SVGO, short for SVG Optimizer, is a Node.js library and command-line application for optimizing SVG files.
SVG files, especially those exported from vector editors, usually contain a lot of redundant information. This includes editor metadata, comments, hidden elements, default or suboptimal values, and other stuff that can be safely removed or converted without impacting rendering.
You can install SVGO globablly through npm, yarn, or pnpm. Alternatively, drop the global flag (global
/-g
) to use it in your Node.js project.
# npm
npm install -g svgo
# yarn
yarn global add svgo
# pnpm
pnpm add -g svgo
Process single files:
svgo one.svg two.svg -o one.min.svg two.min.svg
Process a directory of files recursively with -f
/--folder
:
svgo -f path/to/directory_with_svgs -o path/to/output_directory
Help for advanced usage:
svgo --help
SVGO has a plugin architecture. You can read more about all plugins in Plugins | SVGO Documentation, and the default plugins in Preset Default | SVGO Documentation.
SVGO reads the configuration from svgo.config.js
or the --config path/to/config.js
command-line option. Some other parameters can be configured though command-line options too.
svgo.config.js
module.exports = {
multipass: false, // boolean
datauri: 'base64', // 'base64'|'enc'|'unenc'
js2svg: {
indent: 4, // number
pretty: false // boolean
},
plugins: [
'preset-default', // built-in plugins enabled by default
'prefixIds', // enable built-in plugins by name
// enable built-in plugins with an object to configure plugins
{
name: 'prefixIds',
params: {
prefix: 'uwu'
}
}
]
};
Instead of configuring SVGO from scratch, you can tweak the default preset to suit your needs by configuring or disabling the respective plugin.
svgo.config.js
module.exports = {
plugins: [
{
name: 'preset-default',
params: {
overrides: {
// disable a default plugin
removeViewBox: false,
// customize the params of a default plugin
inlineStyles: {
onlyMatchedOnce: false,
}
}
}
}
]
};
You can find a list of the default plugins in the order they run in Preset Default | SVGO Documentation.
You can also specify custom plugins:
svgo.config.js
const importedPlugin = require('./imported-plugin');
module.exports = {
plugins: [
// plugin imported from another JavaScript file
importedPlugin,
// plugin defined inline
{
name: 'customPlugin',
params: {
paramName: 'paramValue',
},
fn: (ast, params, info) => {}
}
]
};
SVGO provides a few low level utilities.
The core of SVGO is optimize
function.
const { optimize } = require('svgo');
const result = optimize(svgString, {
path: 'path-to.svg', // recommended
multipass: true // all other config fields are available here
});
const optimizedSvgString = result.data;
If you write a tool on top of SVGO you may want to resolve the svgo.config.js
file.
const { loadConfig } = require('svgo');
const config = await loadConfig();
You can also specify a path and customize the current working directory.
const config = await loadConfig(configFile, cwd);
Method | Reference |
---|---|
Web app | SVGOMG |
Grunt task | grunt-svgmin |
Gulp task | gulp-svgmin |
Webpack loader | image-minimizer-webpack-plugin |
PostCSS plugin | postcss-svgo |
Inkscape plugin | inkscape-svgo |
Sketch plugin | svgo-compressor |
Rollup plugin | rollup-plugin-svgo |
Visual Studio Code plugin | vscode-svgo |
Atom plugin | atom-svgo |
Sublime plugin | Sublime-svgo |
Figma plugin | Advanced SVG Export |
Linux app | Oh My SVG |
Browser extension | SVG Gobbler |
API | Vector Express |
SheetJS LLC | Fontello |
This software is released under the terms of the MIT license.
Logo by André Castillo.