11

I feel a Little stuck right now. First I used nuget to

install-package Bootstrap.less

as well as

install-package dotless

Then, as shown in Rick Andersons Blogpost about bundling and minification in asp.net mvc, I created a LessTransform-Class. I set up 2 nearly empty .less files and created a new bundle packaging them...

    var lessBundle = new Bundle("~/MyLess").IncludeDirectory("~/Content/MyLess", "*.less", true);
    lessBundle.Transforms.Add(new LessTransformer());
    lessBundle.Transforms.Add(new CssMinify());
    bundles.Add(lessBundle);

That worked well. Then I added a new StyleBundle to the main bootstrap.less file (which basically uses @import to include all the other .less files that bootstrap.less ships)...

    bundles.Add(new StyleBundle("~/Bootstrap").Include("~/Content/Bootstrap/less/bootstrap.less"));

and a ScriptBundle to the bootstrap JavaScripts...

    bundles.Add(new ScriptBundle("~/bundles/Bootstrap").Include("~/Scripts/bootstrap/js/bootstrap-*"));

to include all shipped bootstrap-*.js files and TADAA everything worked fine. The CSS got compiled including all imported JavaScript files were properly loaded.

But ... all that only worked for development mode with

    <compilation debug="true" targetFramework="4.5"/>

As soon as I disable debug to see if the bundling into one file and the minification works properly I encounter the Problem.

The bundling process seems to fail to import all those .less files imported into bootstrap.less

/* Minification failed. Returning unminified contents.
(11,1): run-time error CSS1019: Unexpected token, found '/'
(11,2): run-time error CSS1019: Unexpected token, found '/'
(12,1): run-time error CSS1031: Expected selector, found '@import'
(12,1): run-time error CSS1025: Expected comma or open brace, found '@import'
(12,27): run-time error CSS1019: Unexpected token, found '/'
(12,28): run-time error CSS1019: Unexpected token, found '/'

 ... here go many many lines like these 

(60,25): run-time error CSS1019: Unexpected token, found ';'
(62,1): run-time error CSS1019: Unexpected token, found '/'
(62,2): run-time error CSS1019: Unexpected token, found '/'
(63,1): run-time error CSS1031: Expected selector, found '@import'
(63,1): run-time error CSS1025: Expected comma or open brace, found '@import'
(63,27): run-time error CSS1019: Unexpected token, found '/'
(63,28): run-time error CSS1019: Unexpected token, found '/'
: run-time error CSS1067: Unexpected end of file encountered
 */
/*!
 * Bootstrap v2.3.1 
 *
 * Copyright 2012 Twitter, Inc
 * Licensed under the Apache License v2.0
 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Designed and built with all the love in the world @twitter by @mdo and @fat.
 */

// Core variables and mixins
@import "variables.less"; // Modify this for custom colors, font-sizes, etc
@import "mixins.less";

... and the rest of the original bootstrap.less... no style definitions

having a look at the minified bootstrap.javascript bundle also boggles me. in dev there was no Problem after loading the page, now after the bootstrap.javascript was bundled and minified in Google the JavaScript console states

Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property 'Constructor' of undefined

I have had a look at several Topics that seemed closely related to my Problem, and I tried a few things, but so far without success.

Many thanks in advance to anyone who could shed some light into my Situation and who would point out what I am missing or doing wrong. Best regards, Ingo

4
  • This is great!!! thanks a lot. Just one thougth. doesn't installing bootstrap with nuget create an association that may overwrite your changes in the less files? Tha is assuming you needed to make changes. Apr 25, 2013 at 1:52
  • Hi, installing Bootstrap.less just installs the .less and .js files your applications content/scripts folders. Installing dotless will add some entries to your web.config.
    – Ingo
    Apr 25, 2013 at 6:08
  • On top of that the nugets won't overwrite anything and it is up to you to decide how you use these. You could just precompile the .less files to css but that is not what I wanted to do. The below solution will enable your Application to compile the css just-in-time from less and due to my slight modification allow you to have multiple directories as source for .less-files.
    – Ingo
    Apr 25, 2013 at 6:21
  • Hey again, it seems Microsoft also has realized that the bundling procedure fails in applying the relative directories properly. So they have announced to fix that with VS 2013... maybe even with an update to WebEssentials?
    – Ingo
    Aug 4, 2013 at 11:49

4 Answers 4

10

If you want to use bootstrap as less-files and in addition want to stop worrying about bundling and minification on your development machine as well as on your production machine, you might consider using the following approach.

Note: you don't need all this if you only play around with Less-Files while DEBUGging is enabled; But as soon as you want your application to go live on a production server like Windows Azure, and still want to just modify your less files without having to take care about the bundling and minification procedures... well... then this approach will work

So in order to solve the problem I felt a little stuck in, I had to approach the problem differently and had to modify (see Modification 2 further down the post) the "BundleSource" I thought I'd like to have.

SO DONT FORGET TO READ THE 2nd Modification/Warning close to the bottom of this answer!


MODIFICATION 1)

So the first and bigger part of the job is to get the bundling of the bootstrap-less files working. In order to do that I took the liberty to fork a piece of code I found in the web that (if you only need one less-file bundle) itself solves my problem... unless you might want to use or be able to use multiple less-bundles with several base directories... So that is where I actually found the approach that helped me a lot ...

... wherefore I award many thanks to Kristof Claes for his Blog-Entry "Using ASP.NET bundling and minification with LESS files" which I accidently and gladly stumbled over.

Like me he tried to use the LessMinify.cs that Scott Hanselman was showing in his speeches to work with 1 LESS-file instead of just bundling every single file in 1 directory full of LESS-files.

But he had to extend the whole bundling procedure slightly as he shows in his Blog-Entry. That way the solution he proposes can bundle 1 less file that uses imports to load other less files. But as he statically implements the path that is added to the source directory in which to find the less files... whichever less bundle you define has to pick a less file in the same directory...

That is where I took the liberty to extend his solution a bit further. I created a file LessBundling.cs with the following content:

using dotless.Core.configuration;
using dotless.Core.Input;
using MvcApplication2.Utils;
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.IO;
using System.Linq;
using System.Runtime.CompilerServices;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.Hosting;
using System.Web.Optimization;

namespace MvcApplication2.Extensions
{
    // create Less-Minifier (use Type to define source directory of less files [see below at BootstrapFileReader])
    public class LessMinify<TFileReader> : CssMinify
        where TFileReader : IFileReader
    {
        public LessMinify() {}

        public override void Process(BundleContext context, BundleResponse response)
        {
            var config = new DotlessConfiguration()
            { 
                MinifyOutput = true,
                ImportAllFilesAsLess = true,
                CacheEnabled = false,
                LessSource = typeof(TFileReader)
            };

            response.Content = dotless.Core.Less.Parse(response.Content, config);
            base.Process(context, response);
        }
    }

    // create a LessStyleBundler to allow initializing LessBundle with a single less file that uses imports
    public class LessStyleBundle<TFileReader> : Bundle
        where TFileReader : IFileReader
    {
        public LessStyleBundle(string virtualPath)
            : base(virtualPath, new LessMinify<TFileReader>()) {}

        public LessStyleBundle(string virtualPath, string cdnPath)
            : base(virtualPath, cdnPath, new LessMinify<TFileReader>()) { }
    }

    // create abstract VirtualFileReader from dotless-IFileReader as a Base for localized 
    internal abstract class VirtualFileReader : IFileReader
    {
        public byte[] GetBinaryFileContents(string fileName)
        {
            fileName = GetFullPath(fileName);
            return File.ReadAllBytes(fileName);
        }

        public string GetFileContents(string fileName)
        {
            fileName = GetFullPath(fileName);
            return File.ReadAllText(fileName);
        }

        public bool DoesFileExist(string fileName)
        {
            fileName = GetFullPath(fileName);
            return File.Exists(fileName);
        }


        public string GetFullPath(string path)
        {
            return  HostingEnvironment.MapPath(SourceDirectory + path);
        }

        public abstract string SourceDirectory {get;}
        // implement to return Path to location of less files
        // e. g. return "~/Content/bootstrap/less/";
    }

    // create BootstrapFileReader overwriting the Path where to find the Bootstrap-Less-Files
    internal sealed class BootstrapFileReader : VirtualFileReader
    {
        public override string SourceDirectory 
        {
            get { return "~/Content/bootstrap/less/"; }
        }
    }

}

So what does this actually do?

  1. LessMinify extends the CssMinify class and therefore brings everything needed to minify css files
    • The important difference to "usual" bundling is that you create a new Dotless-Configuration with the LessSource defined as typeof(TFileReader) ...
    • By using <TFileReader> you can define a class that will contain the source directory in which the bundler/minifier will look for the less files to be taken into account
  2. LessStyleBundle extends Bundle and therefore brings everything needed to bundle the files
    • In this class I again use TFileReader as this is where the LessMinify(er) will be instantiated
  3. VirtualFileReader implements IFileReader which is a dotless interface defining all methods required to parse less files and give information where to find files to be imported
    • In order to extend Kristof's solution to the problem I added the abstract property SourceDirectory... requiring me to also make the VirtualFileReader abstract class

Now with that setup you can create as many LessFileReaders as you want. You just have to extend the abstract VirtualFileReader as can be seen in

  1. BootstrapFileReader extends VirtualFileReader
    • The only purpose of the BootstrapFileReader is to have a property-getter for the SourceDirectory in which the bundler/minifier will find the less files that are to be imported

Well in my case Bootstraps Less-Files where lying in ~/Content/bootstrap/less which should be the default location if you install the "twitter.bootstrap.less"-nugget.

If you'd have another directory in your application, which contained a less file which again has multiple imports you just create a new class extending VirtualFileReader and define the property-getter for the SourceDirectory to return the corresponding path

If you then want to use this Bundling method to actually bundle and minify less files in a production environment you just add the LessStyleBundle-instantion to the BundlerConfig.cs:

bundles.Add(new LessStyleBundle<BootstrapFileReader>("~/bundles/BootstrapCSS")
    .Include("~/Content/bootstrap/less/bootstrap.less"));

and of course your _Layout.cshtml should also be aware of the readily prepared bundle

@Styles.Render("~/bundles/BootstrapCSS")

MODIFICATION 2)

now the minor Modification which I also had to add to get this working

In my first attempt to bundle bootstrap.less I used this

bundles.Add(new LessStyleBundle<BootstrapFileReader>("~/Content/BootstrapCSS")
    .Include("~/Content/bootstrap/less/bootstrap.less"));

I thought I would use Content in the routes for CSS/Less and Bundles in the routes for Javascript.

But that does not work out of the box. ASP.net doesnt permit the creation of a Bundle that starts with ~/Content. You will get a 403 authorization failure. Therefore the easiest solution to that is to use ~/bundles instead:

bundles.Add(new LessStyleBundle<BootstrapFileReader>("~/bundles/BootstrapCSS")
    .Include("~/Content/bootstrap/less/bootstrap.less"));

As there aren't many real solutions to this problem I hope this will help at least some of you if you plan to integrate twitter bootstrap into your asp.net mvc4 application.

best regards, Ingo

2
  • Fantastic, you saved my day (or saved me a day of work) - thanks! Jul 11, 2013 at 21:45
  • +1 for the hint about bundles not being allowed to start with "~/Content".
    – Mark Meuer
    Oct 3, 2013 at 20:13
3

I've modified Ingo workaround to get rid of custom classes for each directory. Also, I've added proper exception output (because otherwise all exceptions was silent and you just got empty less file in case of error).

public class LessTransform : IItemTransform
{
    [ThreadStatic]
    internal static string CurrentParsedFileDirectory;


    public string Process (string includedVirtualPath, string input)
    {
        CurrentParsedFileDirectory = Path.GetDirectoryName (includedVirtualPath);

        var config = new DotlessConfiguration
        {
            MinifyOutput = false,
            CacheEnabled = false,
            MapPathsToWeb = true,
            ImportAllFilesAsLess = true,
            LessSource = typeof (VirtualFileReader),
            Logger = typeof (ThrowExceptionLogger)
        };

        return Less.Parse (input, config);
    }
}


internal class VirtualFileReader : IFileReader
{
    public bool UseCacheDependencies
    {
        get { return false; }
    }


    public byte[] GetBinaryFileContents (string fileName)
    {
        return File.ReadAllBytes (GetFullPath (fileName));
    }


    public string GetFileContents (string fileName)
    {
        return File.ReadAllText (GetFullPath (fileName));
    }


    public bool DoesFileExist (string fileName)
    {
        return File.Exists (GetFullPath (fileName));
    }


    public string GetFullPath (string path)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty (path))
            return string.Empty;

        return HostingEnvironment.MapPath (path[0] != '~' && path[0] != '/'
                                               ? Path.Combine (LessTransform.CurrentParsedFileDirectory, path)
                                               : path);
    }
}


public class ThrowExceptionLogger : Logger
{
    public ThrowExceptionLogger (LogLevel level) : base (level)
    {
    }


    protected override void Log (string message)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty (message))
            return;

        if (message.Length > 100)
            message = message.Substring (0, 100) + "...";

        throw new LessTransformException (message);
    }
}


[Serializable]
public sealed class LessTransformException : Exception
{
    public LessTransformException (string message) : base (message)
    {
    }
}

Usage:

bundles.Add (new StyleBundle ("~/styles-bundle/common")
    .Include ("~/content/bootstrap/bootstrap.less", new LessTransform ()));
1
  • lovely, thanks :-) especially the idea to add exception handling... somehow I must have forgotten that - umm - I guess I was already too used to just check for empty less-files ;-)
    – Ingo
    Apr 3, 2014 at 5:17
2

I was having the same issue today, I found a work around but I'd like a better solution as well. I was also trying to use dotless and a custom transform like what you have.

Workaround:

Pre-build event:

"$(SolutionDir)packages\dotless.1.3.1.0\tool\dotless.compiler.exe" "$(ProjectDir)Content\less\bootstrap.less"

That will create a bootstrap.css file which you can then include as regular CSS instead of LESS.

This solution isn't ideal, as you'd have to update the build event each time you update dotless, and having the bundle handle it is cleaner as well.

1
  • I already thought about precompiling it, but I would really prefer if someone knew how to fix the built-in behaviour. I actually expected asp.net-mvc-built-in bundling and minification to do that Job for me. I am not a fan of "i have to remember to ..." whenever I change the Setup. So far I havent gotten this to work, but will continue to try. Thanks again for the Workaround!
    – Ingo
    Mar 13, 2013 at 12:03
0

I really, really recommend installing WebEssentials 2012 instead.

It will generate a css-file AND a minified css-file from your .less and you can reference the css instead. It will automatically update the css everytime you make a change to your .less so there is no need to remember any pre-build steps or anything...

When installing WebEssentials you'll also get other sweet features like preview of CoffeeScript, TypeScript and LESS. JSHint, automatic minification and lots and lots more "goodies"!

4
  • Yes, WebEssentials 2012 does that, but I will have to reference the css while my solution allows me to modify my "LESS"-files without me having to do anything... is my solution perfect? probably not, is it elegant? maybe not, but i can award it many points on my lazyness-scale :-) ... nevertheless I totally agree that in a final productive system I would prefer using precompiled css files
    – Ingo
    Jun 25, 2013 at 9:01
  • 1
    I'm not saying that your solution isn't elegant. I'm just saying that there is another way without custom code and NuGet-packages. I know it goes against our nature as developers, but we don't have to construct a door when you can buy one at the store (or as in this case, get one for free!). ;-)
    – RickardN
    Jun 25, 2013 at 11:32
  • well, unfortunately WebEssentials 2012 is not available on Visual Studio 2010 Apr 2, 2014 at 19:45
  • it's almost one year left before VS2010 reaches EOL... ain't life a bitch! ;)
    – RickardN
    Apr 10, 2014 at 14:55

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