UglifyJS 2 ========== UglifyJS is a JavaScript parser, minifier, compressor or beautifier toolkit. This page documents the command line utility. For [API and internals documentation see my website](http://lisperator.net/uglifyjs/). There's also an [in-browser online demo](http://lisperator.net/uglifyjs/#demo) (for Firefox, Chrome and probably Safari). Install ------- From NPM: npm install uglify-js From Git: git clone git://github.com/mishoo/UglifyJS2.git cd UglifyJS2 npm link . Usage ----- uglifyjs [input files] [options] UglifyJS2 can take multiple input files. It's recommended that you pass the input files first, then pass the options. UglifyJS will parse input files in sequence and apply any compression options. The files are parsed in the same global scope, that is, a reference from a file to some variable/function declared in another file will be matched properly. If you want to read from STDIN instead, pass a single dash instead of input files. The available options are: --source-map Specify an output file where to generate source map. [string] --source-map-root The path to the original source to be included in the source map. [string] --in-source-map Input source map, useful if you're compressing JS that was generated from some other original code. -p, --prefix Skip prefix for original filenames that appear in source maps. For example -p 3 will drop 3 directories from file names and ensure they are relative paths. -o, --output Output file (default STDOUT). -b, --beautify Beautify output/specify output options. [string] -m, --mangle Mangle names/pass mangler options. [string] -r, --reserved Reserved names to exclude from mangling. -c, --compress Enable compressor/pass compressor options. Pass options like -c hoist_vars=false,if_return=false. Use -c with no argument to use the default compression options. [string] -d, --define Global definitions [string] --comments Preserve copyright comments in the output. By default this works like Google Closure, keeping JSDoc-style comments that contain "@license" or "@preserve". You can optionally pass one of the following arguments to this flag: - "all" to keep all comments - a valid JS regexp (needs to start with a slash) to keep only comments that match. Note that currently not *all* comments can be kept when compression is on, because of dead code removal or cascading statements into sequences. [string] --stats Display operations run time on STDERR. [boolean] --acorn Use Acorn for parsing. [boolean] --spidermonkey Assume input fles are SpiderMonkey AST format (as JSON). [boolean] --self Build itself (UglifyJS2) as a library (implies --wrap=UglifyJS --export-all) [boolean] --wrap Embed everything in a big function, making the “exports” and “global” variables available. You need to pass an argument to this option to specify the name that your module will take when included in, say, a browser. [string] --export-all Only used when --wrap, this tells UglifyJS to add code to automatically export all globals. [boolean] -v, --verbose Verbose [boolean] -V, --version Print version number and exits. [boolean] Specify `--output` (`-o`) to declare the output file. Otherwise the output goes to STDOUT. ## Source map options UglifyJS2 can generate a source map file, which is highly useful for debugging your compressed JavaScript. To get a source map, pass `--source-map output.js.map` (full path to the file where you want the source map dumped). Additionally you might need `--source-map-root` to pass the URL where the original files can be found. In case you are passing full paths to input files to UglifyJS, you can use `--prefix` (`-p`) to specify the number of directories to drop from the path prefix when declaring files in the source map. For example: uglifyjs /home/doe/work/foo/src/js/file1.js \ /home/doe/work/foo/src/js/file2.js \ -o foo.min.js \ --source-map foo.min.js.map \ --source-map-root http://foo.com/src \ -p 5 -c -m The above will compress and mangle `file1.js` and `file2.js`, will drop the output in `foo.min.js` and the source map in `foo.min.js.map`. The source mapping will refer to `http://foo.com/src/js/file1.js` and `http://foo.com/src/js/file2.js` (in fact it will list `http://foo.com/src` as the source map root, and the original files as `js/file1.js` and `js/file2.js`). ### Composed source map When you're compressing JS code that was output by a compiler such as CoffeeScript, mapping to the JS code won't be too helpful. Instead, you'd like to map back to the original code (i.e. CoffeeScript). UglifyJS has an option to take an input source map. Assuming you have a mapping from CoffeeScript → compiled JS, UglifyJS can generate a map from CoffeeScript → compressed JS by mapping every token in the compiled JS to its original location. To use this feature you need to pass `--in-source-map /path/to/input/source.map`. Normally the input source map should also point to the file containing the generated JS, so if that's correct you can omit input files from the command line. ## Mangler options To enable the mangler you need to pass `--mangle` (`-m`). Optionally you can pass `-m sort=true` (we'll possibly have other flags in the future) in order to assign shorter names to most frequently used variables. This saves a few hundred bytes on jQuery before gzip, but the output is _bigger_ after gzip (and seems to happen for other libraries I tried it on) therefore it's not enabled by default. When mangling is enabled but you want to prevent certain names from being mangled, you can declare those names with `--reserved` (`-r`) — pass a comma-separated list of names. For example: uglifyjs ... -m -r '$,require,exports' to prevent the `require`, `exports` and `$` names from being changed. ## Compressor options You need to pass `--compress` (`-c`) to enable the compressor. Optionally you can pass a comma-separated list of options. Options are in the form `foo=bar`, or just `foo` (the latter implies a boolean option that you want to set `true`; it's effectively a shortcut for `foo=true`). The defaults should be tuned for maximum compression on most code. Here are the available options (all are `true` by default, except `hoist_vars`): - `sequences` -- join consecutive simple statements using the comma operator - `properties` -- rewrite property access using the dot notation, for example `foo["bar"] → foo.bar` - `dead-code` -- remove unreachable code - `drop-debugger` -- remove `debugger;` statements - `unsafe` -- apply "unsafe" transformations (discussion below) - `conditionals` -- apply optimizations for `if`-s and conditional expressions - `comparisons` -- apply certain optimizations to binary nodes, for example: `!(a <= b) → a > b` (only when `unsafe`), attempts to negate binary nodes, e.g. `a = !b && !c && !d && !e → a=!(b||c||d||e)` etc. - `evaluate` -- attempt to evaluate constant expressions - `booleans` -- various optimizations for boolean context, for example `!!a ? b : c → a ? b : c` - `loops` -- optimizations for `do`, `while` and `for` loops when we can statically determine the condition - `unused` -- drop unreferenced functions and variables - `hoist-funs` -- hoist function declarations - `hoist-vars` -- hoist `var` declarations (this is `false` by default because it seems to increase the size of the output in general) - `if-return` -- optimizations for if/return and if/continue - `join-vars` -- join consecutive `var` statements - `cascade` -- small optimization for sequences, transform `x, x` into `x` and `x = something(), x` into `x = something()` - `warnings` -- display warnings when dropping unreachable code or unused declarations etc. ### Conditional compilation You can use the `--define` (`-d`) switch in order to declare global variables that UglifyJS will assume to be constants (unless defined in scope). For example if you pass `--define DEBUG=false` then, coupled with dead code removal UglifyJS will discard the following from the output: if (DEBUG) { console.log("debug stuff"); } UglifyJS will warn about the condition being always false and about dropping unreachable code; for now there is no option to turn off only this specific warning, you can pass `warnings=false` to turn off *all* warnings. Another way of doing that is to declare your globals as constants in a separate file and include it into the build. For example you can have a `build/defines.js` file with the following: const DEBUG = false; const PRODUCTION = true; // etc. and build your code like this: uglifyjs build/defines.js js/foo.js js/bar.js... -c UglifyJS will notice the constants and, since they cannot be altered, it will evaluate references to them to the value itself and drop unreachable code as usual. The possible downside of this approach is that the build will contain the `const` declarations. ## Beautifier options The code generator tries to output shortest code possible by default. In case you want beautified output, pass `--beautify` (`-b`). Optionally you can pass additional arguments that control the code output: - `beautify` (default `true`) -- whether to actually beautify the output. Passing `-b` will set this to true, but you might need to pass `-b` even when you want to generate minified code, in order to specify additional arguments, so you can use `-b beautify=false` to override it. - `indent-level` (default 4) - `indent-start` (default 0) -- prefix all lines by that many spaces - `quote-keys` (default `false`) -- pass `true` to quote all keys in literal objects - `space-colon` (default `true`) -- insert a space after the colon signs - `ascii-only` (default `false`) -- escape Unicode characters in strings and regexps - `inline-script` (default `false`) -- escape the slash in occurrences of `