Minify for Laravel is a package for minifying and obfuscating Javascript, CSS, HTML and Blade views. It runs automatically when you load a page or view. Increase your website performance on page load and save bandwidth. Obfuscate your Javascript to protect your code from being stolen.
This image shows the difference in size between the original file and the minified file of default welcome.blade.php Laravel. The original file size is 28.7 KB and the minified file size is 25.7 KB. The minified file size is 10% smaller than the original file size.
If you minify all your asset files, you can save up to 50% of your bandwidth. This will make your website load faster and save your hosting cost. When you have big files, the difference in size will be even greater.
Minify for Laravel requires PHP 7.2 or higher. This particular version supports Laravel 8.x, 9.x, 10.x, and 11.x.
To get the latest version, simply require the project using Composer:
composer require fahlisaputra/laravel-minify
Minify for Laravel supports optional configuration. To get started, you'll need to publish all vendor assets:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Fahlisaputra\Minify\MinifyServiceProvider"
This will create a config/minify.php file in your app that you can modify to set your configuration. Also, make sure you check for changes to the original config file in this package between releases.
In order Minify for Laravel can intercept your request to minify and obfuscate, you need to add the Minify middleware to the app/Http/Kernel.php
file:
protected $middleware = [
....
// Middleware to minify CSS
\Fahlisaputra\Minify\Middleware\MinifyCss::class,
// Middleware to minify Javascript
\Fahlisaputra\Minify\Middleware\MinifyJavascript::class,
// Middleware to minify Blade
\Fahlisaputra\Minify\Middleware\MinifyHtml::class,
];
You can choose which middleware you want to use. Put all of them if you want to minify html, css, and javascript at the same time.
In order Minify for Laravel can intercept your request to minify and obfuscate, you need to add the Minify middleware to the bootstrap/app.php
file:
->withMiddleware(function (Middleware $middleware) {
$middleware->web(append: [
\Fahlisaputra\Minify\Middleware\MinifyHtml::class,
\Fahlisaputra\Minify\Middleware\MinifyCss::class,
\Fahlisaputra\Minify\Middleware\MinifyJavascript::class,
]);
})
This is how you can use Minify for Laravel in your project.
You must set true
on assets_enabled
in the config/minify.php
file to minify your asset files. For example:
"assets_enabled" => env("MINIFY_ASSETS_ENABLED", true),
You can minify your asset files by using the minify()
helper function. This function will minify your asset files and return the minify designed route. In order to work properly, you need to put your asset files in the resources/js
or resources/css
directory. For example:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://github.com/fahlisaputra/laravel-minify/blob/main/{{ minify('/css/test.css') }}">
where test.css
is located in the resources/css
directory.
<script src="https://github.com/fahlisaputra/laravel-minify/raw/main/{{ minify('/js/test.js') }}"></script>
where test.js
is located in the resources/js
directory.
Use this option if Minify for Laravel makes your javascript or css not working properly. You can enable automatic insert semicolon on javascript or css by setting true
on insert_semicolon
in the config/minify.php
file. For example:
"insert_semicolon" => [
'css' => env("MINIFY_CSS_SEMICOLON", true),
'js' => env("MINIFY_JS_SEMICOLON", true),
],
Caution: this option is experimental. If the code still not working properly, you can disable this option and add semicolon manually to your Javascript or CSS code.
You can skip minify on blade by using attribute ignore--minify
inside script or style tag. For example:
<style ignore--minify>
/* css */
</style>
<script ignore--minify>
/* javascript */
</script>
You can skip minify when rendering view by passing ignore_minify = true
in the view data. For example:
return view('welcome', ['ignore_minify' => true]);
You can skip minify by route by adding the route name to the ignore
array in the config/minify.php
file. For example:
"ignore" => [
'/admin'
],
You can replace custom directives by adding the directive name to the directives
array in the config/minify.php
file. For example in AlpineJS you can write @click="function()"
. Unfortunately, Minify for Laravel will remove the @
symbol. You can replace it by adding @ => x-on:
to the directives
array. For example:
"directives" => [
'@' => 'x-on:',
],
You can keep directives by adding the directive name to the keep_directives
array in the config/minify.php
file. For example when you use @vite
, you can add @vite
to the keep_directives
array. For example:
"keep_directives" => [
'@vite'
],
@
symbol in the blade file. This will make the blade directive not working properly. You can fix this by adding @ => x-on:
to the directives
array in the config/minify.php
file.insert_semicolon
option to true
or false
in the config/minify.php
file.If you find an issue, or have a better way to do something, feel free to open an issue, or a pull request. The package is far from perfect, and any help is welcome. There are no formal contribution guidelines, and there should be no contribution too small. All coding styles will be fixed during the pull request by StyleCI. So, don't worry too much about the code style. We'd love to hear from you!
Big thanks to the people who have contributed to this package:
Laravel Minify is licensed under the MIT license.
If you are having general issues with this package, feel free to contact us on saputra@fahli.net
Please read our security policy for more details.