Javascript and CSS Resources
DotVVM has a built-in mechanism for managing resources. It supports JavaScript files, inline JavaScript snippets and CSS files. It is extensible so it can be used to work with fonts, icons and other kinds of static files.
The resources are named and stored in a global repository which is configured in DotVVM configuration.
Each resource can also specify its dependencies. Thanks to this, DotVVM can include all required resources in the page in the correct order.
And finally, if any DotVVM control needs a particular resource, it can request the resource to be included in the page. DotVVM keeps track of the resources needed by controls in the page and renders only the those which are really needed.
We have the following types of resources:
ScriptResource
renders the<script>
element and is used to include JavaScript files.StylesheetResource
renders the<link rel="stylesheet">
element and is used to include CSS files.InlineScriptResource
renders the<script>
element with JavaScript code snippet.NullResource
is a special type of resource that doesn't render anything. It is used when some control requests the resource to be included in the page, however you have included the resource itself (e.g. in the master page).
Resource Repository
The resource registration has changed in DotVVM 1.1. Visit the Upgrading to DotVVM 1.1 for more details.
All resources are registered in resource repository found in the config.Resources
collection.
You can register a new resource with the Register
method. This method can also replace existing resources if they exists.
The resources should be registered in the DotvvmStartup.cs
file.
config.Resources.Register("bootstrap-css", new StylesheetResource()
{
Location = new UrlResourceLocation("~/Content/bootstrap.min.css")
});
config.Resources.Register("bootstrap", new ScriptResource()
{
Location = new UrlResourceLocation("~/Scripts/bootstrap.min.js"),
Dependencies = new[] { "bootstrap-css", "jquery" }
});
In the code, you can retrieve the resource by its name using FindResource
method. If you need to change the path for the jquery
resource, you can do it like this:
var jquery = config.Resources.FindResource("jquery") as ScriptResource;
jquery.Location = new UrlResourceLocation("~/Scripts/jquery.2.1.1.min.js");
jquery.LocationFallback = null;
Resource Location
Most resources have the Location
property of type IResourceLocation
which defines, how the resource file is obtained. You can use one of the following implementations:
UrlResourceLocation
specifies just the URL where the resource can be found. You can use either absolute URL (e.g. to point to some CDN), a relative URL to your server, or even a data URI. DotVVM will render the<script>
or<link>
element with the exact URL you have specified.LocalFileResourceLocation
expects the app-relative filesystem path to the script or stylesheet file. This path should not start with/
- it would point to the root of the filesystem. DotVVM will render the<script>
or<link>
element which points to a DotVVM resource handler (~/dotvvmResource/checksum/resourceName
) that will serve the resource. This is useful for bundling or advanced scenarios.EmbeddedResourceLocation
can extract the embedded resource from an assembly. This is very useful if you need to pack some DotVVM controls in a library and embed the resources in the DLL file.
You can of course implement custom resource types and resource location implementations.
CDN Fallbacks
If you want to use CDN for script files, it is often a good idea to have a local fallback for the case that CDN is down, or if you are debugging the app without the Internet connection.
There is a property called LocationFallback
. If it is set, the framework will try to load the script from the primary location (the CDN) first and will use the ResourceLocationFallback.JavasciptCondition
to check whether the resource has loaded successfully. The JavascriptCondition
property should contain a JavaScript expression which evaluates to true
when used in the if
statement. For jQuery, you can use window.jQuery
.
If the resource could not be loaded from the CDN, it would fall back to the AlternativeLocations
and use the first one that works.
configuration.Resources.Register(ResourceConstants.JQueryResourceName,
new ScriptResource()
{
Location = new UrlResourceLocation("https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.1.1.min.js"),
LocationFallback = new ResourceLocationFallback("window.jQuery", new EmbeddedResourceLocation(typeof(DotvvmConfiguration).GetType().Assembly, "DotVVM.Framework.Resources.Scripts.jquery-2.1.1.min.js")),
VerifyResourceIntegrity = true
});
If the VerifyResourceIntegrity
property on the ScriptResource
is set to true, then it will use the LocationFallback
to automatically compute the subresource integrity hash, for an extra guarantee that the remote resource being downloaded is the one intended.
Registering jQuery
DotVVM 1.1 was including jQuery in the page in Debug mode, because it was required by dotvvm.debug.js
helper library. The need for jQuery in this helper was removed with DotVVM 2.0, so jQuery
resource is not registered in the DotVVM configuration.
If you application uses jQuery and if it is not included with another library (like Bootstrap for DotVVM or DotVVM Business Pack), add the following code into ConfigureResources
method in DotvvmStartup.cs
:
config.Resources.Register("jquery", new ScriptResource()
{
// use relative URL if you ship jQuery with your application
Location = new UrlResourceLocation("https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.2.1/jquery.min.js")
});