vue-prerender v0.1.2
vue-prerender 
vue-prerender implements three strategies for prerendering Vue.js pages using headless chrome.
Installation
$ npm install --save-dev vue-prerenderor
$ yarn add --dev vue-prerenderUsage
There are two main ways of integrating vue-prerender into your projects:
1. Creating a new script called prerender and defining its use inside package.json.
2. Integrating directly to the build script.
In both cases prerendering needs to start after your build was successful.
Prerender script
Crate a new file called prerender.js inside your build directory or wherever you wish, with the following contents:
var vuePrerender = require('vue-prerender');
var options = {
logLevel: 3,
parseRouter: true,
tidy: true
};
vuePrerender('dist', options);Inside your package.json file define the following script:
"scripts": {
"prerender": "node build/prerender.js"
}or add it to the build script:
"scripts": {
"build": "node build/build.js && node build/prerender.js"
}Now you can call the script manually with npm run prerender after npm run build finishes, or if you have added it to the build script it will run automatically after the build finishes.
Integrate to the build script
If you used the vue-cli tool to generate the project from a webpack template, you are going to have a build directory which will contain the build.js file. Inside that file, you need to place the vue-prerender execution in the callback that is called when webpack finishes. The previous callback content is moved to the callback that will be called by vue-prerender.
const spinner = ora('building for production...')
spinner.start()
rm(path.join(config.build.assetsRoot, config.build.assetsSubDirectory), err => {
if (err) throw err
webpack(webpackConfig, (err, stats) => {
console.log('\nStarting prerendering...')
vuePrerender('dist', {
logLevel: 3,
parseRouter: true,
tidy: true
}, () => {
spinner.stop()
if (err) throw err
process.stdout.write(stats.toString({
colors: true,
modules: false,
children: false, // If you are using ts-loader, setting this to true will make TypeScript errors show up during build.
chunks: false,
chunkModules: false
}) + '\n\n')
if (stats.hasErrors()) {
console.log(chalk.red(' Build failed with errors.\n'))
process.exit(1)
}
console.log(chalk.cyan(' Build complete.\n'))
console.log(chalk.yellow(
' Tip: built files are meant to be served over an HTTP server.\n' +
' Opening index.html over file:// won\'t work.\n'
))
})
})
})Modes
Parse router
vue-prerender will generate files for routes defined in your router. This is the default mode.
For this to work you need to modify your main vue instance in main.js so that is exposed as a global constant:
const _vue = new Vue({
el: '#app',
router,
components: { App },
template: '<App/>'
})
window._vuePrerender = _vueThis is activated with the option parseRouter: true
List of paths
Parse all paths that are listed in an array.
This is activated with the option paths: [].
If this is set then router parsing will be skipped.
Catch paths automatically
Catch automatically all paths detected on all pages, starting with the root path.
This is activated with the option catchPaths: [].
If this is set then both router parsing and custom defined path prerendering will be skipped.
Available options
Defaults
logLevel: 3,
parseRouter: true,
pathExceptions: [],
urlExceptions: [],
routerParams: {},
paths: [],
catchPaths: false,
verifyPaths: true,.
tidy: false,
tidyOptions: {
doctype: 'html5',
hideComments: false,
indent: true,
wrap: false,
'wrap-sections': false
}logLevel
| Value | Level of logging |
|---|---|
| 0 | No log output. |
| 1 | Log just errors. |
| 2 | Log errors and warnings. |
| 3 | DEFAULT: Log errors, warnings, and info messages. |
parseRouter
Default: true
Parse routes from
vue-routerand prerender all routes.
pathExceptions
Default: []
List of regex patterns or just plain strings which indicate which routes need to be skipped. Patterns are matched against vue-router paths (without injected params).
urlExceptions
Default: []
List of regex patterns or just plain strings which indicate which URLs need to be skipped. Patterns are matched against vue-router compiled paths (with injected params).
routerParams
Default: {}
Define values for parameters inside dynamic routes.
If there is a route like such:
{
path: '/:language/about-us',
component: AboutUs
}and following languages are available: ['en', 'de', 'bs'], then the option routerParams would look like this:
routerParams: {
language: [null, 'en', 'de', 'bs']
}Paths that will be prerendered:
/about-us
/en/about-us
/de/about-us
/bs/about-usAlso, more complex relationships betwen parameters could be defined. vue-prerender uses the helper library combo-wizard for parsing the routerParams options object. For detailed explanations and examples please read the combo-wizard README: https://github.com/ministryofprogramming/combo-wizard
paths
Default: []
Parse all paths that are listed in the array. If this is set then router parsing will be skipped.
catchPaths
Default: false
Catch automatically all paths detected on all pages, starting with the root path. If this is set then both router parsing and custom defined path prerendering will be skipped.
verifyPaths
Default: true
Before saving an HTML file for a path, check if that path is valid inside of the
vue-routerconfiguration.
tidy
Default: false
Beautify the HTML output using the
htmltidy2module.
tidyOptions
HTML Tidy options.
Default:
tidyOptions: {
doctype: 'html5',
hideComments: false,
indent: true,
wrap: false,
'wrap-sections': false
}All available options availabe in the HTML Tidy API and Quick Reference
License
MIT © Eldar Cejvanovic