I used two ways to handle these:
Get a CDN like server
Have a single version of those files and place them on a server. For example you could have URLs such as:
https://cdn.example.com/css/helpers.css
https://cdn.example.com/js/helpers.js
If you want to support versions (maybe you should?), you can add that to the filename:
https://cdn.example.com/css/helpers-1.3.css
https://cdn.example.com/js/helpers-1.2.js
Or to the path if you view all your files as having one common version:
https://cdn.example.com/1.2/css/helpers.css
https://cdn.example.com/1.2/js/helpers.js
Versioning is useful if you want to test a website with the newest version before using that version on your live site.
This is most certainly the easiest way if you can implement it that way. Now all your other websites will use those URLs instead of local versions of the files:
<link type="text/stylesheet" href="https://cdn.example.com/1.2/css/helpers.css"/>
Pull those files at build time
Depending on how you organize your websites (it is really not clear from your questions) and assuming you have folders on your machine with the original source, you can bring in those files as required with a script that you run before you upload your sites.
In my case, I like to do that in three steps:
- I write the files
- I copy the files to a .../build/... folder
- I send the .../build/... folder to my test or production server
One reason for this is to generate a build folder that includes exactly what you want, verify it, then send it to your server. That verification happens only when you write your script. Once done, it should not require any additional work.
So... one reason to get such a script is that I can compile my files. For example, if you write PHP code, the servers only need the most compressed version of your code (unless you are debugging and need to find line numbers...) The script that generate the build folder could do:
for p in php/*.php
do
php -w $p build/$p
done
Now your PHP code on your server may be something like 20% smaller.
Similarly, you could copy your helper.css
file as in:
cp ../helper-project/css/helper.css build/public_html/css/.
This copies the helpers.css file to your build folder. Since it grabs that file from your unique ../helper-project
folder, you will always end up with the latest.
And instead of a simple cp
command, you could also minimize that file at the same time:
cleancss --remove-empty ../helper-project/css/helper.css > build/public_html/css/.
The only problem here is that if you make changes to the helper-project, it won't automatically update all the projects. You still have to do in each project and run the script(s) that generate the build folder and copy that to your servers. Yet, I find that to be a practical way of doing things because that way I know when I do the update and I can test the resulting website(s) before going to production and once I update a production site, I can verify that it's still all working just fine.