clean-css、cssnano、csso 和 postcss-clean 都是用于压缩和优化 CSS 代码的 npm 包,旨在减小文件体积、提升网页加载性能。它们通过移除注释、空白符、合并重复规则、简化属性值等方式实现压缩,但在架构设计、集成方式、压缩策略和维护状态上存在显著差异。其中 postcss-clean 已被官方废弃,其余三个工具各有适用场景。
在现代前端工程中,CSS 压缩是构建流程的关键一环。虽然目标一致 —— 减小文件体积、提升加载速度 —— 但 clean-css、cssnano、csso 和 postcss-clean 在实现方式、集成能力与压缩策略上存在显著差异。本文将从开发者视角,深入剖析这四个主流工具的技术细节与适用场景。
clean-css 是一个独立的、功能完整的 CSS 优化器,不依赖其他生态。它直接解析 CSS 字符串,执行结构化压缩,并输出结果。适合需要轻量、直接调用的场景。
// clean-css: 独立使用
const CleanCSS = require('clean-css');
const output = new CleanCSS().minify('.foo { color: red; }');
console.log(output.styles);
cssnano 是 PostCSS 生态中的插件集合,通过一系列可配置的 PostCSS 插件(如 postcss-discard-comments、postcss-merge-rules)实现压缩。它天然适配现代构建工具链(如 Vite、Webpack),支持按需启用优化项。
// cssnano: 作为 PostCSS 插件
const postcss = require('postcss');
const cssnano = require('cssnano');
const result = await postcss([cssnano()]).process('.foo { color: red; }', { from: undefined });
console.log(result.css);
csso 同样是一个独立的 CSS 压缩库,强调语义保持(semantic preservation)和结构优化。它采用 AST(抽象语法树)进行深度分析,能安全地合并选择器、移除冗余规则。
// csso: 独立使用
const csso = require('csso');
const minified = csso.minify('.foo { color: red; }').css;
console.log(minified);
postcss-clean 是 clean-css 的 PostCSS 封装层,允许你在 PostCSS 流程中使用 clean-css 的能力。它本身不提供新功能,仅作为桥接工具。
// postcss-clean: 在 PostCSS 中调用 clean-css
const postcss = require('postcss');
const postcssClean = require('postcss-clean');
const result = await postcss([postcssClean()]).process('.foo { color: red; }', { from: undefined });
console.log(result.css);
⚠️ 注意:截至 2024 年,
postcss-clean已被标记为 deprecated(在 npm 页面明确注明 "This package is deprecated")。官方建议直接使用clean-css或迁移到cssnano。新项目不应再使用postcss-clean。
所有工具都提供“安全”与“激进”两种模式,但默认策略不同:
clean-css 默认启用 level: 1(基础清理)和 level: 2(结构优化),但会跳过可能影响渲染的变换(如 @keyframes 重命名)。可通过 compatibility 选项调整浏览器兼容性假设。new CleanCSS({
compatibility: 'ie9', // 保留 IE9 所需的 hack
level: {
2: { mergeMedia: true }
}
}).minify(css);
cssnano 默认使用 default preset,包含一组平衡安全与压缩率的插件。例如,它默认不会合并跨媒体查询的规则,也不会删除未使用的 @keyframes,除非显式启用 discardUnused 等插件。// cssnano 安全默认
postcss([cssnano({ preset: 'default' })]);
csso 默认进行结构压缩(structure minimization),包括安全的选择器合并和声明去重。它不会执行可能改变视觉效果的变换(如颜色值转换),除非启用 restructure 选项。// csso 默认安全压缩
csso.minify(css, { restructure: false }); // 默认即 false
| 功能 | clean-css | cssnano | csso |
|---|---|---|---|
| 合并重复选择器 | ✅ | ✅ (mergeRules) | ✅ (核心能力) |
移除未使用的 @keyframes | ❌ | ✅ (discardUnused) | ❌ |
颜色值简化 (#ff0000 → red) | ✅ | ✅ (colormin) | ❌ |
单位转换 (0px → 0) | ✅ | ✅ (convertValues) | ✅ |
| 安全的 z-index 优化 | ❌ | ✅ (zindex) | ❌ |
💡 示例:颜色简化
/* 输入 */ .box { color: #ff0000; background: rgb(255, 255, 255); }
clean-css输出:.box{color:red;background:#fff}cssnano输出:.box{color:red;background:#fff}csso输出:.box{color:#ff0000;background:#fff}(不转换命名颜色)
cssnano 是最自然的选择。它无缝融入现有流程,且可与其他插件协同工作(如先 autoprefix 再压缩)。// 典型 PostCSS 配置
module.exports = {
plugins: [
require('autoprefixer'),
require('cssnano')({ preset: 'default' })
]
};
postcss-clean 已废弃,即使你想在 PostCSS 中使用 clean-css,也应直接调用 clean-css API,而非通过此封装。clean-css 和 csso 都是优秀选择。
clean-css 提供更细粒度的控制选项(如 compatibility、format)。csso 在结构优化上更激进,通常能产生更小的输出(尤其在大型样式表中)。// 独立脚本示例:使用 csso
const fs = require('fs');
const csso = require('csso');
const css = fs.readFileSync('input.css', 'utf8');
const minified = csso.minify(css).css;
fs.writeFileSync('output.css', minified);
考虑以下输入 CSS:
.foo {
color: #ff0000;
padding: 10px 10px 10px 10px;
}
.bar {
color: red;
margin: 0px;
}
@media screen and (min-width: 768px) {
.foo { color: blue; }
}
@media screen and (min-width: 768px) {
.bar { color: green; }
}
clean-css 输出:
.foo{color:red;padding:10px}.bar{color:red;margin:0}@media screen and (min-width:768px){.foo{color:#00f}.bar{color:green}}
cssnano 输出:
.foo{color:red;padding:10px}.bar{color:red;margin:0}@media screen and (min-width:768px){.foo{color:#00f}.bar{color:green}}
csso 输出:
.bar,.foo{color:red}.foo{padding:10px}.bar{margin:0}@media screen and (min-width:768px){.foo{color:#00f}.bar{color:green}}
关键差异:
csso将.foo和.bar的color: red合并为共享声明,这是其结构优化的核心优势。
clean-css 支持生成 source map,但需手动传入输入文件信息:
new CleanCSS({ sourceMap: true }).minify({ 'styles.css': cssContent });
cssnano 作为 PostCSS 插件,自动继承 PostCSS 的 source map 处理能力,配置简单:
postcss([cssnano()]).process(css, { map: { inline: false } });
csso 不支持 source map。若你的工作流强依赖 source map(如调试压缩后的 CSS),应避免使用 csso。
| 场景 | 推荐工具 | 理由 |
|---|---|---|
| 已使用 PostCSS 的项目 | cssnano | 无缝集成,插件化设计,安全默认,生态完善 |
| 需要极致压缩率且无需 source map | csso | 结构优化能力强,输出体积通常最小 |
| 独立脚本或非 PostCSS 构建流程 | clean-css | 配置灵活,兼容性选项丰富,文档清晰 |
| 新项目 | 避免 postcss-clean | 官方已废弃,无维护保障 |
最终,没有“最好”的工具,只有“最合适”的工具。理解每个工具的设计哲学与能力边界,才能在工程实践中做出精准决策。
选择 clean-css 如果你需要一个独立、轻量且配置灵活的 CSS 压缩器,尤其适用于非 PostCSS 构建流程或需要精细控制兼容性(如 IE 支持)的场景。它提供丰富的选项来平衡压缩率与安全性,但不支持 source map 自动生成。
选择 cssnano 如果你的项目已基于 PostCSS(如使用 Autoprefixer、Tailwind CSS),它能无缝集成到现有构建流程中,提供插件化的压缩策略,默认配置兼顾安全与效率,并原生支持 source map。这是现代前端工程中最推荐的方案。
选择 csso 如果你追求极致的压缩率(尤其在大型 CSS 文件中),且不需要 source map 调试支持。它通过深度结构优化(如智能合并选择器)实现高效压缩,但缺乏对颜色命名简化等常见优化的支持,且无法生成 source map。
不要选择 postcss-clean。该包已被官方明确标记为废弃(deprecated),不再维护。新项目应直接使用 clean-css 或迁移到 cssnano。继续使用此包可能导致兼容性问题或安全漏洞。
clean-css is a fast and efficient CSS optimizer for Node.js platform and any modern browser.
According to tests it is one of the best available.
Table of Contents
@imports correctly?clean-css requires Node.js 10.0+ (tested on Linux, OS X, and Windows)
npm install --save-dev clean-css
var CleanCSS = require('clean-css');
var input = 'a{font-weight:bold;}';
var options = { /* options */ };
var output = new CleanCSS(options).minify(input);
clean-css 5.3 introduces one new feature:
variableValueOptimizers option, which accepts a list of value optimizers or a list of their names, e.g. variableValueOptimizers: ['color', 'fraction'].clean-css 5.0 introduced some breaking changes:
transform callback in level-1 optimizations is removed in favor of new plugins interface;{ compatibility: 'ie10' } flag;rebase option from true to false so URLs are not rebased by default. Please note that if you set rebaseTo option it still counts as setting rebase: true to preserve some of the backward compatibility.And on the new features side of things:
format: {breaks: {afterComment: 2}} means clean-css will add two line breaks after each commentbatch option (defaults to false) is added, when set to true it will process all inputs, given either as an array or a hash, without concatenating them.clean-css 4.2 introduces the following changes / features:
process method for compatibility with optimize-css-assets-webpack-plugin;transition property optimizer;/* clean-css ignore:start */ and /* clean-css ignore:end */ comments;transform callback, see example;format: { breakWith: 'lf' } option.clean-css 4.1 introduces the following changes / features:
inline: false as an alias to inline: ['none'];multiplePseudoMerging compatibility flag controlling merging of rules with multiple pseudo classes / elements;removeEmpty flag in level 1 optimizations controlling removal of rules and nested blocks;removeEmpty flag in level 2 optimizations controlling removal of rules and nested blocks;compatibility: { selectors: { mergeLimit: <number> } } flag in compatibility settings controlling maximum number of selectors in a single rule;minify method improved signature accepting a list of hashes for a predictable traversal;selectorsSortingMethod level 1 optimization allows false or 'none' for disabling selector sorting;fetch option controlling a function for handling remote requests;font shorthand and font-* longhand optimizers;optimizeFont flag in level 1 optimizations due to new font shorthand optimizer;skipProperties flag in level 2 optimizations controlling which properties won't be optimized;animation shorthand and animation-* longhand optimizers;removeUnusedAtRules level 2 optimization controlling removal of unused @counter-style, @font-face, @keyframes, and @namespace at rules;clean-css 4.0 introduces some breaking changes:
root, relativeTo, and target options are replaced by a single rebaseTo option - this means that rebasing URLs and import inlining is much simpler but may not be (YMMV) as powerful as in 3.x;debug option is gone as stats are always provided in output object under stats property;roundingPrecision is disabled by default;roundingPrecision applies to all units now, not only px as in 3.x;processImport and processImportFrom are merged into inline option which defaults to local. Remote @import rules are NOT inlined by default anymore;inliner: { request: ..., timeout: ... } option into inlineRequest and inlineTimeout options;//fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Domine:700, are not inlined anymore;{ compatibility: 'ie9' } flag;keepSpecialComments to specialComments;roundingPrecision and specialComments to level 1 optimizations options, see examples;mediaMerging, restructuring, semanticMerging, and shorthandCompacting to level 2 optimizations options, see examples below;shorthandCompacting option to mergeIntoShorthands;keepBreaks option is replaced with { format: 'keep-breaks' } to ease transition;sourceMap option has to be a boolean from now on - to specify an input source map pass it a 2nd argument to minify method or via a hash instead;aggressiveMerging option is removed as aggressive merging is replaced by smarter override merging.clean-css constructor accepts a hash as a parameter with the following options available:
compatibility - controls compatibility mode used; defaults to ie10+; see compatibility modes for examples;fetch - controls a function for handling remote requests; see fetch option for examples (since 4.1.0);format - controls output CSS formatting; defaults to false; see formatting options for examples;inline - controls @import inlining rules; defaults to 'local'; see inlining options for examples;inlineRequest - controls extra options for inlining remote @import rules, can be any of HTTP(S) request options;inlineTimeout - controls number of milliseconds after which inlining a remote @import fails; defaults to 5000;level - controls optimization level used; defaults to 1; see optimization levels for examples;rebase - controls URL rebasing; defaults to false;rebaseTo - controls a directory to which all URLs are rebased, most likely the directory under which the output file will live; defaults to the current directory;returnPromise - controls whether minify method returns a Promise object or not; defaults to false; see promise interface for examples;sourceMap - controls whether an output source map is built; defaults to false;sourceMapInlineSources - controls embedding sources inside a source map's sourcesContent field; defaults to false.There is a certain number of compatibility mode shortcuts, namely:
new CleanCSS({ compatibility: '*' }) (default) - Internet Explorer 10+ compatibility modenew CleanCSS({ compatibility: 'ie9' }) - Internet Explorer 9+ compatibility modenew CleanCSS({ compatibility: 'ie8' }) - Internet Explorer 8+ compatibility modenew CleanCSS({ compatibility: 'ie7' }) - Internet Explorer 7+ compatibility modeEach of these modes is an alias to a fine grained configuration, with the following options available:
new CleanCSS({
compatibility: {
colors: {
hexAlpha: false, // controls 4- and 8-character hex color support
opacity: true // controls `rgba()` / `hsla()` color support
},
properties: {
backgroundClipMerging: true, // controls background-clip merging into shorthand
backgroundOriginMerging: true, // controls background-origin merging into shorthand
backgroundSizeMerging: true, // controls background-size merging into shorthand
colors: true, // controls color optimizations
ieBangHack: false, // controls keeping IE bang hack
ieFilters: false, // controls keeping IE `filter` / `-ms-filter`
iePrefixHack: false, // controls keeping IE prefix hack
ieSuffixHack: false, // controls keeping IE suffix hack
merging: true, // controls property merging based on understandability
shorterLengthUnits: false, // controls shortening pixel units into `pc`, `pt`, or `in` units
spaceAfterClosingBrace: true, // controls keeping space after closing brace - `url() no-repeat` into `url()no-repeat`
urlQuotes: true, // controls keeping quoting inside `url()`
zeroUnits: true // controls removal of units `0` value
},
selectors: {
adjacentSpace: false, // controls extra space before `nav` element
ie7Hack: true, // controls removal of IE7 selector hacks, e.g. `*+html...`
mergeablePseudoClasses: [':active', ...], // controls a whitelist of mergeable pseudo classes
mergeablePseudoElements: ['::after', ...], // controls a whitelist of mergeable pseudo elements
mergeLimit: 8191, // controls maximum number of selectors in a single rule (since 4.1.0)
multiplePseudoMerging: true // controls merging of rules with multiple pseudo classes / elements (since 4.1.0)
},
units: {
ch: true, // controls treating `ch` as a supported unit
in: true, // controls treating `in` as a supported unit
pc: true, // controls treating `pc` as a supported unit
pt: true, // controls treating `pt` as a supported unit
rem: true, // controls treating `rem` as a supported unit
vh: true, // controls treating `vh` as a supported unit
vm: true, // controls treating `vm` as a supported unit
vmax: true, // controls treating `vmax` as a supported unit
vmin: true // controls treating `vmin` as a supported unit
}
}
})
You can also use a string when setting a compatibility mode, e.g.
new CleanCSS({
compatibility: 'ie9,-properties.merging' // sets compatibility to IE9 mode with disabled property merging
})
The fetch option accepts a function which handles remote resource fetching, e.g.
var request = require('request');
var source = '@import url(http://example.com/path/to/stylesheet.css);';
new CleanCSS({
fetch: function (uri, inlineRequest, inlineTimeout, callback) {
request(uri, function (error, response, body) {
if (error) {
callback(error, null);
} else if (response && response.statusCode != 200) {
callback(response.statusCode, null);
} else {
callback(null, body);
}
});
}
}).minify(source);
This option provides a convenient way of overriding the default fetching logic if it doesn't support a particular feature, say CONNECT proxies.
Unless given, the default loadRemoteResource logic is used.
By default output CSS is formatted without any whitespace unless a format option is given.
First of all there are two shorthands:
new CleanCSS({
format: 'beautify' // formats output in a really nice way
})
and
new CleanCSS({
format: 'keep-breaks' // formats output the default way but adds line breaks for improved readability
})
however format option also accept a fine-grained set of options:
new CleanCSS({
format: {
breaks: { // controls where to insert breaks
afterAtRule: false, // controls if a line break comes after an at-rule; e.g. `@charset`; defaults to `false`
afterBlockBegins: false, // controls if a line break comes after a block begins; e.g. `@media`; defaults to `false`
afterBlockEnds: false, // controls if a line break comes after a block ends, defaults to `false`
afterComment: false, // controls if a line break comes after a comment; defaults to `false`
afterProperty: false, // controls if a line break comes after a property; defaults to `false`
afterRuleBegins: false, // controls if a line break comes after a rule begins; defaults to `false`
afterRuleEnds: false, // controls if a line break comes after a rule ends; defaults to `false`
beforeBlockEnds: false, // controls if a line break comes before a block ends; defaults to `false`
betweenSelectors: false // controls if a line break comes between selectors; defaults to `false`
},
breakWith: '\n', // controls the new line character, can be `'\r\n'` or `'\n'` (aliased as `'windows'` and `'unix'` or `'crlf'` and `'lf'`); defaults to system one, so former on Windows and latter on Unix
indentBy: 0, // controls number of characters to indent with; defaults to `0`
indentWith: 'space', // controls a character to indent with, can be `'space'` or `'tab'`; defaults to `'space'`
spaces: { // controls where to insert spaces
aroundSelectorRelation: false, // controls if spaces come around selector relations; e.g. `div > a`; defaults to `false`
beforeBlockBegins: false, // controls if a space comes before a block begins; e.g. `.block {`; defaults to `false`
beforeValue: false // controls if a space comes before a value; e.g. `width: 1rem`; defaults to `false`
},
wrapAt: false, // controls maximum line length; defaults to `false`
semicolonAfterLastProperty: false // controls removing trailing semicolons in rule; defaults to `false` - means remove
}
})
Also since clean-css 5.0 you can use numerical values for all line breaks, which will repeat a line break that many times, e.g:
new CleanCSS({
format: {
breaks: {
afterAtRule: 2,
afterBlockBegins: 1, // 1 is synonymous with `true`
afterBlockEnds: 2,
afterComment: 1,
afterProperty: 1,
afterRuleBegins: 1,
afterRuleEnds: 1,
beforeBlockEnds: 1,
betweenSelectors: 0 // 0 is synonymous with `false`
}
}
})
which will add nicer spacing between at rules and blocks.
inline option whitelists which @import rules will be processed, e.g.
new CleanCSS({
inline: ['local'] // default; enables local inlining only
})
new CleanCSS({
inline: ['none'] // disables all inlining
})
// introduced in clean-css 4.1.0
new CleanCSS({
inline: false // disables all inlining (alias to `['none']`)
})
new CleanCSS({
inline: ['all'] // enables all inlining, same as ['local', 'remote']
})
new CleanCSS({
inline: ['local', 'mydomain.example.com'] // enables local inlining plus given remote source
})
new CleanCSS({
inline: ['local', 'remote', '!fonts.googleapis.com'] // enables all inlining but from given remote source
})
The level option can be either 0, 1 (default), or 2, e.g.
new CleanCSS({
level: 2
})
or a fine-grained configuration given via a hash.
Please note that level 1 optimization options are generally safe while level 2 optimizations should be safe for most users.
Level 0 optimizations simply means "no optimizations". Use it when you'd like to inline imports and / or rebase URLs but skip everything else.
Level 1 optimizations (default) operate on single properties only, e.g. can remove units when not required, turn rgb colors to a shorter hex representation, remove comments, etc
Here is a full list of available options:
new CleanCSS({
level: {
1: {
cleanupCharsets: true, // controls `@charset` moving to the front of a stylesheet; defaults to `true`
normalizeUrls: true, // controls URL normalization; defaults to `true`
optimizeBackground: true, // controls `background` property optimizations; defaults to `true`
optimizeBorderRadius: true, // controls `border-radius` property optimizations; defaults to `true`
optimizeFilter: true, // controls `filter` property optimizations; defaults to `true`
optimizeFont: true, // controls `font` property optimizations; defaults to `true`
optimizeFontWeight: true, // controls `font-weight` property optimizations; defaults to `true`
optimizeOutline: true, // controls `outline` property optimizations; defaults to `true`
removeEmpty: true, // controls removing empty rules and nested blocks; defaults to `true`
removeNegativePaddings: true, // controls removing negative paddings; defaults to `true`
removeQuotes: true, // controls removing quotes when unnecessary; defaults to `true`
removeWhitespace: true, // controls removing unused whitespace; defaults to `true`
replaceMultipleZeros: true, // contols removing redundant zeros; defaults to `true`
replaceTimeUnits: true, // controls replacing time units with shorter values; defaults to `true`
replaceZeroUnits: true, // controls replacing zero values with units; defaults to `true`
roundingPrecision: false, // rounds pixel values to `N` decimal places; `false` disables rounding; defaults to `false`
selectorsSortingMethod: 'standard', // denotes selector sorting method; can be `'natural'` or `'standard'`, `'none'`, or false (the last two since 4.1.0); defaults to `'standard'`
specialComments: 'all', // denotes a number of /*! ... */ comments preserved; defaults to `all`
tidyAtRules: true, // controls at-rules (e.g. `@charset`, `@import`) optimizing; defaults to `true`
tidyBlockScopes: true, // controls block scopes (e.g. `@media`) optimizing; defaults to `true`
tidySelectors: true, // controls selectors optimizing; defaults to `true`,
variableValueOptimizers: [] // controls value optimizers which are applied to variables
}
}
});
There is an all shortcut for toggling all options at the same time, e.g.
new CleanCSS({
level: {
1: {
all: false, // set all values to `false`
tidySelectors: true // turns on optimizing selectors
}
}
});
Level 2 optimizations operate at rules or multiple properties level, e.g. can remove duplicate rules, remove properties redefined further down a stylesheet, or restructure rules by moving them around.
Please note that if level 2 optimizations are turned on then, unless explicitely disabled, level 1 optimizations are applied as well.
Here is a full list of available options:
new CleanCSS({
level: {
2: {
mergeAdjacentRules: true, // controls adjacent rules merging; defaults to true
mergeIntoShorthands: true, // controls merging properties into shorthands; defaults to true
mergeMedia: true, // controls `@media` merging; defaults to true
mergeNonAdjacentRules: true, // controls non-adjacent rule merging; defaults to true
mergeSemantically: false, // controls semantic merging; defaults to false
overrideProperties: true, // controls property overriding based on understandability; defaults to true
removeEmpty: true, // controls removing empty rules and nested blocks; defaults to `true`
reduceNonAdjacentRules: true, // controls non-adjacent rule reducing; defaults to true
removeDuplicateFontRules: true, // controls duplicate `@font-face` removing; defaults to true
removeDuplicateMediaBlocks: true, // controls duplicate `@media` removing; defaults to true
removeDuplicateRules: true, // controls duplicate rules removing; defaults to true
removeUnusedAtRules: false, // controls unused at rule removing; defaults to false (available since 4.1.0)
restructureRules: false, // controls rule restructuring; defaults to false
skipProperties: [] // controls which properties won't be optimized, defaults to `[]` which means all will be optimized (since 4.1.0)
}
}
});
There is an all shortcut for toggling all options at the same time, e.g.
new CleanCSS({
level: {
2: {
all: false, // sets all values to `false`
removeDuplicateRules: true // turns on removing duplicate rules
}
}
});
In clean-css version 5 and above you can define plugins which run alongside level 1 and level 2 optimizations, e.g.
var myPlugin = {
level1: {
property: function removeRepeatedBackgroundRepeat(_rule, property, _options) {
// So `background-repeat:no-repeat no-repeat` becomes `background-repeat:no-repeat`
if (property.name == 'background-repeat' && property.value.length == 2 && property.value[0][1] == property.value[1][1]) {
property.value.pop();
property.dirty = true;
}
}
}
}
new CleanCSS({plugins: [myPlugin]})
Search test\module-test.js for plugins or check out lib/optimizer/level-1/property-optimizers and lib/optimizer/level-1/value-optimizers for more examples.
Important: To rewrite your old transform as a plugin, check out this commit.
Once configured clean-css provides a minify method to optimize a given CSS, e.g.
var output = new CleanCSS(options).minify(source);
The output of the minify method is a hash with following fields:
console.log(output.styles); // optimized output CSS as a string
console.log(output.sourceMap); // output source map if requested with `sourceMap` option
console.log(output.errors); // a list of errors raised
console.log(output.warnings); // a list of warnings raised
console.log(output.stats.originalSize); // original content size after import inlining
console.log(output.stats.minifiedSize); // optimized content size
console.log(output.stats.timeSpent); // time spent on optimizations in milliseconds
console.log(output.stats.efficiency); // `(originalSize - minifiedSize) / originalSize`, e.g. 0.25 if size is reduced from 100 bytes to 75 bytes
Example: Minifying a CSS string:
const CleanCSS = require("clean-css");
const output = new CleanCSS().minify(`
a {
color: blue;
}
div {
margin: 5px
}
`);
console.log(output);
// Log:
{
styles: 'a{color:#00f}div{margin:5px}',
stats: {
efficiency: 0.6704545454545454,
minifiedSize: 29,
originalSize: 88,
timeSpent: 6
},
errors: [],
inlinedStylesheets: [],
warnings: []
}
The minify method also accepts an input source map, e.g.
var output = new CleanCSS(options).minify(source, inputSourceMap);
or a callback invoked when optimizations are finished, e.g.
new CleanCSS(options).minify(source, function (error, output) {
// `output` is the same as in the synchronous call above
});
To optimize a single file, without reading it first, pass a path to it to minify method as follows:
var output = new CleanCSS(options).minify(['path/to/file.css'])
(if you won't enclose the path in an array, it will be treated as a CSS source instead).
There are several ways to optimize multiple files at the same time, see How to optimize multiple files?.
If you prefer clean-css to return a Promise object then you need to explicitely ask for it, e.g.
new CleanCSS({ returnPromise: true })
.minify(source)
.then(function (output) { console.log(output.styles); })
.catch(function (error) { // deal with errors });
Clean-css has an associated command line utility that can be installed separately using npm install clean-css-cli. For more detailed information, please visit https://github.com/clean-css/clean-css-cli.
It can be done either by passing an array of paths, or, when sources are already available, a hash or an array of hashes:
new CleanCSS().minify(['path/to/file/one', 'path/to/file/two']);
new CleanCSS().minify({
'path/to/file/one': {
styles: 'contents of file one'
},
'path/to/file/two': {
styles: 'contents of file two'
}
});
new CleanCSS().minify([
{'path/to/file/one': {styles: 'contents of file one'}},
{'path/to/file/two': {styles: 'contents of file two'}}
]);
Passing an array of hashes allows you to explicitly specify the order in which the input files are concatenated. Whereas when you use a single hash the order is determined by the traversal order of object properties - available since 4.1.0.
Important note - any @import rules already present in the hash will be resolved in memory.
Since clean-css 5.0 you can, when passing an array of paths, hash, or array of hashes (see above), ask clean-css not to join styles into one output, but instead return stylesheets optimized one by one, e.g.
var output = new CleanCSS({ batch: true }).minify(['path/to/file/one', 'path/to/file/two']);
var outputOfFile1 = output['path/to/file/one'].styles // all other fields, like errors, warnings, or stats are there too
var outputOfFile2 = output['path/to/file/two'].styles
@imports correctly?In order to inline remote @import statements you need to provide a callback to minify method as fetching remote assets is an asynchronous operation, e.g.:
var source = '@import url(http://example.com/path/to/remote/styles);';
new CleanCSS({ inline: ['remote'] }).minify(source, function (error, output) {
// output.styles
});
If you don't provide a callback, then remote @imports will be left as is.
Please see plugins.
The level 1 roundingPrecision optimization option accept a string with per-unit rounding precision settings, e.g.
new CleanCSS({
level: {
1: {
roundingPrecision: 'all=3,px=5'
}
}
}).minify(source)
which sets all units rounding precision to 3 digits except px unit precision of 5 digits.
rpx units?Since rpx is a non standard unit (see #1074), it will be dropped by default as an invalid value.
However you can treat rpx units as regular ones:
new CleanCSS({
compatibility: {
customUnits: {
rpx: true
}
}
}).minify(source)
Note: available since 4.2.0.
Wrap the CSS fragment in special comments which instruct clean-css to preserve it, e.g.
.block-1 {
color: red
}
/* clean-css ignore:start */
.block-special {
color: transparent
}
/* clean-css ignore:end */
.block-2 {
margin: 0
}
Optimizing this CSS will result in the following output:
.block-1{color:red}
.block-special {
color: transparent
}
.block-2{margin:0}
Use the /*! notation instead of the standard one /*:
/*!
Important comments included in optimized output.
*/
clean-css will handle it automatically for you in the following cases:
rebaseTo is used with any of above two.To generate a source map, use sourceMap: true option, e.g.:
new CleanCSS({ sourceMap: true, rebaseTo: pathToOutputDirectory })
.minify(source, function (error, output) {
// access output.sourceMap for SourceMapGenerator object
// see https://github.com/mozilla/source-map/#sourcemapgenerator for more details
});
You can also pass an input source map directly as a 2nd argument to minify method:
new CleanCSS({ sourceMap: true, rebaseTo: pathToOutputDirectory })
.minify(source, inputSourceMap, function (error, output) {
// access output.sourceMap to access SourceMapGenerator object
// see https://github.com/mozilla/source-map/#sourcemapgenerator for more details
});
or even multiple input source maps at once:
new CleanCSS({ sourceMap: true, rebaseTo: pathToOutputDirectory }).minify({
'path/to/source/1': {
styles: '...styles...',
sourceMap: '...source-map...'
},
'path/to/source/2': {
styles: '...styles...',
sourceMap: '...source-map...'
}
}, function (error, output) {
// access output.sourceMap as above
});
Using the hash configuration specifying both optimization levels, e.g.
new CleanCSS({
level: {
1: {
all: true,
normalizeUrls: false
},
2: {
restructureRules: true
}
}
})
will apply level 1 optimizations, except url normalization, and default level 2 optimizations with rule restructuring.
All level 2 optimizations are dispatched here, and this is what they do:
recursivelyOptimizeBlocks - does all the following operations on a nested block, like @media or @keyframe;recursivelyOptimizeProperties - optimizes properties in rulesets and flat at-rules, like @font-face, by splitting them into components (e.g. margin into margin-(bottom|left|right|top)), optimizing, and restoring them back. You may want to use mergeIntoShorthands option to control whether you want to turn multiple components into shorthands;removeDuplicates - gets rid of duplicate rulesets with exactly the same set of properties, e.g. when including a Sass / Less partial twice for no good reason;mergeAdjacent - merges adjacent rulesets with the same selector or rules;reduceNonAdjacent - identifies which properties are overridden in same-selector non-adjacent rulesets, and removes them;mergeNonAdjacentBySelector - identifies same-selector non-adjacent rulesets which can be moved (!) to be merged, requires all intermediate rulesets to not redefine the moved properties, or if redefined to have the same value;mergeNonAdjacentByBody - same as the one above but for same-selector non-adjacent rulesets;restructure - tries to reorganize different-selector different-rules rulesets so they take less space, e.g. .one{padding:0}.two{margin:0}.one{margin-bottom:3px} into .two{margin:0}.one{padding:0;margin-bottom:3px};removeDuplicateFontAtRules - removes duplicated @font-face rules;removeDuplicateMediaQueries - removes duplicated @media nested blocks;mergeMediaQueries - merges non-adjacent @media at-rules by the same rules as mergeNonAdjacentBy* above;If clean-css encounters invalid CSS, it will try to remove the invalid part and continue optimizing the rest of the code. It will make you aware of the problem by generating an error or warning. Although clean-css can work with invalid CSS, it is always recommended that you fix warnings and errors in your CSS.
Example: Minify invalid CSS, resulting in two warnings:
const CleanCSS = require("clean-css");
const output = new CleanCSS().minify(`
a {
-notarealproperty-: 5px;
color:
}
div {
margin: 5px
}
`);
console.log(output);
// Log:
{
styles: 'div{margin:5px}',
stats: {
efficiency: 0.8695652173913043,
minifiedSize: 15,
originalSize: 115,
timeSpent: 1
},
errors: [],
inlinedStylesheets: [],
warnings: [
"Invalid property name '-notarealproperty-' at 4:8. Ignoring.",
"Empty property 'color' at 5:8. Ignoring."
]
}
Example: Minify invalid CSS, resulting in one error:
const CleanCSS = require("clean-css");
const output = new CleanCSS().minify(`
@import "idontexist.css";
a {
color: blue;
}
div {
margin: 5px
}
`);
console.log(output);
// Log:
{
styles: 'a{color:#00f}div{margin:5px}',
stats: {
efficiency: 0.7627118644067796,
minifiedSize: 28,
originalSize: 118,
timeSpent: 2
},
errors: [
'Ignoring local @import of "idontexist.css" as resource is missing.'
],
inlinedStylesheets: [],
warnings: []
}
An example of how you can include clean-css in gulp
const { src, dest, series } = require('gulp');
const CleanCSS = require('clean-css');
const concat = require('gulp-concat');
function css() {
const options = {
compatibility: '*', // (default) - Internet Explorer 10+ compatibility mode
inline: ['all'], // enables all inlining, same as ['local', 'remote']
level: 2 // Optimization levels. The level option can be either 0, 1 (default), or 2, e.g.
// Please note that level 1 optimization options are generally safe while level 2 optimizations should be safe for most users.
};
return src('app/**/*.css')
.pipe(concat('style.min.css'))
.on('data', function(file) {
const buferFile = new CleanCSS(options).minify(file.contents)
return file.contents = Buffer.from(buferFile.styles)
})
.pipe(dest('build'))
}
exports.css = series(css)
There is a number of 3rd party plugins to popular build tools:
See CONTRIBUTING.md.
First clone the sources:
git clone git@github.com:clean-css/clean-css.git
then install dependencies:
cd clean-css
npm install
then use any of the following commands to verify your copy:
npm run bench # for clean-css benchmarks (see [test/bench.js](https://github.com/clean-css/clean-css/blob/master/test/bench.js) for details)
npm run browserify # to create the browser-ready clean-css version
npm run check # to lint JS sources with [JSHint](https://github.com/jshint/jshint/)
npm test # to run all tests
Sorted alphabetically by GitHub handle:
@import processing;@import processing inside comments;minify method source traversal in ES6;sys package;@import inlining and URL rebasing.@import inlining behavior;clean-css is released under the MIT License.