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NPM version x86 Linux build Dependency Status NPM Downloads

clean-css-cli is a command-line interface to clean-css - fast and efficient CSS optimizer for Node.js.

Previously a part of clean-css it's a separate package since clean-css 4.0.

Table of Contents

Node.js version support

clean-css-cli requires Node.js 10.0+ (tested on Linux)

Install

npm install clean-css-cli -g

Note: Global install via -g option is recommended unless you want to execute the binary via a relative path, i.e. ./node_modules/.bin/cleancss

Use

cleancss -o one.min.css one.css

What's new in version 5.5

clean-css-cli 5.5 introduces the following changes / features:

  • adds a new --watch switch, which makes cleancss re-run optimizations when watched file(s) change.

What's new in version 5.1

clean-css-cli 5.1 introduces the following changes / features:

  • accept !path/to/file as a way of telling cleancss to ignore such file, also accepts any available glob patterns.

What's new in version 5.0

clean-css-cli 5.0 introduces the following changes / features:

  • adds --batch option (off by default) which processes input files one by one without joining them together;
  • adds --batch-suffix option to specify what gets appended to output filename in batch mode;
  • automatically creates missing output directories;
  • clean-css 5.0 with loads of bugfixes;
  • drops official support for Node.js 4, 6, and 8;
  • --skip-rebase option has been removed as rebasing URLs is disabled by default now
  • --with-rebase option is added if you really want URLs rebasing

What's new in version 4.3

clean-css-cli 4.3 introduces the following changes / features:

  • --input-source-map option which accepts a path to input source map file.

What's new in version 4.2

clean-css-cli 4.2 introduces the following changes / features:

What's new in version 4.1

clean-css-cli 4.1 introduces the following changes / features:

  • clean-css 4.1 as a dependency;
  • --remove-inlined-files option for removing files inlined in <source-file ...> or via @import statements;
  • adds glob pattern matching to source paths, see example;
  • allows non-boolean compatibility options, e.g. --compatibility selectors.mergeLimit=512;
  • extracts CLI into an importable module, so it can be reused and enhanced if needed;
  • adds beforeMinify callback as a second argument to CLI module, see example use case.

What's new in version 4.0

clean-css-cli 4.0 introduces some breaking changes:

  • API and CLI interfaces are split, so CLI has been moved to this repository while API stays at clean-css;
  • --root and --relativeTo options are replaced by a single option taken from --output path - this means that rebasing URLs and import inlining is much simpler but may not be (YMMV) as powerful as in 3.x;
  • --rounding-precision is disabled by default;
  • --rounding-precision applies to all units now, not only px as in 3.x;
  • --skip-import and --skip-import-from are merged into --inline option which defaults to local. Remote @import rules are NOT inlined by default anymore;
  • renames --timeout option to --inline-timeout;
  • remote resources without a protocol, e.g. //fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Domine:700, are not inlined anymore;
  • changes default Internet Explorer compatibility from 9+ to 10+, to revert the old default use --compatibility ie9 option;
  • moves --rounding-precision, --s0, and --s1 options to level 1 optimization options, see examples;
  • moves --skip-media-merging, --skip-restructuring, --semantic-merging, and --skip-shorthand-compacting to level 2 optimizations options, see examples below;
  • level 1 optimizations are the new default, up to 3.x it was level 2;
  • --keep-breaks option is replaced with --format keep-breaks to ease transition;
  • --skip-aggressive-merging option is removed as aggressive merging is replaced by smarter override merging.

CLI options

-b, --batch                    If enabled, optimizes input files one by one instead of joining them together
-c, --compatibility [ie7|ie8]  Force compatibility mode (see Readme for advanced examples)
-d, --debug                    Shows debug information (minification time & compression efficiency)
-f, --format <options>         Controls output formatting, see examples below
-h, --help                     output usage information
-o, --output [output-file]     Use [output-file] as output instead of STDOUT
-O <n> [optimizations]         Turn on level <n> optimizations; optionally accepts a list of fine-grained options, defaults to `1`, IMPORTANT: the prefix is O (a capital o letter), NOT a 0 (zero, a number)
-v, --version                  output the version number
--inline [rules]               Enables inlining for listed sources (defaults to `local`)
--inline-timeout [seconds]     Per connection timeout when fetching remote stylesheets (defaults to 5 seconds)
--input-source-map [file]      Specifies the path of the input source map file
--remove-inlined-files         Remove files inlined in <source-file ...> or via `@import` statements
--source-map                   Enables building input's source map
--source-map-inline-sources    Enables inlining sources inside source maps
--with-rebase                  Enables URLs rebasing

Compatibility modes

There is a certain number of compatibility mode shortcuts, namely:

  • --compatibility '*' (default) - Internet Explorer 10+ compatibility mode
  • --compatibility ie9 - Internet Explorer 9+ compatibility mode
  • --compatibility ie8 - Internet Explorer 8+ compatibility mode
  • --compatibility ie7 - Internet Explorer 7+ compatibility mode

Each of these modes is an alias to a fine grained configuration, with the following options available:

cleancss --compatibility '*,-properties.urlQuotes'
cleancss --compatibility '*,+properties.ieBangHack,+properties.ieFilters'
# [+-]colors.opacity controls `rgba()` / `hsla()` color support; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]properties.backgroundClipMerging controls background-clip merging into shorthand; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]properties.backgroundOriginMerging controls background-origin merging into shorthand; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]properties.backgroundSizeMerging controls background-size merging into shorthand; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]properties.colors controls color optimizations; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]properties.ieBangHack controls keeping IE bang hack; defaults to `off` (-)
# [+-]properties.ieFilters controls keeping IE `filter` / `-ms-filter`; defaults to `off` (-)
# [+-]properties.iePrefixHack controls keeping IE prefix hack; defaults to `off` (-)
# [+-]properties.ieSuffixHack controls keeping IE suffix hack; defaults to `off` (-)
# [+-]properties.merging controls property merging based on understandability; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]properties.shorterLengthUnits controls shortening pixel units into `pc`, `pt`, or `in` units; defaults to `off` (-)
# [+-]properties.spaceAfterClosingBrace controls keeping space after closing brace - `url() no-repeat` cleancss --compatibility '*,into `url('roperties.no-repeat`; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]properties.urlQuotes controls keeping quoting inside `url()`; defaults to `off` (-)
# [+-]properties.zeroUnitsf units `0` value; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]selectors.adjacentSpace controls extra space before `nav` element; defaults to `off` (-)
# [+-]selectors.ie7Hack controls removal of IE7 selector hacks, e.g. `*+html...`; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]units.ch controls treating `ch` as a supported unit; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]units.in controls treating `in` as a supported unit; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]units.pc controls treating `pc` as a supported unit; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]units.pt controls treating `pt` as a supported unit; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]units.rem controls treating `rem` as a supported unit; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]units.vh controls treating `vh` as a supported unit; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]units.vm controls treating `vm` as a supported unit; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]units.vmax controls treating `vmax` as a supported unit; defaults to `on` (+)
# [+-]units.vmin controls treating `vmin` as a supported unit; defaults to `on` (+)

You can also chain more rules after a shortcut when setting a compatibility:

cleancss --compatibility 'ie9,-colors.opacity,-units.rem' one.css

Formatting options

The --format option accept the following options:

cleancss --format beautify one.css
cleancss --format keep-breaks one.css
cleancss --format 'indentBy:1;indentWith:tab' one.css
cleancss --format 'breaks:afterBlockBegins=on;spaces:aroundSelectorRelation=on' one.css
# `breaks` controls where to insert breaks
#   `afterAtRule` controls if a line break comes after an at-rule; e.g. `@charset`; defaults to `off` (alias to `false`)
#   `afterBlockBegins` controls if a line break comes after a block begins; e.g. `@media`; defaults to `off`
#   `afterBlockEnds` controls if a line break comes after a block ends, defaults to `off`
#   `afterComment` controls if a line break comes after a comment; defaults to `off`
#   `afterProperty` controls if a line break comes after a property; defaults to `off`
#   `afterRuleBegins` controls if a line break comes after a rule begins; defaults to `off`
#   `afterRuleEnds` controls if a line break comes after a rule ends; defaults to `off`
#   `beforeBlockEnds` controls if a line break comes before a block ends; defaults to `off`
#   `betweenSelectors` controls if a line break comes between selectors; defaults to `off`
# `breakWith` controls the new line character, can be `windows` or `unix` (aliased via `crlf` and `lf`); defaults to system one, so former on Windows and latter on Unix
# `indentBy` controls number of characters to indent with; defaults to `0`
# `indentWith` controls a character to indent with, can be `space` or `tab`; defaults to `space`
# `spaces` controls where to insert spaces
#   `aroundSelectorRelation` controls if spaces come around selector relations; e.g. `div > a`; defaults to `off`
#   `beforeBlockBegins` controls if a space comes before a block begins; e.g. `.block {`; defaults to `off`
#   `beforeValue` controls if a space comes before a value; e.g. `width: 1rem`; defaults to `off`
# `wrapAt` controls maximum line length; defaults to `off`

Inlining options

--inline option whitelists which @import rules will be processed, e.g.

cleancss --inline local one.css # default
cleancss --inline all # same as local,remote
cleancss --inline local,mydomain.example.com one.css
cleancss --inline 'local,remote,!fonts.googleapis.com' one.css

Optimization levels

The -O option can be either 0, 1 (default), or 2, e.g.

cleancss -O2 one.css

or a fine-grained configuration given via a string.

Please note that level 1 optimization options are generally safe while level 2 optimizations should be safe for most users.

Important: The -O option is using the capital letter O (as in "Oscar"), not the number zero.

Level 0 optimizations

Level 0 optimizations simply means "no optimizations". Use it when you'd like to inline imports and / or rebase URLs but skip everything else, e.g.

cleancss -O0 one.css

Level 1 optimizations

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:

cleancss -O1 one.css
cleancss -O1 removeQuotes:off;roundingPrecision:4;specialComments:1 one.css
# `cleanupCharsets` controls `@charset` moving to the front of a stylesheet; defaults to `on`
# `normalizeUrls` controls URL normalzation; default to `on`
# `optimizeBackground` controls `background` property optimizatons; defaults to `on`
# `optimizeBorderRadius` controls `border-radius` property optimizatons; defaults to `on`
# `optimizeFilter` controls `filter` property optimizatons; defaults to `on`
# `optimizeFontWeight` controls `font-weight` property optimizatons; defaults to `on`
# `optimizeOutline` controls `outline` property optimizatons; defaults to `on`
# `removeEmpty` controls removing empty rules and nested blocks; defaults to `on` (since 4.1.0)
# `removeNegativePaddings` controls removing negative paddings; defaults to `on`
# `removeQuotes` controls removing quotes when unnecessary; defaults to `on`
# `removeWhitespace` controls removing unused whitespace; defaults to `on`
# `replaceMultipleZeros` contols removing redundant zeros; defaults to `on`
# `replaceTimeUnits` controls replacing time units with shorter values; defaults to `on
# `replaceZeroUnits` controls replacing zero values with units; defaults to `on`
# `roundingPrecision` rounds pixel values to `N` decimal places; `off` disables rounding; defaults to `off`
# `selectorsSortingMethod` denotes selector sorting method; can be `natural` or `standard`; defaults to `standard`
# `specialComments` denotes a number of /*! ... */ comments preserved; defaults to `all`
# `tidyAtRules` controls at-rules (e.g. `@charset`, `@import`) optimizing; defaults to `on`
# `tidyBlockScopes` controls block scopes (e.g. `@media`) optimizing; defaults to `on`
# `tidySelectors` controls selectors optimizing; defaults to `on`

There is an all shortcut for toggling all options at the same time, e.g.

cleancss -O1 'all:off;tidySelectors:on' one.css

Level 2 optimizations

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:

cleancss -O2 one.css
cleancss -O2 mergeMedia:off;restructureRules:off;mergeSemantically:on;mergeIntoShorthands:off one.css
# `mergeAdjacentRules` controls adjacent rules merging; defaults to `on`
# `mergeIntoShorthands` controls merging properties into shorthands; defaults to `on`
# `mergeMedia` controls `@media` merging; defaults to `on`
# `mergeNonAdjacentRules` controls non-adjacent rule merging; defaults to `on`
# `mergeSemantically` controls semantic merging; defaults to `off`
# `overrideProperties` controls property overriding based on understandability; defaults to `on`
# `reduceNonAdjacentRules` controls non-adjacent rule reducing; defaults to `on`
# `removeDuplicateFontRules` controls duplicate `@font-face` removing; defaults to `on`
# `removeDuplicateMediaBlocks` controls duplicate `@media` removing; defaults to `on`
# `removeDuplicateRules` controls duplicate rules removing; defaults to `on`
# `removeEmpty` controls removing empty rules and nested blocks; defaults to `on` (since 4.1.0)
# `removeUnusedAtRules` controls unused at rule removing; defaults to `off` (since 4.1.0)
# `restructureRules` controls rule restructuring; defaults to `off`
# `skipProperties` controls which properties won\'t be optimized, defaults to empty list 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.

cleancss -O2 'all:off;removeDuplicateRules:on' one.css

As a module

clean-css-cli can also be used as a module in a way of enhancing its functionality in a programmatic way, e.g.

#!/usr/bin/env node

var cleanCssCli = require('clean-css-cli');

var customPlugin = {
  level1: {
    value: function (propertyName, propertyValue, options) {
      if (propertyName == 'background-image' && propertyValue.indexOf('../valid/path/to') == -1) {
        return propertyValue.replace('url(', 'url(../valid/path/to/');
      } else {
        return propertyValue;
      }
    }
  }
}

return cleanCssCli(process, function (cleanCss) {
  cleanCss.options.plugins.level1Value.push(customPlugin.level1.value);
});

FAQ

More answers can be found in clean-css FAQ section.

How to optimize multiple files?

It can be done by passing in paths to multiple files, e.g.

cleancss -o merged.min.css one.css two.css three.css

Since version 4.1.0 it can also be done using glob pattern matching, e.g.

cleancss -o merged.min.css *.css

How to process multiple files without concatenating them into one output file?

Since clean-css-cli 5.0 you can optimize files one by one, without joining them into one output file, e.g.

cleancss --batch styles/*.css

By default it will pick up every single file from styles directory, optimize it, add a -min suffix to filename (before extension), and write it to disk.

You can use --batch-suffix option to customize the -min suffix, e.g.

cleancss --batch --batch-suffix '.min' styles/*.css # output will have `.min` suffix before `.css`, e.g. styles.min.css

or

cleancss --batch --batch-suffix '' styles/*.css # output files will OVERRIDE input files

Remember you can use glob matching to match exactly the files you want.

Since clean-css-cli 5.1 you can also use a negated pattern to exclude some files from being matched, e.g.

cleancss --batch styles/*.css !styles/*.min.css

How to specify a custom rounding precision?

The level 1 roundingPrecision optimization option accept a string with per-unit rounding precision settings, e.g.

cleancss -O1 roundingPrecision:all=3,px=5

which sets all units rounding precision to 3 digits except px unit precision of 5 digits.

How to rebase relative image URLs?

clean-css-cli will rebase paths it automatically for you when full paths to input files are passed, and --with-rebase & --output options are used, e.g

/*! one.css */
a {
  background:url(image.png)
}
cleancss --with-rebase -o build/one.min.css one.css
/*! build/one.min.css */
a{background:url(../image.png)}

How to apply level 1 & 2 optimizations at the same time?

Using -O option twice and specifying optimization options in each, e.g.

cleancss -O1 all:on,normalizeUrls:off -O2 restructureRules:on one.css

will apply level 1 optimizations, except url normalization, and default level 2 optimizations with rule restructuring.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md.

How to get started?

First clone the sources:

git clone git@github.com:clean-css/clean-css-cli.git

then install dependencies:

cd clean-css-cli
npm install

then use any of the following commands to verify your copy:

npm run check # to lint JS sources with [JSHint](https://github.com/jshint/jshint/)
npm test # to run all tests

License

clean-css-cli is released under the MIT License.