Marking a resource with `resources.PostProcess` delays any transformations to after the build, typically because one or more of the steps in the transformation chain depends on the result of the build (e.g. files in `public`).
There are several ways to set up CSS purging with PostCSS in Hugo. If you have a simple project, you should consider going the simpler route and drop the use of `resources.PostProcess` and just extract keywords from the templates. See the [Tailwind documentation](https://tailwindcss.com/docs/controlling-file-size/#app) for some examples.
{{% /note %}}
The below configuration will write a `hugo_stats.json` file to the project root as part of the build. If you're only using this for the production build, you should consider placing it below [config/production](/getting-started/configuration/#configuration-directory).
Note that in the example above, the "CSS purge step" will only be applied to the production build. This means that you need to do something like this in your head template to build and include your CSS:
These are the environment variables Hugo passes down to PostCSS (and Babel), which allows you do do `process.env.HUGO_ENVIRONMENT === 'production' ? [autoprefixer] : []` and similar:
PWD
: The absolute path to the project working directory.
: {{<new-in"0.109.0">}} The absolute path to the publish directory (the `public` directory). Note that the value will always point to a directory on disk even when running `hugo server` in memory mode. If you write to this folder from PostCSS when running the server, you could run the server with one of these flags:
Also, Hugo will add environment variables for all files mounted below `assets/_jsconfig`. A default mount will be set up with files in the project root matching this regexp: `(babel|postcss|tailwind)\.config\.js`.
These will get environment variables named on the form `HUGO_FILE_:filename:` where `:filename:` is all upper case with periods replaced with underscore. This allows you to do this and similar: