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mkdocs-material/docs/setup/building-an-optimized-site.md
2023-08-03 19:08:28 +02:00

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Building an optimized site

Material for MkDocs, by default, allows to build optimized sites that rank great on search engines, load fast (even on slow networks), and work perfectly without JavaScript. Additionally, the built-in optimize plugin adds support for further useful automatic optimization techniques.

Configuration

Built-in projects plugin :material-alert-decagram:

:octicons-heart-fill-24:{ .mdx-heart } Sponsors only{ .mdx-insiders } · :octicons-tag-24: insiders-4.38.0 · :octicons-cpu-24: Plugin · :octicons-beaker-24: Experimental

The built-in projects plugin allows to split your documentation into multiple distinct MkDocs projects, build them concurrently and serve them together. Add the following to mkdocs.yml:

plugins:
  - projects

Next, create a folder called projects in your root directory which will contain all projects. For example, if we want to build a project with two additional languages, we can use:

.
├─ projects/
│  ├─ de/
│  │  ├─ docs/
│  │  └─ mkdocs.yml
│  └─ fr/
│     ├─ docs/
│     └─ mkdocs.yml
└─ mkdocs.yml

If you now invoke mkdocs serve and change a file in one of the projects, the projects plugin makes sure that MkDocs will also reload those files. Note that the projects are currently entirely separate, which means they will have separate search indexes and sitemaps. We're happy to receive feedback on this plugin and learn about your requirements to make it better, as we plan to add support for merging and hoisting files. Create a discussion to share your thoughts!

??? info "Use cases for the projects plugin"

Ideal use cases for the projects plugin are:

- Building a multi-language site
- Building a blog alongside your documentation
- Splitting large code bases for better performance

Note that the plugin is currently experimental. We're releasing it early,
so that we can improve it together with our users and make it even more
powerful as we discover new use cases.

The following configuration options are available:

enabled{ #+projects.enabled }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: true This option specifies whether the plugin is enabled when building your project. If you want to speed up local builds, you can use an environment variable:

plugins:
  - projects:
      enabled: !ENV [CI, false]
concurrency{ #+projects.concurrency }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: number of CPUs This option specifies how many CPUs the plugin is allowed to use when building projects. With more CPUs, the plugin can do more work in the same time, thus complete optimization faster. Concurrent processing can be disabled with:

plugins:
  - projects:
      concurrency: 1

Projects

The following configuration options are available for projects:

projects{ #+projects.projects }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: true This option specifies whether to build nested projects. If you want to switch the plugin off, e.g. for local builds, you can use an environment variable:

plugins:
  - projects:
      projects: !ENV [CI, false]
projects_dir{ #+projects.projects_dir }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: projects This option specifies the name of the folder the plugin expects your projects to be stored. While it's usually not necessary to change this option, change it with:

plugins:
  - projects:
      projects_dir: path/to/folder

Hoisting

The following configuration options are available for hoisting:

hoisting{ #+projects.hoisting }

:octicons-tag-24: insiders-4.39.0 · :octicons-milestone-24: Default: true This option specifies whether the plugin should hoist all themes files to the top-level project. If you disable this setting, each project will have a copy of the themes files, which in general, can be considered redundant:

plugins:
  - projects:
      hoisting: false

It's generally advisable to enable hoisting, as it leads to faster deployments and faster loading of your project's sites, because the files are the same for all projects.

Built-in optimize plugin

:octicons-heart-fill-24:{ .mdx-heart } Sponsors only{ .mdx-insiders } · :octicons-tag-24: insiders-4.29.0 · :octicons-cpu-24: Plugin · :octicons-beaker-24: Experimental

The built-in optimize plugin automatically identifies and optimizes all media files as part of the build using compression and conversion techniques. Add the following lines to mkdocs.yml:

plugins:
  - optimize # (1)!
  1. Please ensure that all dependencies for image processing are installed, or the plugin will not work properly.

If you need to be able to build your documentation with and without Insiders, please refer to the built-in plugins section to learn how shared configurations help to achieve this.

The following configuration options are available:

enabled{ #+optimize.enabled }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: true This option specifies whether the plugin is enabled when building your project. If you want to speed up local builds, you can use an environment variable:

plugins:
  - optimize:
      enabled: !ENV [CI, false]
concurrency{ #+optimize.concurrency }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: number of CPUs This option specifies how many CPUs the plugin is allowed to use when optimizing media files. With more CPUs, the plugin can do more work in the same time, thus complete optimization faster. Concurrent processing can be disabled with:

plugins:
  - optimize:
      concurrency: 1

Optimization

Technical documentation often includes screenshots or diagrams, both of which are prime candidates for compression. The built-in optimize plugin allows to automatically compress images using pngquant (for PNGs), and Pillow (for JPGs).

The following configuration options are available for optimization:

optimize_png{ #+optimize.optimize_png }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: true This option specifies whether the plugin should optimize PNG files using pngquant, which must be installed on the system. PNG optimization can be disabled with:

plugins:
  - optimize:
      optimize_png: false
optimize_png_speed{ #+optimize.optimize_png_speed }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: 4 of [1,10] This option specifies the speed/quality tradeoff that pngquant applies when compressing. The lower the number, the more time will be spent optimizing:

=== "Slower small"

``` yaml
plugins:
  - optimize:
      optimize_png_speed: 1
```

=== "Faster rough"

``` yaml
plugins:
  - optimize:
      optimize_png_speed: 10
```

A factor of 10 has 5% lower quality, but is 8x faster than the default 4.

optimize_png_strip{ #+optimize.optimize_png_strip }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: true This option specifies whether pngquant should remove all non-optional metadata that is not necessary for rendering images in a browser:

plugins:
  - optimize:
      optimize_png_strip: false
optimize_jpg{ #+optimize.optimize_jpg }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: true This option specifies whether the plugin should optimize JPG files using Pillow, a Python image processing library. JPG optimization can be disabled with:

plugins:
  - optimize:
      optimize_jpg: false
optimize_jpg_quality{ #+optimize.optimize_jpg_quality }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: 60 of [0,100] This option specifies the image quality that Pillow uses when compressing. If the images look blurry, it's a good idea to tune and change this setting:

plugins:
  - optimize:
      optimize_jpg_quality: 75
optimize_jpg_progressive{ #+optimize.optimize_jpg_progressive }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: true This option specifies whether Pillow should use progressive encoding (faster rendering) when compressing JPGs. Progressive encoding can be disabled with:

plugins:
  - optimize:
      optimize_jpg_progressive: false

Caching

The built-in optimize plugin implements an intelligent caching mechanism, ensuring that media files are only pushed through the optimization pipeline when their contents change. If you swap out or update an image, the plugin will detect it and update the optimized version.

The following configuration options are available for caching:

cache{ #+optimize.cache }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: true This option specifies whether the plugin queries its cache for an existing artifact before starting an optimization job. It's normally not necessary to change this setting, except for when debugging the plugin itself. Caching can be disabled with:

plugins:
  - optimize:
      cache: false
cache_dir{ #+optimize.cache_dir }

:octicons-milestone-24: Default: .cache/plugins/optimize This option specifies the file system location of the plugin's cache. It's normally not necessary to change this setting, except for when debugging the plugin itself. The cache directory can be changed with:

plugins:
  - optimize:
      cache_dir: .cache/plugins/optimize

By default, all built-in plugins that implement caching will create a .cache directory in the same folder your mkdocs.yml resides, and create subfolders to not interfere with each other. If you use multiple instances of this plugin, it could be necessary to change this setting.