> ⚠️ This integration is still experimental! Only node environments are supported currently, stay tuned for Deno support in the future!
This **[Astro integration][astro-integration]** makes it easy to optimize images in your [Astro project](https://astro.build), with full support for SSG builds and server-side rendering!
Images play a big role in overall site performance and usability. Serving properly sized images makes all the difference but is often tricky to automate.
This integration provides `<Image />` and `<Picture>` components as well as a basic image transformer powered by [sharp](https://sharp.pixelplumbing.com/), with full support for static sites and server-side rendering. The built-in `sharp` transformer is also replacable, opening the door for future integrations that work with your favorite hosted image service.
The `astro add` command-line tool automates the installation for you. Run one of the following commands in a new terminal window. (If you aren't sure which package manager you're using, run the first command.) Then, follow the prompts, and type "y" in the terminal (meaning "yes") for each one.
Then, restart the dev server by typing `CTRL-C` and then `npm run astro dev` in the terminal window that was running Astro.
Because this command is new, it might not properly set things up. If that happens, [feel free to log an issue on our GitHub](https://github.com/withastro/astro/issues) and try the manual installation steps below.
The included `sharp` transformer supports resizing images and encoding them to different image formats. Third-party image services will be able to add support for custom transformations as well (ex: `blur`, `filter`, `rotate`, etc).
The built-in `<Image />` component is used to create an optimized `<img />` for both remote images hosted on other domains as well as local images imported from your project's `src` directory.
In addition to the component-specific properties, any valid HTML attribute for the `<img />` included in the `<Image />` component will be included in the built `<img />`.
The output format to be used in the optimized image. The original image format will be used if `format` is not provided.
#### quality
<p>
**Type:** `number`<br>
**Default:** `undefined`
</p>
The compression quality used during optimization. The image service will use a default quality if not provided.
#### width
<p>
**Type:** `number`<br>
**Default:** `undefined`
</p>
The desired width of the output image. Combine with `height` to crop the image to an exact size, or `aspectRatio` to automatically calculate and crop the height.
Dimensions are optional for local images, the original image size will be used if not provided.
For remote images, the integration needs to be able to calculate dimensions for the optimized image. This can be done by providing `width` and `height` or by providing one dimension and an `aspectRatio`.
#### height
<p>
**Type:** `number`<br>
**Default:** `undefined`
</p>
The desired height of the output image. Combine with `width` to crop the image to an exact size, or `aspectRatio` to automatically calculate and crop the width.
Dimensions are optional for local images, the original image size will be used if not provided.
For remote images, the integration needs to be able to calculate dimensions for the optimized image. This can be done by providing `width` and `height` or by providing one dimension and an `aspectRatio`.
#### aspectRatio
<p>
**Type:** `number` | `string`<br>
**Default:** `undefined`
</p>
The desired aspect ratio of the output image. Combine with either `width` or `height` to automatically calculate and crop the other dimension.
A `string` can be provided in the form of `{width}:{height}`, ex: `16:9` or `3:4`.
A `number` can also be provided, useful when the aspect ratio is calculated at build time. This can be an inline number such as `1.777` or inlined as a JSX expression like `aspectRatio={16/9}`.
The list of sizes that should be built for responsive images. This is combined with `aspectRatio` to calculate the final dimensions of each built image.
```astro
// Builds three images: 400x400, 800x800, and 1200x1200
A `string` can be provided in the form of `{width}:{height}`, ex: `16:9` or `3:4`.
A `number` can also be provided, useful when the aspect ratio is calculated at build time. This can be an inline number such as `1.777` or inlined as a JSX expression like `aspectRatio={16/9}`.
The output formats to be used in the optimized image. If not provided, `webp` and `avif` will be used in addition to the original image format.
### `getImage`
This is the helper function used by the `<Image />` component to build `<img />` attributes for the transformed image. This helper can be used directly for more complex use cases that aren't currently supported by the `<Image />` component.
This helper takes in an object with the same properties as the `<Image />` component and returns an object with attributes that should be included on the final `<img />` element.
This is the helper function used by the `<Picture />` component to build multiple sizes and formats for responsive images. This helper can be used directly for more complex use cases that aren't currently supported by the `<Picture />` component.
This helper takes in an object with the same properties as the `<Picture />` component and returns an object attributes that should be included on the final `<img />` element **and** a list of sources that should be used to render all `<source>`s for the `<picture>` element.
The integration can be configured to run with a different image service, either a hosted image service or a full image transformer that runs locally in your build or SSR deployment.
> During development, local images may not have been published yet and would not be available to hosted image services. Local images will always use the built-in `sharp` service when using `astro dev`.
The `serviceEntryPoint` should resolve to the image service installed from NPM. The default entry point is `@astrojs/image/sharp`, which resolves to the entry point exported from this integration's `package.json`.
The `logLevel` controls can be used to control how much detail is logged by the integration during builds. This may be useful to track down a specific image or transformation that is taking a long time to build.
Image files in your project's `src` directory can be imported in frontmatter and passed directly to the `<Image />` component. All other properties are optional and will default to the original image file's properties if not provided.
Files in the `/public` directory are always served or copied as-is, with no processing. We recommend that local images are always kept in `src/` so that Astro can transform, optimize and bundle them. But if you absolutely must keep an image in `public/`, use its relative URL path as the image's `src=` attribute. It will be treated as a remote image, which requires an `aspectRatio` attribute.
Alternatively, you can import an image from your `public/` directory in your frontmatter and use a variable in your `src=` attribute. You cannot, however, import this directly inside the component as its `src` value.
For example, use an image located at `public/social.png` in either static or SSR builds like so:
```astro title="src/pages/page.astro"
---
import { Image } from '@astrojs/image/components';
import socialImage from '/social.png';
---
// In static builds: the image will be built and optimized to `/dist`.
// In SSR builds: the image will be optimized by the server when requested by a browser.
Remote images can be transformed with the `<Image />` component. The `<Image />` component needs to know the final dimensions for the `<img />` element to avoid content layout shifts. For remote images, this means you must either provide `width` and `height`, or one of the dimensions plus the required `aspectRatio`.
The `<Picture />` component can be used to automatically build a `<picture>` with multiple sizes and formats. Check out [MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn/HTML/Multimedia_and_embedding/Responsive_images#art_direction) for a deep dive into responsive images and art direction.