When I run the my task it says files are injected to index.html in the console; but there is no js files injected in the index.html file actually.
my task functions is as follow
gulp.task('testing', function() {
gulp.src('../dist/app/index.html')
.pipe(debug())
.pipe(inject(gulp.src('../dist/app/js/*.js', {read: false}), {relative: true}))
.pipe(debug())
.pipe(gulp.dest('../dist/app/js'));
});
I am using gulp3.9.1 and gulp-inject version 3.0.0, any help is advance appreciated.
It seems like the destination path specified points to js directory '../dist/app/js'
See if the new file is in js folder. If yes, you probably don't want /js part in the path
Also you can try to add
<!-- inject:js -->
<!-- endinject -->
into you index.html at the place where you want your js scripts to be injected
Related
I created an angular single-page web app for my customer.
Now they need to integrate the app into a page of their (wordpress) website.
EDIT: in other words they want the app inside an existing wordpress page
what's the best approach?
I tried iframe but it does not work: no resize on app content change and problems with modals.
Thanks
If you need to insert it in an existing page with an already done template you can create a shortcode and a plugin:
create a folder like "your_spa" in the plugin folder of wordpress (/wp-content/plugins/)
create a php file named your_spa.php inside the new generated folder
put this inside the file "your_spa.php"
<?php
/*
Plugin Name: your spa plugin
Description: description
*/
function your_spa_code(){ ?>
<!-- put here your code (this will be inside the body of the page) -->
<?php }
add_shortcode( 'yourspa', 'your_spa_code' );
?>
take care of the links/resources urls (js, json, css): place them anywhere you want them, but remember the path (like in html path => url)
remember to let the apache user read the files (file permissions)
activate the plugin "your spa plugin" inside the wordpress dashboard
use [yourspa] inside a blogpost/page as a shortcut
And now you have created a plugin and a shortcode!
PS: remember that your code will be surrounded by the code of the existing page
It's a little dirty but it's the easies solution.
I had some success with simply rendering Angular's bootstrap code, the <app-root> and <script> tags, just as they are served from a standalone an Angular deployment.
I just added the following HTML in a post, using the HTML editor.
Of course, I had to fiddle the JS script source URLs. Rendering all this HTML could be done with a Wordpress shortcode and plugin that asks for a URL path to the JS files.
<app-root></app-root>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://localhost:4200/inline.bundle.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://localhost:4200/polyfills.bundle.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://localhost:4200/styles.bundle.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://localhost:4200/scripts.bundle.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://localhost:4200/vendor.bundle.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://localhost:4200/main.bundle.js"></script>
This worked poorly with the Divi theme and a 'code' module, totally screwed up the page. Attempts to use the offical Wordpress mechanism for including JS scripts (wp_enqueue_script) failed since the <app-root> tag can't be found when the scripts load.
Within a new SailsJs application I'm trying to serve an angular app from the assets folder. Considering assets/admin/index.html I can access localhost:1337/admin, however, none of the additional js files or sub-directories can be accessed. I've even checked the .tmp/public folder and everything is copying over correctly but when I try to refer to any file within the admin folder other than index.html it can not be found.
Referring to angular module in index.html
<!--Sailes IO Library-->
<script src="/js/dependencies/sails.io.js"></script>
<!--Vendor Scripts-->
<script src="/js/angular-animate.js"></script>
<script src="/js/angular-aria.js"></script>
<script src="/js/angular-material.js"></script>
<script src="/js/angular-messages.js"></script>
<script src="/js/angular.js"></script>
<script src="/js/release/angular-ui-router.js"></script>
<!--Admin Application Definition-->
<script src="/admin/app.js"></script>
<script src="/admin/config/router.js"></script>
However, app.js is not being served!
Can I not do it this way? How can I access my angular application files from the admin folder?
To load an angular application in sails.js you need to serve the index.html file from the views folder.
so in you config/routes.js
'/': {
view: 'homepage'
}
this means when you hit the root of you application then homepage.ejs from the views folder is served
copy the contents of assest/admin/index.html file in homepage.ejs and if necessary check that all the link and script tags have the file path relative to assets folder.
once the homepage is served you can use angular ui router for routing purpose
Note--
change your
localhost:1337/admin to
localhost:1337
After reading the documentation a little more in-depth, sails will also serve index.html files found in the assets folder. So I created a new folder, inside that folder I created a new index.html and app.js file, and then lifted. My index.html file was then available at a url that matched my folder name. My folder was called "admin" so navigating to localhost:1337/admin loaded my index.html page.
As far as serving the other dependencies, I used grunt-bower and a new grunt task to start serving my bower_components over to my assets/vendor folder.
I am trying to run the google-cdn plugin via Gulp (gulp-google-cdn) to covert bower references in my HTML file into the CDN equivalent. Gulp-google-cdn does not do anything, and enabling the DEBUG, shows: google-cdn Could not find satisfying version for angular-material ^1.0.5
My task (I use a subdirectory with tasks per file):
gulp.task('HTML:Release', function() {
return gulp.src('../src/*.html')
.pipe(googleCdn(require('../bower.json')))
.pipe(gulp.dest('../dist/') )
;
});
HTML:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html ng-app="OntarioDarts" ng-cloak lang="en">
<head>
</head>
<body layout="row" ng-cloak>
<div layout="column" class="relative" layout-fill role="main">
<md-content flex md-scroll-y>
<ng-view></ng-view>
</md-content>
</div>
</body>
<!-- Load JavaScript Last for Speed. Load from CDN for cache speed -->
<!-- Angular JS -->
<script src="bower_components/angular/angular.js"></script>
<script src="bower_components/angular-material/angular-material.min.js"></script>
<script src="bower_components/angular-material-icons/angular-material-icons.min.js"></script>
The distribution file does not point Angular to the CDN, but still tries to use the bower_components, even though it did not complain that the files were not found.
One problem I found is that I have Angular set at ^1.5.0 in my bower.json. However, I was only using the default Google CDN, which does not currently have the 1.5.0 available. I changed the version in the bower.json file to be ^1.4.0, and then the file was changed to use the CDN with version 1.4.7.
The problem though is that the reference did not get changed to HTTPS://, but was left simply as src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.4.7/angular.min.js"
Gulp-google-cdn does not do anything, and enabling the DEBUG, shows: google-cdn Could not find satisfying version for angular-material ^1.0.5
That's because the newest version available from the Google CDN is 1.0.4.
The problem though is that the reference did not get changed to HTTPS://, but was left simply as src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.4.7/angular.min.js"
That's not necessarily a problem. That's a protocol-relative URL. If your page is served over HTTP, angular.min.js is fetched over HTTP. If your page is served over HTTPS, angular.min.js is fetched over HTTPS.
Unless you absolutely need angular.min.js to always be fetched over HTTPS you can just leave it like that.
EDIT: ... except for when you're trying to open a local HTML file in a browser. Then your protocol is file:// and the protocol relative URL will refer to your local file system. Which of course leads nowhere.
One way of fixing this would be to serve your html files through a locally running webserver (e.g. with gulp-webserver). When your HTML pages come from e.g. http://localhost:8000/ all the protocol relative URLs will be served over http:// as well.
If you just want all the CDN URLs to be prefixed with https:// instead, here's a way to wrap the google-cdn-data object to achieve this:
var gulp = require('gulp');
var googleCdn = require('gulp-google-cdn');
var jp = require('jsonpath');
function protocol(proto, cdn) {
jp.apply(cdn, '$.*.url', function(url) {
return function(version) {
return proto + url(version);
};
});
return cdn;
}
gulp.task('HTML:Release', function() {
return gulp.src('../src/*.html')
.pipe(googleCdn(require('./bower.json'), {
cdn: protocol('https:', require('google-cdn-data'))
}))
.pipe(gulp.dest('../dist/') );
});
You'll need to run npm install --save-dev google-cdn-data jsonpath for this to work.
I have an angular application with below index.html file
Consider in my index.html page I have the following code for SRI (SubResource Integrity)
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Security-Policy"
content="script-src 'self' scripts/alert.js 'unsafe-inline' 'unsafe-eval' 'sha256-qznLcsROx4GACP2dm0UCKCzCG+HiZ1guq6ZZDob/Tng='">
<script src="scripts/alert.js"
integrity="sha256-qznLcsROx4GACP2dm0UCKCzCG+HiZ1guq6ZZDob/Tng="
crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
</head>
</html>
In case, if I am using require JS, then I have to move the script inclusion of 'alert.js' to 'main.js' file as below
require.config({
// alias libraries paths
paths: {
'jquery': '/scripts/alert'
},
// kick start application
deps: ['../app/require.bootstrap']
})
Can someone help me how to include the integrity attribute to the main.js file while referring the alert.js script in the paths.
If I understand your question correctly, you want to use Sub Resource Integrity for scripts referenced via require js. Note, that in order to do this you need RequireJS version 2.1.19 or later (see http://requirejs.org/docs/download.html).
For a working example (referencing jQuery), see this plunker: http://plnkr.co/edit/kzqLjUThJRtoEruCCtMt?p=preview. Hopefully you should be able to copy this method to your project.
My example uses integrity/crossorigin attributes for:
RequireJS itself (through the index.html file)
jQuery (via the config file main.js and the interesting thing for you)
This is built on the RequireJS hook onNodeCreated and code like
onNodeCreated: function(node, config, module, path) {
node.setAttribute('integrity', integrityForModule);
node.setAttribute('crossorigin', 'anonymous');
}
Please note that this example does NOT use SRI for the config file main.js file. In order to accomplish that, either
include the RequireJS config inline in the index.html page
...or reference main.js (the config file) through an extra script tag (with integrity/crossover), and not via the data-main attribute
I use Yeoman/Grunt with the Angular generator, and after running grunt build, the AngularJS reference in my dist/index.html looks like this:
<script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.0.7/angular.min.js"></script>
So, http: is missing, which I manually have to change to:
<script src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.0.7/angular.min.js"></script>
In the original index.html, the reference looks like this:
<script src="bower_components/angular/angular.js"></script>
Is this a config error in my Gruntfile.js?
// simply represents "use the protocol of the current file"
So if your index.html uses http, the CDN will be fetched using http. Same with https.
I'm guessing you are testing locally and the browser uses the file: protocol. Should work once you use a server.