🖼 Unpic
Universal image CDN URL translator
There are many image CDNs that provide a URL API for transforming images. There is little consistency in these APIs, and it's often unclear what the API is for a given URL. This library aims to provide a consistent interface for detecting image CDN URLs and transforming them.
If you'd like to use this on the web, you might want to try Unpic img, a multi-framework image component, powered by Unpic.
It designed to work with image URLs from sources such as CMSs and other user-generated content, where the source image may or may not be from an image CDN, and may already have transforms applied. This allow different transforms to be applied for display on a website. A web framework may need to transform an image for display on a site. Rather than doing this by downloading and resizing it locally or re-processing it with a separate image service, this library can be used to transform the URL to use the original image CDN, which will then transform the image on the fly.
Usage
This library is available via URL imports for Deno and via npm for Node. To use it in Deno, import the module from deno.land:
import { transformUrl } from "https://deno.land/x/unpic/mod.ts";
To use it in Node, install it from npm:
npm install unpic
Then import it in your code:
import { transformUrl } from "unpic";
You can then use the transformUrl
function to transform a URL:
const url = transformUrl(
{
url:
"https://cdn.shopify.com/static/sample-images/bath_grande_crop_center.jpeg",
width: 800,
height: 600,
},
);
console.log(url.toString());
// https://cdn.shopify.com/static/sample-images/bath.jpeg?width=800&height=600&crop=center
You can also use the parseUrl
function to parse a URL and get the CDN and any
params:
const parsedUrl = parseUrl(
"https://cdn.shopify.com/static/sample-images/bath_800x600_crop_center.jpeg",
);
console.log(parsedUrl);
// {
// cdn: "shopify",
// width: 800,
// height: 600,
// base: "https://cdn.shopify.com/static/sample-images/bath.jpeg",
// params: {
// crop: "center",
// },
// }
You can bypass auto-detection by specifying the CDN:
const url = transformUrl(
{
url:
"https://cdn.shopify.com/static/sample-images/bath_grande_crop_center.jpeg",
width: 800,
height: 600,
cdn: "shopify",
},
);
This is particularly useful if you are using the CDN with a custom domain which is not auto-detected.
Supported CDN APIs
- Adobe Dynamic Media (Scene7)
- Builder.io
- Bunny.net
- Cloudflare
- Contentful
- Cloudinary
- Imgix, including Unsplash, DatoCMS, Sanity and Prismic
- Kontent.ai
- Shopify
- Storyblok
- Vercel / Next.js
- WordPress.com and Jetpack Site Accelerator
Delegated URLs
Some transformers support URL delegation. This means that the source image URL
is also checked, and if it matches a CDN then the transform is applied directly
to the source image. For example: consider a next/image
URL that points to an
image on Shopify. The URL is detected as a nextjs
URL because it starts with
/_next/image
. The nextjs
transformer supports delegation, so the source
image URL is then checked. As it matches a Shopify domain, the transform is
applied directly to the Shopify URL. This means that the image is transformed on
the fly by Shopify, rather than by Next.js. However if the source image is not a
supported CDN, or is a local image then the nextjs
transformer will return a
/_next/image
URL.
FAQs
- What is an image CDN? An image CDN is a service that provides a URL API for transforming images. This is often used to resize images on the fly, but can also be used to apply other transforms such as cropping, rotation, compression, etc. This includes dedicated image CDNs such as Imgix and Cloudinary, CMSs such as Contentful, Builder.io and Sanity, general CDNs such as Bunny.net that provide an image API, but also other service providers such as Shopify. The CMSs and other service providers often use a dedicated image CDN to provide the image API, most commonly Imgix. In most cases they support the same API, but in others they may proxy the image through their own CDN, or use a different API.
- Why would I use this instead of the CDN's own SDK? If you you know that your images will all come from one CDN, then you probably should use the CDN's own SDK. This library is designed to work with images from multiple CDNs, and to work with images that may or may not be from a CDN. It is particularly useful for images that may come from an arbitrary source, such as a CMS. It is also useful for parsing URLs that may already have transforms applied, because most CDN SDKs will not parse these URLs correctly.
- Can you add support for CDN X? If it supports a URL API then yes, please open an issue or PR.
- Can you add my domain to CDN X? If you provide a service where end-users
use your URLs then probably. Examples may be image providers such as Unsplash,
or CMSs. If it is just your own site then probably not. You can manually
specify the CDN in the arguments to
transformUrl
andparseUrl
. - Can you support more params? We deliberately just support the most common params that are shared between all CDNs. If you need more params then you can use the CDN-specific API directly.
- Why do you set auto format? If the CDN support is, and no format is
specified in
transformUrl
, the library will remove any format set in the source image, changing it to auto-format. In most cases, this is what you want. Almost all browsers now support modern formats such as WebP, and setting auto-format will allow the CDN to serve the best format for the browser. If you want to force a specific format, you can set it intransformUrl
. - Do you support SVG, animated GIF etc? If the CDN supports it, then yes. We don't attempt to check if a format is valid - we will just pass it through to the CDN. If the CDN doesn't support it, then it will return an error or a default.
- Do you support video, etc No, this library is only for images. If you pass
a video URL to
transformUrl
, it will returnundefined
, as it will for any URL that is not recognised as an image CDN URL. It is up to you to handle this case.
Contributing
See the contributing guide.