-devUsage
Create a rollup.config.js configuration file and import the plugin:
const html = require('@rollup/plugin-html');
module.exports = {
  input: 'src/index.js',
  output: {
    dir: 'output',
    format: 'cjs'
  },
  plugins: [html()]
};Then call rollup either via the CLI or the API.
Once run successfully, an HTML file should be written to the bundle output destination.
Options
attributes
Type: Object
Default: { html: { lang: 'en' }, link: null, script: null }
Specifies additional attributes for html, link, and script elements. For each property, provide an object with key-value pairs that represent an HTML element attribute name and value. By default, the html element is rendered with an attribute of lang="en".
Note: If using the es / esm output format, { type: 'module'} is automatically added to attributes.script.
fileName
Type: String
Default: 'index.html'
meta
Type: Array[...object]
Default: [{ charset: 'utf-8' }]
Specifies attributes used to create <meta> elements. For each array item, provide an object with key-value pairs that represent <meta> element attribute names and values.
Specifies the name of the HTML to emit.
publicPath
Type: String
Default: ''
Specifies a path to prepend to all bundle assets (files) in the HTML output.
template
Type: Function
Default: internal function
Returns: String
Specifies a function that provides the rendered source for the HTML output. The function should be in the form of:
const template = ({ attributes, bundle, files, publicPath, title }) => { ... }- attributes: Corresponds to the- attributesoption passed to the plugin
- bundle: An- Objectcontaining key-value pairs of- AssetInfoor- ChunkInfo
- files: An- Arrayof- AssetInfoor- ChunkInfocontaining any entry (- isEntry: true) files, and any asset (- isAsset: true) files in the bundle that will be emitted
- publicPath: Corresponds to the- publicPathoption passed to the plugin
- title: Corresponds to the- titleoption passed to the plugin
By default this is handled internally and produces HTML in the following format:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html ${attributes}>
  <head>
    ${metas}
    <title>${title}</title>
    ${links}
  </head>
  <body>
    ${scripts}
  </body>
</html>Where ${links} represents all <link .. tags for CSS and ${scripts} represents all <script... tags for JavaScript files.
title
Type: String
Default: 'Rollup Bundle'
Specifies the HTML document title.
Exports
makeHtmlAttributes(attributes)
Parameters: attributes, Type: Object
Returns: String
Consumes an object with key-value pairs that represent an HTML element attribute name and value. The function returns all pairs as a space-separated string of valid HTML element attributes. e.g.
const { makeHtmlAttributes } = require('@rollup/plugin-html');
makeHtmlAttributes({ lang: 'en', 'data-batcave': 'secret' });
// -> 'lang="en" data-batcave="secret"'Supported Output Formats
By default, this plugin supports the esm (es), iife, and umd output formats, as those are most commonly used as browser bundles. Other formats can be used, but will require using the template option to specify a custom template function which renders the unique requirements of other formats.
amd
Will likely require use of RequireJS semantics, which allows only for a single entry <script> tag. If more entry chunks are emitted, these need to be loaded via a proxy file. RequireJS would also need to be a dependency and added to the build: https://requirejs.org/docs/start.html.
system
Would require a separate <script> tag first that adds the s.js minimal loader. Loading modules might then resemble: <script>System.import('./batman.js')</script>.
Attribution
This plugin was inspired by and is based upon mini-html-webpack-plugin by Juho Vepsäläinen and Artem Sapegin, with permission.