sprockets 3.0.3 → 4.2.0

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Files changed (95) hide show
  1. checksums.yaml +5 -5
  2. data/CHANGELOG.md +101 -0
  3. data/{LICENSE → MIT-LICENSE} +2 -2
  4. data/README.md +531 -276
  5. data/bin/sprockets +12 -7
  6. data/lib/rake/sprocketstask.rb +9 -4
  7. data/lib/sprockets/add_source_map_comment_to_asset_processor.rb +60 -0
  8. data/lib/sprockets/asset.rb +41 -28
  9. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/babel.rb +8 -0
  10. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/closure.rb +1 -0
  11. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/coffee_script.rb +1 -0
  12. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/eco.rb +1 -0
  13. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/ejs.rb +1 -0
  14. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/jsminc.rb +8 -0
  15. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/sass.rb +1 -0
  16. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/sassc.rb +8 -0
  17. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/uglifier.rb +1 -0
  18. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/yui.rb +1 -0
  19. data/lib/sprockets/autoload/zopfli.rb +7 -0
  20. data/lib/sprockets/autoload.rb +5 -0
  21. data/lib/sprockets/babel_processor.rb +66 -0
  22. data/lib/sprockets/base.rb +61 -13
  23. data/lib/sprockets/bower.rb +6 -3
  24. data/lib/sprockets/bundle.rb +41 -5
  25. data/lib/sprockets/cache/file_store.rb +32 -7
  26. data/lib/sprockets/cache/memory_store.rb +28 -10
  27. data/lib/sprockets/cache/null_store.rb +8 -0
  28. data/lib/sprockets/cache.rb +43 -6
  29. data/lib/sprockets/cached_environment.rb +15 -20
  30. data/lib/sprockets/closure_compressor.rb +6 -11
  31. data/lib/sprockets/coffee_script_processor.rb +20 -6
  32. data/lib/sprockets/compressing.rb +62 -2
  33. data/lib/sprockets/configuration.rb +5 -9
  34. data/lib/sprockets/context.rb +99 -25
  35. data/lib/sprockets/dependencies.rb +10 -9
  36. data/lib/sprockets/digest_utils.rb +103 -62
  37. data/lib/sprockets/directive_processor.rb +64 -36
  38. data/lib/sprockets/eco_processor.rb +4 -3
  39. data/lib/sprockets/ejs_processor.rb +4 -3
  40. data/lib/sprockets/encoding_utils.rb +1 -0
  41. data/lib/sprockets/environment.rb +9 -4
  42. data/lib/sprockets/erb_processor.rb +34 -21
  43. data/lib/sprockets/errors.rb +1 -0
  44. data/lib/sprockets/exporters/base.rb +71 -0
  45. data/lib/sprockets/exporters/file_exporter.rb +24 -0
  46. data/lib/sprockets/exporters/zlib_exporter.rb +33 -0
  47. data/lib/sprockets/exporters/zopfli_exporter.rb +14 -0
  48. data/lib/sprockets/exporting.rb +73 -0
  49. data/lib/sprockets/file_reader.rb +1 -0
  50. data/lib/sprockets/http_utils.rb +25 -7
  51. data/lib/sprockets/jsminc_compressor.rb +32 -0
  52. data/lib/sprockets/jst_processor.rb +11 -10
  53. data/lib/sprockets/loader.rb +244 -62
  54. data/lib/sprockets/manifest.rb +100 -46
  55. data/lib/sprockets/manifest_utils.rb +9 -6
  56. data/lib/sprockets/mime.rb +8 -42
  57. data/lib/sprockets/npm.rb +52 -0
  58. data/lib/sprockets/path_dependency_utils.rb +3 -11
  59. data/lib/sprockets/path_digest_utils.rb +2 -1
  60. data/lib/sprockets/path_utils.rb +107 -22
  61. data/lib/sprockets/paths.rb +1 -0
  62. data/lib/sprockets/preprocessors/default_source_map.rb +49 -0
  63. data/lib/sprockets/processing.rb +32 -52
  64. data/lib/sprockets/processor_utils.rb +38 -39
  65. data/lib/sprockets/resolve.rb +177 -97
  66. data/lib/sprockets/sass_cache_store.rb +1 -0
  67. data/lib/sprockets/sass_compressor.rb +21 -17
  68. data/lib/sprockets/sass_functions.rb +1 -0
  69. data/lib/sprockets/sass_importer.rb +1 -0
  70. data/lib/sprockets/sass_processor.rb +46 -18
  71. data/lib/sprockets/sassc_compressor.rb +56 -0
  72. data/lib/sprockets/sassc_processor.rb +297 -0
  73. data/lib/sprockets/server.rb +77 -44
  74. data/lib/sprockets/source_map_processor.rb +66 -0
  75. data/lib/sprockets/source_map_utils.rb +483 -0
  76. data/lib/sprockets/transformers.rb +63 -35
  77. data/lib/sprockets/uglifier_compressor.rb +23 -20
  78. data/lib/sprockets/unloaded_asset.rb +139 -0
  79. data/lib/sprockets/uri_tar.rb +99 -0
  80. data/lib/sprockets/uri_utils.rb +14 -14
  81. data/lib/sprockets/utils/gzip.rb +99 -0
  82. data/lib/sprockets/utils.rb +63 -71
  83. data/lib/sprockets/version.rb +2 -1
  84. data/lib/sprockets/yui_compressor.rb +5 -14
  85. data/lib/sprockets.rb +105 -33
  86. metadata +157 -27
  87. data/lib/sprockets/coffee_script_template.rb +0 -6
  88. data/lib/sprockets/eco_template.rb +0 -6
  89. data/lib/sprockets/ejs_template.rb +0 -6
  90. data/lib/sprockets/engines.rb +0 -81
  91. data/lib/sprockets/erb_template.rb +0 -6
  92. data/lib/sprockets/legacy.rb +0 -314
  93. data/lib/sprockets/legacy_proc_processor.rb +0 -35
  94. data/lib/sprockets/legacy_tilt_processor.rb +0 -29
  95. data/lib/sprockets/sass_template.rb +0 -7
data/README.md CHANGED
@@ -5,7 +5,6 @@ It features declarative dependency management for JavaScript and CSS
5
5
  assets, as well as a powerful preprocessor pipeline that allows you to
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6
  write assets in languages like CoffeeScript, Sass and SCSS.
7
7
 
8
-
9
8
  ## Installation
10
9
 
11
10
  Install Sprockets from RubyGems:
@@ -17,62 +16,37 @@ $ gem install sprockets
17
16
  Or include it in your project's `Gemfile` with Bundler:
18
17
 
19
18
  ``` ruby
20
- gem 'sprockets', '~> 3.0'
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+ gem 'sprockets', '~> 4.0'
21
20
  ```
22
21
 
22
+ ## Upgrading to Sprockets 4.x
23
23
 
24
- ## Understanding the Sprockets Environment
25
-
26
- You'll need an instance of the `Sprockets::Environment` class to
27
- access and serve assets from your application. Under Rails 4.0 and
28
- later, `YourApp::Application.assets` is a preconfigured
29
- `Sprockets::Environment` instance. For Rack-based applications, create
30
- an instance in `config.ru`.
31
-
32
- The Sprockets `Environment` has methods for retrieving and serving
33
- assets, manipulating the load path, and registering processors. It is
34
- also a Rack application that can be mounted at a URL to serve assets
35
- over HTTP.
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+ These are the major features in Sprockets 4.x
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25
 
37
- ### The Load Path
26
+ - Source Maps
27
+ - Manifest.js
28
+ - ES6 support
29
+ - Deprecated processor interface in 3.x is removed in 4.x
38
30
 
39
- The *load path* is an ordered list of directories that Sprockets uses
40
- to search for assets.
31
+ Read more about them by referencing [Upgrading document](UPGRADING.md)
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32
 
42
- In the simplest case, a Sprockets environment's load path will consist
43
- of a single directory containing your application's asset source
44
- files. When mounted, the environment will serve assets from this
45
- directory as if they were static files in your public root.
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+ ## Guides
46
34
 
47
- The power of the load path is that it lets you organize your source
48
- files into multiple directories -- even directories that live outside
49
- your application -- and combine those directories into a single
50
- virtual filesystem. That means you can easily bundle JavaScript, CSS
51
- and images into a Ruby library or [Bower](http://bower.io) package and import them into your application.
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+ For most people interested in using Sprockets, you will want to see the README below.
52
36
 
53
- #### Manipulating the Load Path
37
+ If you are a framework developer that is using Sprockets, see [Building an Asset Processing Framework](guides/building_an_asset_processing_framework.md).
54
38
 
55
- To add a directory to your environment's load path, use the
56
- `append_path` and `prepend_path` methods. Directories at the beginning
57
- of the load path have precedence over subsequent directories.
39
+ If you are a library developer who is extending the functionality of Sprockets, see [Extending Sprockets](guides/extending_sprockets.md).
58
40
 
59
- ``` ruby
60
- environment = Sprockets::Environment.new
61
- environment.append_path 'app/assets/javascripts'
62
- environment.append_path 'lib/assets/javascripts'
63
- environment.append_path 'vendor/assets/bower_components'
64
- ```
41
+ If you want to work on Sprockets or better understand how it works read [How Sprockets Works](guides/how_sprockets_works.md)
65
42
 
66
- In general, you should append to the path by default and reserve
67
- prepending for cases where you need to override existing assets.
43
+ ## Behavior Overview
68
44
 
69
- ### Accessing Assets
45
+ You can interact with Sprockets primarily through directives and file extensions. This section covers how to use each of these things, and the defaults that ship with Sprockets.
70
46
 
71
- Once you've set up your environment's load path, you can mount the
72
- environment as a Rack server and request assets via HTTP. You can also
73
- access assets programmatically from within your application.
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+ Since you are likely using Sprockets through another framework (such as the [the Rails asset pipeline](http://guides.rubyonrails.org/asset_pipeline.html)), there will be configuration options you can toggle that will change behavior such as what directories or files get compiled. For that documentation you should see your framework's documentation.
74
48
 
75
- #### Logical Paths
49
+ #### Accessing Assets
76
50
 
77
51
  Assets in Sprockets are always referenced by their *logical path*.
78
52
 
@@ -82,380 +56,661 @@ contains the directory `app/assets/javascripts`:
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56
 
83
57
  <table>
84
58
  <tr>
85
- <th>Asset source file</th>
86
59
  <th>Logical path</th>
60
+ <th>Source file on disk</th>
87
61
  </tr>
88
62
  <tr>
89
- <td>app/assets/javascripts/application.js</td>
90
63
  <td>application.js</td>
64
+ <td>app/assets/javascripts/application.js</td>
91
65
  </tr>
92
66
  <tr>
93
- <td>app/assets/javascripts/models/project.js</td>
94
67
  <td>models/project.js</td>
68
+ <td>app/assets/javascripts/models/project.js</td>
69
+ </tr>
70
+ <tr>
71
+ <td>hello.js</td>
72
+ <td>app/assets/javascripts/hello.coffee</td>
95
73
  </tr>
96
74
  </table>
97
75
 
98
- In this way, all directories in the load path are merged to create a
99
- virtual filesystem whose entries are logical paths.
76
+ > Note: For assets that are compiled or transpiled, you want to specify the extension that you want, not the extension on disk. For example we specified `hello.js` even if the file on disk is a coffeescript file, since the asset it will generate is javascript.
100
77
 
101
- #### Serving Assets Over HTTP
78
+ ### Directives
102
79
 
103
- When you mount an environment, all of its assets are accessible as
104
- logical paths underneath the *mount point*. For example, if you mount
105
- your environment at `/assets` and request the URL
106
- `/assets/application.js`, Sprockets will search your load path for the
107
- file named `application.js` and serve it.
80
+ Directives are special comments in your asset file and the main way of interacting with processors. What kind of interactions? You can use these directives to tell Sprockets to load other files, or specify dependencies on other assets.
108
81
 
109
- Under Rails 4.0 and later, your Sprockets environment is automatically
110
- mounted at `/assets`. If you are using Sprockets with a Rack
111
- application, you will need to mount the environment yourself. A good
112
- way to do this is with the `map` method in `config.ru`:
82
+ For example, let's say you have custom JavaScript that you've written. You put this javascript in a file called `beta.js`. The javascript makes heavy use of jQuery, so you need to load that before your code executes. You could add a `require` directive to the top of `beta.js`:
113
83
 
114
- ``` ruby
115
- require 'sprockets'
116
- map '/assets' do
117
- environment = Sprockets::Environment.new
118
- environment.append_path 'app/assets/javascripts'
119
- environment.append_path 'app/assets/stylesheets'
120
- run environment
121
- end
84
+ ```js
85
+ //= require jquery
122
86
 
123
- map '/' do
124
- run YourRackApp
125
- end
87
+ $().ready({
88
+ // my custom code here
89
+ })
126
90
  ```
127
91
 
128
- #### Accessing Assets Programmatically
92
+ The directive processor understands comment blocks in three formats:
129
93
 
130
- You can use the `find_asset` method (aliased as `[]`) to retrieve an
131
- asset from a Sprockets environment. Pass it a logical path and you'll
132
- get a `Sprockets::Asset` instance back:
94
+ ``` css
95
+ /* Multi-line comment blocks (CSS, SCSS, JavaScript)
96
+ *= require foo
97
+ */
98
+ ```
133
99
 
134
- ``` ruby
135
- environment['application.js']
136
- # => #<Sprockets::Asset ...>
100
+ ``` js
101
+ // Single-line comment blocks (SCSS, JavaScript)
102
+ //= require foo
137
103
  ```
138
104
 
139
- Call `to_s` on the resulting asset to access its contents, `length` to
140
- get its length in bytes, `mtime` to query its last-modified time, and
141
- `filename` to get its full path on the filesystem.
105
+ ``` coffee
106
+ # Single-line comment blocks (CoffeeScript)
107
+ #= require foo
108
+ ```
142
109
 
110
+ > Note: Directives are only processed if they come before any application code. Once you have a line that does not include a comment or whitespace then Sprockets will stop looking for directives. If you use a directive outside of the "header" of the document it will not do anything, and won't raise any errors.
143
111
 
144
- ## Using Processors
112
+ Here is a list of the available directives:
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113
 
146
- Asset source files can be written in another format, like SCSS or
147
- CoffeeScript, and automatically compiled to CSS or JavaScript by
148
- Sprockets. Processors that convert a file from one format to another are called *transformers*.
114
+ - [`require`](#require) - Add the contents of a file to current
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+ - [`require_self`](#require_self) - Change order of where current contents are concatenated to current
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+ - [`require_directory`](#require_directory) - Add contents of each file in a folder to current
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+ - [`require_tree`](#require_tree) - Add contents of all files in all directories in a path to current
118
+ - [`link`](#link) - Make target file compile and be publicly available without adding contents to current
119
+ - [`link_directory`](#link_directory) - Make target directory compile and be publicly available without adding contents to current
120
+ - [`link_tree`](#link_tree) - Make target tree compile and be publicly available without adding contents to current
121
+ - [`depend_on`](#depend_on) - Recompile current file if target has changed
122
+ - [`depend_on_directory`](#depend_on_directory) - Recompile current file if any files in target directory has changed
123
+ - [`stub`](#stub) - Ignore target file
149
124
 
150
- ### Minifying Assets
125
+ You can see what each of these does below.
151
126
 
152
- Several JavaScript and CSS minifiers are available through shorthand.
127
+ ### Specifying Processors through File Extensions
128
+
129
+ Sprockets uses the filename extensions to determine what processors to run on your file and in what order. For example if you have a file:
153
130
 
154
- ``` ruby
155
- environment.js_compressor = :uglify
156
- environment.css_compressor = :scss
131
+ ```
132
+ application.scss
157
133
  ```
158
134
 
159
- ### Styling with Sass and SCSS
135
+ Then Sprockets will by default run the sass processor (which implements scss). The output file will be converted to css.
160
136
 
161
- [Sass](http://sass-lang.com/) is a language that compiles to CSS and
162
- adds features like nested rules, variables, mixins and selector
163
- inheritance.
137
+ You can specify multiple processors by specifying multiple file extensions. For example you can use Ruby's [ERB template language](#invoking-ruby-with-erb) to embed content in your doc before running the sass processor. To accomplish this you would need to name your file
164
138
 
165
- If the `sass` gem is available to your application, you can use Sass
166
- to write CSS assets in Sprockets.
139
+ ```
140
+ application.scss.erb
141
+ ```
167
142
 
168
- Sprockets supports both Sass syntaxes. For the original
169
- whitespace-sensitive syntax, use the extension `.sass`. For the
170
- new SCSS syntax, use the extension `.scss`.
143
+ Processors are run from right to left (tail to head), so in the above example the processor associated with `erb` will be run before the processor associated with `scss` extension.
171
144
 
172
- ### Scripting with CoffeeScript
145
+ For a description of the processors that Sprockets has by default see the "default processors" section below. Other libraries may register additional processors.
173
146
 
174
- [CoffeeScript](http://jashkenas.github.com/coffee-script/) is a
175
- language that compiles to the "good parts" of JavaScript, featuring a
176
- cleaner syntax with array comprehensions, classes, and function
177
- binding.
147
+ When "asking" for a compiled file, you always ask for the extension you want. For example if you're using Rails, to get the contents of `application.scss.erb` you would use
178
148
 
179
- If the `coffee-script` gem is available to your application, you can
180
- use CoffeeScript to write JavaScript assets in Sprockets. Note that
181
- the CoffeeScript compiler is written in JavaScript, and you will need
182
- an [ExecJS](https://github.com/rails/execjs)-supported runtime
183
- on your system to invoke it.
149
+ ```
150
+ asset_path("application.css")
151
+ ```
184
152
 
185
- To write JavaScript assets with CoffeeScript, use the extension
186
- `.coffee`.
153
+ Sprockets understands that `application.scss.erb` will compile down to a `application.css`. Ask for what you need, not what you have.
187
154
 
188
- ### JavaScript Templating with EJS and Eco
155
+ If this isn't working like you expect, make sure you didn't typo an extension, and make sure the file is on a "load path" (see framework docs for adding new load paths).
189
156
 
190
- Sprockets supports *JavaScript templates* for client-side rendering of
191
- strings or markup. JavaScript templates have the special format
192
- extension `.jst` and are compiled to JavaScript functions.
157
+ ## File Order Processing
193
158
 
194
- When loaded, a JavaScript template function can be accessed by its
195
- logical path as a property on the global `JST` object. Invoke a
196
- template function to render the template as a string. The resulting
197
- string can then be inserted into the DOM.
159
+ By default files are processed in alphabetical order. This behavior can impact your asset compilation when one asset needs to be loaded before another.
160
+
161
+ For example if you have an `application.js` and it loads another directory
198
162
 
163
+ ```js
164
+ //= require_directory my_javascript
199
165
  ```
200
- <!-- templates/hello.jst.ejs -->
201
- <div>Hello, <span><%= name %></span>!</div>
202
166
 
203
- // application.js
204
- //= require templates/hello
205
- $("#hello").html(JST["templates/hello"]({ name: "Sam" }));
167
+ The files in that directory will be loaded in alphabetical order. If the directory looks like this:
168
+
169
+ ```sh
170
+ $ ls -1 my_javascript/
171
+
172
+ alpha.js
173
+ beta.js
174
+ jquery.js
206
175
  ```
207
176
 
208
- Sprockets supports two JavaScript template languages:
209
- [EJS](https://github.com/sstephenson/ruby-ejs), for embedded
210
- JavaScript, and [Eco](https://github.com/sstephenson/ruby-eco), for
211
- embedded CoffeeScript. Both languages use the familiar `<% … %>`
212
- syntax for embedding logic in templates.
177
+ Then `alpha.js` will be loaded before either of the other two. This can be a problem if `alpha.js` uses jquery. For this reason it is not recommend to use `require_directory` with files that are ordering dependent. You can either require individual files manually:
213
178
 
214
- If the `ejs` gem is available to your application, you can use EJS
215
- templates in Sprockets. EJS templates have the extension `.jst.ejs`.
179
+ ```js
180
+ //= require jquery
181
+ //= require alpha
182
+ //= require beta
183
+ ```
216
184
 
217
- If the `eco` gem is available to your application, you can use [Eco
218
- templates](https://github.com/sstephenson/eco) in Sprockets. Eco
219
- templates have the extension `.jst.eco`. Note that the `eco` gem
220
- depends on the CoffeeScript compiler, so the same caveats apply as
221
- outlined above for the CoffeeScript engine.
185
+ Or you can use index files to proxy your folders.
222
186
 
223
- ### Invoking Ruby with ERB
187
+ ### Index files are proxies for folders
224
188
 
225
- Sprockets provides an ERB engine for preprocessing assets using
226
- embedded Ruby code. Append `.erb` to a CSS or JavaScript asset's
227
- filename to enable the ERB engine.
189
+ In Sprockets index files such as `index.js` or `index.css` files inside of a folder will generate a file with the folder's name. So if you have a `foo/index.js` file it will compile down to `foo.js`. This is similar to NPM's behavior of using [folders as modules](https://nodejs.org/api/modules.html#modules_folders_as_modules). It is also somewhat similar to the way that a file in `public/my_folder/index.html` can be reached by a request to `/my_folder`. This means that you cannot directly use an index file. For example this would not work:
228
190
 
229
- Ruby code embedded in an asset is evaluated in the context of a
230
- `Sprockets::Context` instance for the given asset. Common uses for ERB
231
- include:
191
+ ```erb
192
+ <%= asset_path("foo/index.js") %>
193
+ ```
232
194
 
233
- - embedding another asset as a Base64-encoded `data:` URI with the
234
- `asset_data_uri` helper
235
- - inserting the URL to another asset, such as with the `asset_path`
236
- helper provided by the Sprockets Rails plugin
237
- - embedding other application resources, such as a localized string
238
- database, in a JavaScript asset via JSON
239
- - embedding version constants loaded from another file
195
+ Instead you would need to use:
240
196
 
241
- See the [Helper Methods](lib/sprockets/context.rb) section for more information about
242
- interacting with `Sprockets::Context` instances via ERB.
197
+ ```erb
198
+ <%= asset_path("foo.js") %>
199
+ ```
243
200
 
201
+ Why would you want to use this behavior? It is common behavior where you might want to include an entire directory of files in a top level JavaScript. You can do this in Sprockets using `require_tree .`
244
202
 
245
- ## Managing and Bundling Dependencies
203
+ ```js
204
+ //= require_tree .
205
+ ```
246
206
 
247
- You can create *asset bundles* -- ordered concatenations of asset
248
- source files -- by specifying dependencies in a special comment syntax
249
- at the top of each source file.
207
+ This has the problem that files are required alphabetically. If your directory has `jquery-ui.js` and `jquery.min.js` then Sprockets will require `jquery-ui.js` before `jquery` is required which won't work (because jquery-ui depends on jquery). Previously the only way to get the correct ordering would be to rename your files, something like `0-jquery-ui.js`. Instead of doing that you can use an index file.
250
208
 
251
- Sprockets reads these comments, called *directives*, and processes
252
- them to recursively build a dependency graph. When you request an
253
- asset with dependencies, the dependencies will be included in order at
254
- the top of the file.
209
+ For example, if you have an `application.js` and want all the files in the `foo/` folder you could do this:
255
210
 
256
- ### The Directive Processor
211
+ ```js
212
+ //= require foo.js
213
+ ```
257
214
 
258
- Sprockets runs the *directive processor* on each CSS and JavaScript
259
- source file. The directive processor scans for comment lines beginning
260
- with `=` in comment blocks at the top of the file.
215
+ Then create a file `foo/index.js` that requires all the files in that folder in any order you want using relative references:
261
216
 
262
- ``` js
263
- //= require jquery
264
- //= require jquery-ui
265
- //= require backbone
266
- //= require_tree .
217
+ ```js
218
+ //= require ./foo.min.js
219
+ //= require ./foo-ui.js
267
220
  ```
268
221
 
269
- The first word immediately following `=` specifies the directive
270
- name. Any words following the directive name are treated as
271
- arguments. Arguments may be placed in single or double quotes if they
272
- contain spaces, similar to commands in the Unix shell.
222
+ Now in your `application.js` will correctly load the `foo.min.js` before `foo-ui.js`. If you used `require_tree` it would not work correctly.
273
223
 
274
- **Note**: Non-directive comment lines will be preserved in the final
275
- asset, but directive comments are stripped after
276
- processing. Sprockets will not look for directives in comment blocks
277
- that occur after the first line of code.
224
+ ## Cache
278
225
 
279
- #### Supported Comment Types
226
+ Compiling assets is slow. It requires a lot of disk use to pull assets off of hard drives, a lot of RAM to manipulate those files in memory, and a lot of CPU for compilation operations. Because of this Sprockets has a cache to speed up asset compilation times. That's the good news. The bad news, is that sprockets has a cache and if you've found a bug it's likely going to involve the cache.
280
227
 
281
- The directive processor understands comment blocks in three formats:
228
+ By default Sprockets uses the file system to cache assets. It makes sense that Sprockets does not want to generate assets that already exist on disk in `public/assets`, what might not be as intuitive is that Sprockets needs to cache "partial" assets.
282
229
 
283
- ``` css
284
- /* Multi-line comment blocks (CSS, SCSS, JavaScript)
285
- *= require foo
286
- */
230
+ For example if you have an `application.js` and it is made up of `a.js`, `b.js`, all the way to `z.js`
231
+
232
+ ```js
233
+ //= require a.js
234
+ //= require b.js
235
+ # ...
236
+ //= require z.js
287
237
  ```
288
238
 
289
- ``` js
290
- // Single-line comment blocks (SCSS, JavaScript)
291
- //= require foo
239
+ The first time this file is compiled the `application.js` output will be written to disk, but also intermediary compiled files for `a.js` etc. will be written to the cache directory (usually `tmp/cache/assets`).
240
+
241
+ So, if `b.js` changes it will get recompiled. However instead of having to recompile the other files from `a.js` to `z.js` since they did not change, we can use the prior intermediary files stored in the cached values . If these files were expensive to generate, then this "partial" asset cache strategy can save a lot of time.
242
+
243
+ Directives such as `require`, `link`, `depend_on`, and `depend_on_directory` tell Sprockets what assets need to be re-compiled when a file changes. Files are considered "fresh" based on their mtime on disk and a combination of cache keys.
244
+
245
+ On Rails you can force a "clean" install by clearing the `public/assets` and `tmp/cache/assets` directories.
246
+
247
+
248
+ ## Default Directives
249
+
250
+ Directives take a path or a path to a file. Paths for directive can be relative to the current file, for example:
251
+
252
+ ```js
253
+ //= require ../foo.js
292
254
  ```
293
255
 
294
- ``` coffee
295
- # Single-line comment blocks (CoffeeScript)
296
- #= require foo
256
+ This would load the file up one directory and named `foo.js`. However this isn't required if `foo.js` is on one of Sprocket's load paths. You can simply use
257
+
258
+ ```js
259
+ //= require foo.js
297
260
  ```
298
261
 
299
- ### Sprockets Directives
262
+ Without any prepended dots and sprockets will search for the asset. If the asset is on a sub-path of the load path, you can specify it without using a relative path as well:
300
263
 
301
- You can use the following directives to declare dependencies in asset
302
- source files.
264
+ ```js
265
+ //= require sub/path/foo.js
266
+ ```
267
+
268
+ You can also use an absolute path, but this is discouraged unless you know the directory structure of every machine you plan on running code on.
303
269
 
304
- For directives that take a *path* argument, you may specify either a
305
- logical path or a relative path. Relative paths begin with `./` and
306
- reference files relative to the location of the current file.
270
+ Below is a section for each of the built in directive types supported by Sprockets.
307
271
 
308
- #### The `require` Directive
272
+ ### require
309
273
 
310
274
  `require` *path* inserts the contents of the asset source file
311
275
  specified by *path*. If the file is required multiple times, it will
312
276
  appear in the bundle only once.
313
277
 
314
- ### The `require_directory` Directive ###
278
+ **Example:**
279
+
280
+ If you've got an `a.js`:
281
+
282
+ ```js
283
+ var a = "A";
284
+ ```
285
+
286
+ and a `b.js`;
287
+
288
+ ```js
289
+ var b = "B";
290
+ ```
291
+
292
+ Then you could require both of these in an `application.js`
293
+
294
+ ```js
295
+ //= require a.js
296
+ //= require b.js
297
+ ```
298
+
299
+ Which would generate one concatenated file:
300
+
301
+ ```js
302
+ var a = "A";
303
+ var b = "B";
304
+ ```
305
+
306
+ ### require_self
307
+
308
+ `require_self` tells Sprockets to insert the body of the current
309
+ source file before any subsequent `require` directives.
310
+
311
+ **Example:**
312
+
313
+ If you've got an `a.js`:
314
+
315
+ ```js
316
+ var a = "A";
317
+ ```
318
+
319
+ And an `application.js`
320
+
321
+ ```js
322
+ //= require_self
323
+ //= require 'a.js'
324
+
325
+ var app_name = "Sprockets";
326
+ ```
327
+
328
+ Then this will take the contents of `application.js` (that come after the last require) and put them at the beginning of the file:
329
+
330
+ ```js
331
+ var app_name = "Sprockets";
332
+ var a = "A";
333
+ ```
334
+
335
+ ### require_directory
315
336
 
316
337
  `require_directory` *path* requires all source files of the same
317
338
  format in the directory specified by *path*. Files are required in
318
339
  alphabetical order.
319
340
 
320
- #### The `require_tree` Directive
341
+ **Example:**
342
+
343
+ If we've got a directory called `alphabet` with an `a.js` and `b.js` files like before, then our `application.js`
344
+
345
+ ```js
346
+ //= require_directory alphabet
347
+ ```
348
+
349
+ Would produce:
350
+
351
+ ```js
352
+ var a = "A";
353
+ var b = "B";
354
+ ```
355
+
356
+ You can also see [Index files are proxies for folders](#index-files-are-proxies-for-folders) for another method of organizing folders that will give you more control.
357
+
358
+ ### require_tree
321
359
 
322
360
  `require_tree` *path* works like `require_directory`, but operates
323
361
  recursively to require all files in all subdirectories of the
324
362
  directory specified by *path*.
325
363
 
326
- #### The `require_self` Directive
327
-
328
- `require_self` tells Sprockets to insert the body of the current
329
- source file before any subsequent `require` directives.
330
-
331
- #### The `link` Directive
364
+ ### link
332
365
 
333
366
  `link` *path* declares a dependency on the target *path* and adds it to a list
334
- of subdependencies to automatically be compiled when the asset is written out to
367
+ of subdependencies to be compiled when the asset is written out to
335
368
  disk.
336
369
 
337
- For an example, in a CSS file you might reference an external image that always
338
- needs to be compiled along with the css file.
370
+ Example:
371
+
372
+ If you've got a `manifest.js` file and you want to specify that a `admin.js` source file should be
373
+ generated and made available to the public you can link it by including this in the `manifest.js` file:
339
374
 
340
- ``` css
341
- /*= link "logo.png" */
342
- .logo {
343
- background-image: url(logo.png)
344
- }
375
+ ```
376
+ //= link admin.js
345
377
  ```
346
378
 
347
- However, if you use a `asset-path` or `asset-url` SCSS helper, these links will
348
- automatically be defined for you.
379
+ The argument to `link` is a _logical path_, that is it will be resolved according to the
380
+ configured asset load paths. See [Accessing Assets](#accessing-assets) above. A path relative to
381
+ the current file won't work, it must be a logical path.
382
+
383
+ **Caution**: the "link" directive should always have an explicit extension on the end.
384
+
385
+ `link` can also be used to include manifest files from mounted Rails engines:
349
386
 
350
- ``` css
351
- .logo {
352
- background-image: asset-url("logo.png")
353
- }
354
387
  ```
388
+ //= link my_engine_manifest
389
+ ```
390
+
391
+ This would find a manifest file at `my_engine/app/assets/config/my_engine_manifest.js` and include its directives.
392
+
393
+ ### link_directory
394
+
395
+ `link_directory` *path* links all the files inside the directory specified by the *path*. By "link", we mean they are specified as compilation targets to be written out to disk, and made available to be served to user-agents.
396
+
397
+ Files in subdirectories will not be linked (Compare to [link_tree](#link_tree)).
398
+
399
+ The *path* argument to `link_directory` is _not_ a logical path (it does not use the asset load paths), but is a path relative to the file the `link_directory` directive is found in, and can use `..` to . For instance, you might want:
400
+
401
+ ```js
402
+ //= link_directory ../stylesheets
403
+ ```
404
+
405
+ `link_directory` can take an optional second argument with an extension or content-type, with the
406
+ two arguments separated by a space:
407
+
408
+ ```js
409
+ //= link_directory ../stylesheets text/css
410
+ //= link_directory ../more_stylesheets .css
411
+ ```
412
+
413
+ This will limit the matching files to link to only files recognized as that type. An extension is
414
+ just a shortcut for the type referenced, it does not need to match the source file exactly, but
415
+ instead identifies the content-type the source file must be recognized as.
416
+
417
+ ### link_tree
418
+
419
+ `link_tree` *path* works like [link_directory](#link_directory), but operates
420
+ recursively to link all files in all subdirectories of the
421
+ directory specified by *path*.
355
422
 
356
- #### The `depend_on` Directive
423
+ Example:
424
+
425
+ ```js
426
+ //= link_tree ./path/to/folder
427
+ ```
428
+
429
+ Like `link_directory`, the argument is path relative to the current file, it is *not* a 'logical path' tresolved against load paths.
430
+
431
+
432
+ As with `link_directory`, you can also specify a second argument -- separated by a space -- so any extra files not matching the content-type specified will be ignored:
433
+
434
+ ```js
435
+ //= link_tree ./path/to/folder text/javascript
436
+ //= link_tree ./path/to/other_folder .js
437
+ ```
438
+
439
+
440
+ ### depend_on
357
441
 
358
442
  `depend_on` *path* declares a dependency on the given *path* without
359
443
  including it in the bundle. This is useful when you need to expire an
360
444
  asset's cache in response to a change in another file.
361
445
 
362
- #### The `depend_on_asset` Directive
446
+ **Example:**
447
+
448
+ If you have a file such as `bar.data` and you're using data from that file in another file, then
449
+ you need to tell sprockets that it needs to re-compile the file if `bar.data` changes:
450
+
451
+ ```js
452
+ //= depend_on "bar.data"
453
+
454
+ var bar = '<%= File.read("bar.data") %>'
455
+ ```
456
+
457
+ To depend on an entire directory containing multiple files, use `depend_on_directory`
458
+
459
+ ### depend_on_asset
363
460
 
364
461
  `depend_on_asset` *path* works like `depend_on`, but operates
365
462
  recursively reading the file and following the directives found. This is automatically implied if you use `link`, so consider if it just makes sense using `link` instead of `depend_on_asset`.
366
463
 
367
- #### The `stub` Directive
464
+ ### depend_on_directory
465
+
466
+ `depend_on_directory` *path* declares all files in the given *path* without
467
+ including them in the bundle. This is useful when you need to expire an
468
+ asset's cache in response to a change in multiple files in a single directory.
469
+
470
+ All paths are relative to your declaration and must begin with `./`
471
+
472
+ Also, your must include these directories in your [load path](guides/building_an_asset_processing_framework.md#the-load-path).
473
+
474
+ **Example:**
475
+
476
+ If we've got a directory called `data` with files `a.data` and `b.data`
368
477
 
369
- `stub` *path* allows dependency to be excluded from the asset bundle.
478
+ ```
479
+ // ./data/a.data
480
+ A
481
+ ```
482
+
483
+ ```
484
+ // ./data/b.data
485
+ B
486
+ ```
487
+
488
+ ```
489
+ // ./file.js.erb
490
+ //= depend_on_directory ./data
491
+ var a = '<% File.read('data/a.data') %>'
492
+ var b = '<% File.read('data/b.data') %>'
493
+ ```
494
+
495
+ Would produce:
496
+
497
+ ```js
498
+ var a = "A";
499
+ var b = "B";
500
+ ```
501
+
502
+ You can also see [Index files are proxies for folders](#index-files-are-proxies-for-folders) for another method of organizing folders that will give you more control.
503
+
504
+ ### stub
505
+
506
+ `stub` *path* excludes that asset and its dependencies from the asset bundle.
370
507
  The *path* must be a valid asset and may or may not already be part
371
508
  of the bundle. `stub` should only be used at the top level bundle, not
372
509
  within any subdependencies.
373
510
 
511
+ ### Invoking Ruby with ERB
374
512
 
375
- ## Processor Interface
513
+ Sprockets provides an ERB engine for preprocessing assets using
514
+ embedded Ruby code. Append `.erb` to a CSS or JavaScript asset's
515
+ filename to enable the ERB engine.
376
516
 
377
- Sprockets 2.x was originally design around [Tilt](https://github.com/rtomayko/tilt)'s engine interface. However, starting with 3.x, a new interface has been introduced deprecating Tilt.
517
+ For example if you have an `app/application/javascripts/app_name.js.erb`
518
+ you could have this in the template
378
519
 
379
- Similar to Rack, a processor is a any "callable" (an object that responds to `call`). This maybe a simple Proc or a full class that defines a `def self.call(input)` method. The `call` method accepts an `input` Hash and returns a Hash of metadata.
520
+ ```js
521
+ var app_name = "<%= ENV['APP_NAME'] %>";
522
+ ```
380
523
 
381
- Also see [`Sprockets::ProcessorUtils`](https://github.com/rails/sprockets/blob/master/lib/sprockets/processor_utils.rb) for public helper methods.
524
+ Generated files are cached. If you're using an `ENV` var then
525
+ when you change then ENV var the asset will be forced to
526
+ recompile. This behavior is only true for environment variables,
527
+ if you are pulling a value from somewhere else, such as a database,
528
+ you must manually invalidate the cache to see the change.
382
529
 
383
- ### input Hash
530
+ If you're using Rails, there are helpers you can use such as `asset_url`
531
+ that will cause a recompile if the value changes.
384
532
 
385
- The `input` Hash defines the following public fields.
533
+ For example if you have this in your `application.css`
386
534
 
387
- * `:data` - String asset contents
388
- * `:environment` - Current `Sprockets::Environment` instance.
389
- * `:cache` - A `Sprockets::Cache` instance. See [`Sprockets::Cache#fetch`](https://github.com/rails/sprockets/blob/master/lib/sprockets/cache.rb).
390
- * `:uri` - String Asset URI.
391
- * `:filename` - String full path to original file.
392
- * `:load_path` - String current load path for filename.
393
- * `:name` - String logical path for filename.
394
- * `:content_type` - String content type of the output asset.
395
- * `:metadata` - Hash of processor metadata.
535
+ ``` css
536
+ .logo {
537
+ background: url(<%= asset_url("logo.png") %>)
538
+ }
539
+ ```
540
+
541
+ When you modify the `logo.png` on disk, it will force `application.css` to be
542
+ recompiled so that the fingerprint will be correct in the generated asset.
543
+
544
+ You can manually make sprockets depend on any other file that is generated
545
+ by sprockets by using the `depend_on` or `depend_on_directory` directive. Rails
546
+ implements the above feature by auto calling `depend_on` on the original asset
547
+ when the `asset_url` is used inside of an asset.
548
+
549
+ ### Styling with Sass and SCSS
550
+
551
+ [Sass](http://sass-lang.com/) is a language that compiles to CSS and
552
+ adds features like nested rules, variables, mixins and selector
553
+ inheritance.
554
+
555
+ If the `sass` gem is available to your application, you can use Sass
556
+ to write CSS assets in Sprockets.
557
+
558
+ Sprockets supports both Sass syntaxes. For the original
559
+ whitespace-sensitive syntax, use the extension `.sass`. For the
560
+ new SCSS syntax, use the extension `.scss`.
561
+
562
+ In Rails if you have `app/application/stylesheets/foo.scss` it can
563
+ be referenced with `<%= asset_path("foo.css") %>`. When referencing
564
+ an asset in Rails, always specify the extension you want. Sprockets will
565
+ convert `foo.scss` to `foo.css`.
566
+
567
+ ### Scripting with CoffeeScript
568
+
569
+ [CoffeeScript](http://jashkenas.github.io/coffeescript/) is a
570
+ language that compiles to the "good parts" of JavaScript, featuring a
571
+ cleaner syntax with array comprehensions, classes, and function
572
+ binding.
573
+
574
+ If the `coffee-script` gem is available to your application, you can
575
+ use CoffeeScript to write JavaScript assets in Sprockets. Note that
576
+ the CoffeeScript compiler is written in JavaScript, and you will need
577
+ an [ExecJS](https://github.com/rails/execjs)-supported runtime
578
+ on your system to invoke it.
579
+
580
+ To write JavaScript assets with CoffeeScript, use the extension
581
+ `.coffee`.
582
+
583
+ In Rails if you have `app/application/javascripts/foo.coffee` it can
584
+ be referenced with `<%= asset_path("foo.js") %>`. When referencing
585
+ an asset in Rails, always specify the extension you want. Sprockets will
586
+ convert `foo.coffee` to `foo.js`.
587
+
588
+
589
+ ## ES6 Support
590
+
591
+ Sprockets 4 ships with a Babel processor. This allows you to transpile ECMAScript6 to JavaScript just like you would transpile CoffeeScript to JavaScript. To use this, modify your Gemfile:
592
+
593
+ ```ruby
594
+ gem 'babel-transpiler'
595
+ ```
596
+
597
+ Any asset with the extension `es6` will be treated as an ES6 file:
598
+
599
+ ```es6
600
+ // app/assets/javascript/application.es6
601
+
602
+ var square = (n) => n * n
603
+
604
+ console.log(square);
605
+ ```
606
+
607
+ Start a Rails server in development mode and visit `localhost:3000/assets/application.js`, and this asset will be transpiled to JavaScript:
608
+
609
+ ```js
610
+ var square = function square(n) {
611
+ return n * n;
612
+ };
613
+
614
+ console.log(square);
615
+ ```
616
+
617
+
618
+ ### JavaScript Templating with EJS and Eco
619
+
620
+ Sprockets supports *JavaScript templates* for client-side rendering of
621
+ strings or markup. JavaScript templates have the special format
622
+ extension `.jst` and are compiled to JavaScript functions.
623
+
624
+ When loaded, a JavaScript template function can be accessed by its
625
+ logical path as a property on the global `JST` object. Invoke a
626
+ template function to render the template as a string. The resulting
627
+ string can then be inserted into the DOM.
396
628
 
397
- ``` ruby
398
- def self.call(input)
399
- input[:cache].fetch("my:cache:key:v1") do
400
- # Remove all semicolons from source
401
- input[:data].gsub(";", "")
402
- end
403
- end
404
629
  ```
630
+ <!-- templates/hello.jst.ejs -->
631
+ <div>Hello, <span><%= name %></span>!</div>
405
632
 
406
- ### return Hash
633
+ // application.js
634
+ //= require templates/hello
635
+ $("#hello").html(JST["templates/hello"]({ name: "Sam" }));
636
+ ```
407
637
 
408
- The processor should return metadata `Hash`. With the exception of the `:data` key, the processor can store arbitrary JSON valid values in this Hash. The data will be stored and exposed on `Asset#metadata`.
638
+ Sprockets supports two JavaScript template languages:
639
+ [EJS](https://github.com/sstephenson/ruby-ejs), for embedded
640
+ JavaScript, and [Eco](https://github.com/sstephenson/ruby-eco), for
641
+ embedded CoffeeScript. Both languages use the familiar `<% … %>`
642
+ syntax for embedding logic in templates.
409
643
 
410
- The returned `:data` replaces the assets `input[:data]` to the next processor in the chain. Returning a `String` is shorthand for returning `{ data: str }`. And returning `nil` is shorthand for a no-op where the input data is not transformed, `{ data: input[:data] }`.
644
+ If the `ejs` gem is available to your application, you can use EJS
645
+ templates in Sprockets. EJS templates have the extension `.jst.ejs`.
646
+
647
+ If the `eco` gem is available to your application, you can use [Eco
648
+ templates](https://github.com/sstephenson/eco) in Sprockets. Eco
649
+ templates have the extension `.jst.eco`. Note that the `eco` gem
650
+ depends on the CoffeeScript compiler, so the same caveats apply as
651
+ outlined above for the CoffeeScript engine.
411
652
 
412
- ### metadata
653
+ ### Minifying Assets
413
654
 
414
- The metadata Hash provides an open format for processors to extend the pipeline processor. Internally, built-in processors use it for passing data to each other.
655
+ Several JavaScript and CSS minifiers are available through shorthand.
415
656
 
416
- * `:required` - A `Set` of String Asset URIs that the Bundle processor should concatenate together.
417
- * `:stubbed` - A `Set` of String Asset URIs that will be omitted from the `:required` set.
418
- * `:links` - A `Set` of String Asset URIs that should be compiled along with this asset.
419
- * `:dependencies` - A `Set` of String Cache URIs that should be monitored for caching.
657
+ In Rails you will specify them with:
658
+
659
+ ```ruby
660
+ config.assets.js_compressor = :terser
661
+ config.assets.css_compressor = :scss
662
+ ```
663
+
664
+ If you're not using Rails, configure this directly on the "environment".
420
665
 
421
666
  ``` ruby
422
- def self.call(input)
423
- # Any metadata may start off as nil, so initialize it the value
424
- required = Set.new(input[:metadata][:required])
667
+ environment.js_compressor = :terser
668
+ environment.css_compressor = :scss
669
+ ```
670
+
671
+ If you are using Sprockets directly with a Rack app, don't forget to add
672
+ the `terser` and `sass` gems to your Gemfile when using above options.
673
+
674
+ ### Gzip
675
+
676
+ By default when Sprockets generates a compiled asset file it will also produce a gzipped copy of that file. Sprockets only gzips non-binary files such as CSS, javascript, and SVG files.
677
+
678
+ For example if Sprockets is generating
679
+
680
+ ```
681
+ application-12345.css
682
+ ```
425
683
 
426
- # Manually add "foo.js" asset uri to our bundle
427
- required << input[:environment].resolve("foo.js")
684
+ Then it will also generate a compressed copy in
428
685
 
429
- { required: required }
430
- end
686
+ ```
687
+ application-12345.css.gz
431
688
  ```
432
689
 
690
+ This behavior can be disabled, refer to your framework specific documentation.
433
691
 
434
- ## Development
692
+ ### Serving Assets
435
693
 
436
- ### Contributing
694
+ In production you should generate your assets to a directory on disk and serve them either via Nginx or a feature like Rail's `config.public_file_server.enabled = true`.
437
695
 
438
- The Sprockets source code is [hosted on
439
- GitHub](https://github.com/rails/sprockets). You can check out a
440
- copy of the latest code using Git:
696
+ On Rails you can generate assets by running:
441
697
 
442
- $ git clone https://github.com/rails/sprockets
698
+ ```term
699
+ $ RAILS_ENV=production rake assets:precompile
700
+ ```
443
701
 
444
- If you've found a bug or have a question, please open an issue on the
445
- [Sprockets issue
446
- tracker](https://github.com/rails/sprockets/issues). Or, clone
447
- the Sprockets repository, write a failing test case, fix the bug and
448
- submit a pull request.
702
+ In development Rails will serve assets from `Sprockets::Server`.
449
703
 
450
- ### Version History
704
+ ## Contributing to Sprockets
451
705
 
452
- Please see the [CHANGELOG](https://github.com/rails/sprockets/tree/master/CHANGELOG.md)
706
+ Sprockets is the work of hundreds of contributors. You're encouraged to submit pull requests, propose
707
+ features and discuss issues.
453
708
 
454
- ## License
709
+ See [CONTRIBUTING](CONTRIBUTING.md).
455
710
 
456
- Copyright &copy; 2014 Sam Stephenson <<sstephenson@gmail.com>>
711
+ ### Version History
457
712
 
458
- Copyright &copy; 2014 Joshua Peek <<josh@joshpeek.com>>
713
+ Please see the [CHANGELOG](https://github.com/rails/sprockets/tree/master/CHANGELOG.md)
459
714
 
460
- Sprockets is distributed under an MIT-style license. See LICENSE for
461
- details.
715
+ ## License
716
+ Sprockets is released under the [MIT License](MIT-LICENSE).