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Drop-in static asset compilation

In templates

Assetman can be used by grouping your static assets into "asset blocks" to be compiled together. These asset blocks look like this:

{% apply assetman.include_js %}
path/to/utils.js
path/to/lib.js
path/to/main.js
{% end %}

The given paths are relative to the static_url_prefix setting. There are comparable include_css and include_less helpers available in every template. There is no limit on the number of assetman blocks that can be included in a template.

When a template with asset blocks is rendered, Assetman decides what static includes to render in the template.

Assetman also provides a replacement for the built in tornado static_url helper that is used the same way:

{{ assetman.static_url('path/to/asset.jpg') }}

If you use the built in static_url function, an error will be raised.

The compiler

The Assetman compiler can be called via commandline using the assetman_compile script.

The compiler starts by building a manifest file which describes the dependencies of each asset block and their versions. The manifest is built by using Tornado's template parser to parse each template file in the template dir(s) given to the compiler and recursively extracting dependencies from each template.

In addition to the "current" manifest built for every compile, a "cached" manifest from the previous compile is loaded from a configured path. These two manifests are used to determine what asset blocks need to be recompiled (or compiled for the first time).

If any asset blocks needed to be compiled, the compiled files are written to that same /data/ directory along with the updated manifest file.

As a part of the compilation process, references to static assets rooted under the static_url_prefix will be rewritten to include version information specific to each asset. Likewise, calls to assetman.static_url will result in asset-specific versioned URLs.

The manifest

The manifest built as part of the compilation process and used during the template rendering and static asset serving processes is a JSON object divided into three parts:

{ 'blocks': {},
  'assets': {},
  'lookups': {} }

The blocks section contains mappings from asset blocks (which are identified by a "name hash", the md5 hash of their constituent paths) to a version string, which is an md5 hash representing the versions of each of its dependencies (calculated recursively). An entry in the blocks section might look like this:

"c5f7fa59d1d2e25521e936869f8fbb7c": {
  "version": "89328b33de18bd42a3782d44b7316541"
}

The assets section contains mappings from individual assets to a "depencency spec", which is composed of a version (md5 hash) and a list of that asset's dependencies. As above, the version is a hash representing the version of that asset and the versions of each of its dependencies, calculated recursively. An entry in the assets section might look like this:

"www/static/css/components/notice_box.less": {
  "version": "1f170c977b473f6f009bc1adb078efc5",
  "deps": [
    "www/static/graphics/vis/x-blue.png"
  ]
}

An single asset's version, with no dependencies, is the md5 hash of its file name and its file modification time.

Every single dependency at any point in the manifest must have an entry at the top level of the manifest.

The lookups block contains a mapping from an "asset abbreviation" (the first few letters of the md5 hash of an asset's file name) to the full path to that asset. This lookup table is generated at compile time and used at run time to request compiled assets while also including a list of individual fallbacks to include if the compiled asset isn't found or if its version doesn't match. This is just an optimization to keep URL sizes manageable.

Serving static assets

Static assets are served by a special StaticFileHandler. It knows how to handle three types of URLs (assume static_url_prefix is /s/beta/ for these examples):

  1. Unversioned URLs: /s/{path}

    This is used to serve unversioned, uncompiled assets during development.

  2. Versioned URLs: /s/v:{version}/{path}

    This is used to serve static assets referenced directly or via assetman.static_url, where no fallbacks are necessary.

  3. Versioned URLs with fallbacks: /s/v:{version}/f:{a:b:c}/{hash}

    This is used to request compiled asset blocks while also providing the ability for the server to respond with as many of the constituent assets as possible in the case where the compiled asset is not yet available or out of date.

Assetman takes care of generating the appropriate URLs at compile time (for the second kind of URL) or template render time (for the 3rd).

Running the Assetman compiler

assetman_compile \
    --output_dir=/data/assets \
    --static_url_prefix=/s/ \
    --template_dir=templates \
    --template_dir=../other/templates

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