Collects webfont links, imports and definitions from your Vite project, downloads css and font files (privacy-first), add the fonts to your bundle (or serves through dev server), and injects font definitions using a non-render blocking method, meanwhile stores external css and font files in a persistent file cache, making them available for offline development.
npm i vite-plugin-webfont-dl -D
- 📦 Install
- Usage:
- 🚀 That's all!
- 🔌 Laravel
- 📸 Screenshot
- 🧩 Supported webfont providers
- 🛠️ Options
- ❓ Third-party webfonts
- 🔮 How it works
- 📊 Benchmark
- 📚 Resources
- 📄 License
Extracts, downloads and injects fonts from the original Google Fonts code snippet.
- Select your font families in your webfont provider (e.g. Google Fonts) and copy the code into
<head>
from the "Use on the web" block:<link rel="preconnect" href="https://fonts.googleapis.com"> <link rel="preconnect" href="https://fonts.gstatic.com" crossorigin> <link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Fira+Code:wght@300;400&family=Roboto:wght@100&display=swap" rel="stylesheet">
- Add
webfontDownload
to your Vite plugins without any configuration and the plugin automagically will take care of everything:// vite.config.js import webfontDownload from 'vite-plugin-webfont-dl'; export default { plugins: [ webfontDownload(), ], };
- The original webfont tags will be replaced in
dist/index.html
:<style>@font-face{font-family:...;src:url(/assets/foo-xxxxxxxx.woff2) format('woff2'),url(/assets/bar-yyyyyyyy.woff) format('woff')}...</style>
Extracts, downloads and injects fonts from the configured webfont CSS URL(s).
- Select your font families in your webfont provider (e.g. Google Fonts) and copy the CSS URL(s) from the "Use on the web" code block:
<link href="[CSS URL]" rel="stylesheet">
- Add
webfontDownload
to your Vite plugins with the selected Google Fonts CSS URL(s):// vite.config.js import webfontDownload from 'vite-plugin-webfont-dl'; export default { plugins: [ webfontDownload([ 'https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Press+Start+2P&display=swap', 'https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Fira+Code&display=swap' ]), ], };
The webfonts are injected and ready to use.
The plugin does its job seamlessly whether you are working on local development server or building to production.
h1 {
font-family: 'Press Start 2P', cursive;
}
h2 {
font-family: 'Fira Code', monospace;
}
To make it work with Laravel Vite Plugin add this line to your blade file:
@vite('webfonts.css')
- Google Fonts: works with Zero config or Simple config
- Bunny Fonts: works with Zero config or Simple config
- Fontshare: works with Zero config or Simple config
- Fira Code, Hack fonts (
cdn.jsdelivr.net
): works with Zero config or Simple config - Inter font (
rsms.me
): works with Zero config or Simple config - any provider with CSS (containing
@font-face
definitions) works with Simple config
-
injectAsStyleTag
(boolean
, default:true
):
Inject webfonts as<style>
tag (embedded CSS) or as an external.css
file -
minifyCss
(boolean
, default: value ofbuild.minify
):
Minify CSS code during build. -
embedFonts
(boolean
, default:false
):
Embed base64-encoded fonts into css.
In some cases can cause filesize increase if css containes multiple references to same font file. Example -
async
(boolean
, default:true
):
Prevent the usage of inline event handlers (webfonts.css
) that can cause Content Security Policy issues.
Works only withinjectAsStyleTag:false
. -
cache
(boolean
, default:true
):
Persistently store downloaded css and font files in local file cache.
If set tofalse
the existing cache will be deleted. -
proxy
(false|AxiosProxyConfig
, default:false
):
Proxy configuration for network requests. -
assetsSubfolder
(string
, default:''
):
Moves downloaded font files to separate subfolder in assets directory.
usage:
ViteWebfontDownload(
[],
{
injectAsStyleTag: true,
minifyCss: true,
embedFonts: false,
async: true,
cache: true,
proxy: false,
assetsSubfolder: '',
}
)
or:
ViteWebfontDownload(
[
'https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Poppins:wght@300;400;500;600;700&display=swap',
],
{
injectAsStyleTag: true,
minifyCss: true,
embedFonts: false,
async: true,
cache: true,
proxy: false,
assetsSubfolder: '',
}
)
📈 By avoiding render-blocking resources caused by third-party webfonts, you can boost page performance which leads to better user-experience and it improves SEO results.
⚙️ The plugin downloads the given fonts from the third-party webfont service (like Google Fonts) and dynamically injects them (as an internal or external stylesheet) into your Vite project, transforming the third-party webfonts into self-hosted ones. 🤩
🔐 In addition to the significant performance increase, your visitors will also benefit to privacy protection, since there is no third-party server involved.
Google Fonts generates the following code which you have to inject into your website's <head>
, example:
<link rel="preconnect" href="https://fonts.googleapis.com">
<link rel="preconnect" href="https://fonts.gstatic.com" crossorigin>
<link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Fira+Code&display=swap" rel="stylesheet">
📱 What happens on client-side with Google Fonts:
- First line gives a hint to the browser to begin the connection handshake (DNS, TCP, TLS) with
fonts.googleapis.com
. This happens in the background to improve performance. [preconnect
] - Second line is another preconnect hint to
fonts.gstatic.com
. [preconnect
] - Third line instructs the browser to load and use a CSS stylesheet file from
fonts.googleapis.com
(withfont-display:swap
). [stylesheet
] - The browser downloads the CSS file and starts to parse it. The parsed CSS is a set of
@font-face
definitions containing font URLs fromfonts.gstatic.com
server. - The browser starts to download the all relevant fonts from
fonts.gstatic.com
. - After the successful fonts download the browser swaps the fallback fonts to the downloaded ones.
On the contrary, Webfont-DL plugin does most of the job at build time, leaves the minimum to the browser.
Webfont-DL plugin
- collects the webfont CSS URLs (from plugin config,
index.html
and the generated CSS) - downloads the webfont CSS file(s)
- extracts the font URLs
- downloads the fonts
- adds the fonts to the bundle
- generates an embedded CSS (
<style>
tag) or a webfont / external CSS file - add them to the bundle and injects the following code into your website's
<head>
using a non-render blocking method, example:
<style>
@font-face {
font-family: 'Fira Code';
font-style: normal;
font-weight: 300;
font-display: swap;
src: url(/assets/uU9eCBsR6Z2vfE9aq3bL0fxyUs4tcw4W_GNsJV37Nv7g.9c348768.woff2) format('woff2');
unicode-range: U+0460-052F, U+1C80-1C88, U+20B4, U+2DE0-2DFF, U+A640-A69F, U+FE2E-FE2F;
}
...
</style>
or (using dev server or injectAsStyleTag: false
option)
<link rel="preload" as="style" href="/assets/webfonts.b904bd45.css">
<link rel="stylesheet" media="print" onload="this.onload=null;this.removeAttribute('media');" href="/assets/webfonts.b904bd45.css">
📱 What happens on client-side with Webfont-DL plugin:
- Load fonts from the embedded CSS (
<style>
tag).
or
- First line instructs the browser to prefetch a CSS file for later use as stylesheet. [
preload
] - Second line instructs the browser to load and use that CSS file as a "
print
" stylesheet (non-render blocking). After loading it promote to "all
" media type stylesheet (by removing the "media
" attribute). [stylesheet
]
Starter Vite project with
🆚 | ||
---|---|---|
🔗 webfont.feat.agency | 🔗 webfont-dl.feat.agency |
MIT License © 2022 feat.