Agent skill
mermaid-graph-renderer
Renders Mermaid diagrams to SVG, PNG, and PDF in both web and offline contexts. Covers client-side lazy loading, SSR trade-offs, CLI batch export, and native Rust rendering. Use when exporting diagrams to images, optimizing Mermaid rendering performance on web pages, setting up CI/CD diagram pipelines, or choosing a rendering library. Activate on "render mermaid", "export diagram", "mermaid to png", "mermaid to svg", "mermaid performance", "diagram export". NOT for writing Mermaid syntax (use mermaid-graph-writer), general image processing, or non-Mermaid diagram formats.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/curiositech/some_claude_skills/tree/main/.claude/skills/mermaid-graph-renderer
Metadata
Additional technical details for this skill
- tags
-
mermaid graph renderer render-mermaid export-diagram
- category
- Content & Writing
- pairs with
-
[ { "skill": "mermaid-graph-writer", "reason": "The writer creates diagram syntax; the renderer converts it to visual SVG/PNG output" }, { "skill": "diagramming-expert", "reason": "Rendering decisions (sizing, themes, fonts) complement diagram content authoring" }, { "skill": "document-generation-pdf", "reason": "Rendered Mermaid diagrams are embedded in generated PDF documentation" } ]
SKILL.md
Mermaid Graph Renderer
Renders Mermaid diagrams to production-quality SVG, PNG, and PDF in web and offline contexts. Covers the full spectrum from lazy-loaded client-side rendering to 1000x-faster native Rust batch export.
Core Constraint
Mermaid.js requires browser APIs (document.createElement, SVGTextElement.getBBox()) to compute text dimensions. Every non-browser rendering path must either embed a headless browser or reimplement the renderer from scratch. This constraint shapes every decision below.
When to Use
✅ Use for:
- Rendering Mermaid diagrams on web pages (performance-optimized)
- Exporting diagrams to SVG, PNG, or PDF (offline/CLI)
- Setting up CI/CD pipelines that generate diagram images
- Choosing between rendering libraries for a project
- Optimizing Mermaid load time on documentation sites
❌ NOT for:
- Writing Mermaid syntax (use
mermaid-graph-writer) - Rendering non-Mermaid formats (PlantUML, GraphViz — see Kroki)
- General image processing or manipulation
Rendering Decision Tree
flowchart TD
A{Where are you rendering?} -->|Browser| B{Performance matters?}
A -->|CLI / CI| C{Volume?}
A -->|Server-side| D{Must avoid client JS?}
B -->|Yes| E[Lazy-load mermaid.js]
B -->|No| F[CDN script tag]
C -->|1-10 diagrams| G[mermaid-cli]
C -->|10-100 diagrams| H{Need multiple formats?}
C -->|100+ diagrams| I[mmdr Rust renderer]
H -->|Mermaid only| G
H -->|Multiple languages| J[Kroki]
D -->|Yes, zero JS| K[Build-time with Puppeteer]
D -->|Some JS OK| E
K -->|Slow builds warning| L[rehype-mermaid + Playwright]
Web Rendering
Option 1: Lazy-Loaded mermaid.js (Recommended)
Best for documentation sites, blogs, and apps where only some pages have diagrams.
How it works: Check for .mermaid elements before loading the library. The ~480 KB cost is only paid on pages that actually need it.
// Lazy load pattern — only loads mermaid.js when diagrams exist
function initMermaid() {
const diagrams = document.querySelectorAll('.mermaid');
if (diagrams.length === 0) return;
const script = document.createElement('script');
script.src = 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/mermaid@11/dist/mermaid.min.js';
script.onload = () => {
mermaid.initialize({ startOnLoad: false, theme: 'neutral' });
mermaid.run({ nodes: diagrams });
};
document.head.appendChild(script);
}
// Handle initial load + SPA navigation
document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', initMermaid);
// For SPA route changes: call initMermaid() after navigation
Key detail: Handle both initial page load AND client-side navigation (SPA route changes) by re-running mermaid.run() when new diagram content appears.
| Aspect | Value |
|---|---|
| Bundle size | ~480 KB (core + lazy diagram chunks) |
| Render time | ~50-200 ms per diagram (client) |
| Diagram coverage | Full (all Mermaid types) |
| Best for | Docs sites, blogs, apps with occasional diagrams |
Option 2: @mermaid-js/tiny
Pre-bundled subset for CDN use. All diagram types included upfront (no lazy-loading of diagram chunks). Smaller total but loaded eagerly.
Use when: You know exactly which 1-2 diagram types you need and want a single-file import.
Option 3: Build-Time SSR (Usually Not Worth It)
Render SVGs at build time using Puppeteer/Playwright. Sounds appealing; painful in practice.
Costs:
- Adds ~280 MB to
node_modules(Puppeteer + Chromium) - ~2-3 seconds per diagram to spin up and render
- A 5-second build becomes 45 seconds for ~30 diagrams
- Docker/CI headaches (Chrome needs to be installed)
When actually worth it: Strict zero-JS requirements, or sites with hundreds of diagrams where you want to eliminate client-side rendering entirely.
Tools: rehype-mermaid (uses Playwright), rehype-mermaid-cli (wraps official CLI).
Verdict: Unless you have strict zero-JS requirements, lazy-loaded client-side rendering is the better trade-off.
Offline / CLI Rendering
Option 1: mermaid-cli (Official)
The canonical CLI tool. Launches headless Chromium, renders, captures output.
# Install
npm install -g @mermaid-js/mermaid-cli
# Basic usage
mmdc -i input.mmd -o output.svg
mmdc -i input.mmd -o output.png -b transparent
mmdc -i input.mmd -o output.pdf
# With config
mmdc -i input.mmd -o output.svg -t dark --configFile mermaid.config.json
# Batch: process Markdown with embedded diagrams
mmdc -i document.md -o document-with-images.md
# Docker
docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/data minlag/mermaid-cli -i /data/input.mmd -o /data/output.svg
| Aspect | Value |
|---|---|
| Speed | ~3000 ms per diagram (Chromium overhead) |
| Output | SVG, PNG, PDF |
| Size | ~280 MB (Puppeteer + Chromium) |
| Coverage | Full (all Mermaid types, 100% parity) |
| Best for | 1-50 diagrams, when accuracy matters most |
SVG gotcha: Output SVGs contain <foreignObject> elements that break in Inkscape and rsvg-convert. Fix: set "htmlLabels": false in config, or export to PNG instead.
Option 2: Kroki (Multi-Format Gateway)
Unified HTTP API that routes diagram source to appropriate rendering engine. Supports 25+ languages (Mermaid, PlantUML, GraphViz, D2, Excalidraw, etc.).
# Render via HTTP (self-hosted or kroki.io)
curl -X POST https://kroki.io/mermaid/svg \
-H 'Content-Type: text/plain' \
-d 'flowchart LR
A --> B --> C' \
-o diagram.svg
# Self-host via Docker Compose
# docker-compose.yml needs: yuzutech/kroki + yuzutech/kroki-mermaid
| Aspect | Value |
|---|---|
| Speed | ~500-2000 ms (network + render) |
| Output | SVG, PNG, PDF, JPEG |
| Languages | 25+ (Mermaid, PlantUML, GraphViz, D2, etc.) |
| Best for | Multi-language pipelines, CI/CD, documentation generators |
When Kroki wins: You need multiple diagram languages in one pipeline. When it doesn't: Simple "render one Mermaid diagram" — overkill.
Option 3: mmdr (Native Rust — Fastest)
Native Rust reimplementation. No browser, no Node.js. ~1000x faster than mermaid-cli.
# Install (Rust toolchain required)
cargo install mmdr
# Usage
mmdr input.mmd -o output.svg
mmdr input.mmd -o output.png # via resvg, no browser
| Aspect | Value |
|---|---|
| Speed | ~3 ms per diagram (1000x faster) |
| Output | SVG (native), PNG (via resvg) |
| Size | ~5-10 MB binary |
| Coverage | 13 diagram types (partial parity) |
| Best for | Batch processing 100+ diagrams, CI/CD speed |
Trade-off: Not all Mermaid features are supported yet. Flowcharts and sequence diagrams are mature; other types vary. Accept imperfection for speed, or fall back to mermaid-cli for edge cases.
No <foreignObject> issue: Uses native SVG text, so output works with Inkscape and other SVG tools.
Comparison Matrix
| Criterion | mermaid.js CDN | mermaid-cli | Kroki | mmdr (Rust) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Runtime | Browser | Node + Puppeteer | Docker | Native binary |
| Speed/diagram | ~100 ms | ~3000 ms | ~1000 ms | ~3 ms |
| SVG quality | Excellent | Excellent | Excellent | Good (improving) |
| PNG quality | N/A | Good | Good | Good (resvg) |
| PDF export | N/A | Yes | Yes | Not yet |
| Install size | ~480 KB | ~280 MB | ~1 GB (Docker) | ~5-10 MB |
| Diagram coverage | Full | Full | Full | 13 types |
| CI/CD fit | Poor | Moderate | Good | Excellent |
| Multi-language | No | No | Yes (25+) | No |
Recommendations by Use Case
| Use Case | Recommendation | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Docs site with occasional diagrams | Lazy-loaded mermaid.js | Only loads on pages that need it |
| Next.js / SSR app | Dynamic import, ssr: false |
Don't fight build-time rendering |
| CI/CD generating static docs (Mermaid only) | mmdr for speed, mermaid-cli for accuracy | 1000x faster vs. 100% feature parity |
| CI/CD with multiple diagram languages | Kroki | One API for PlantUML + Mermaid + GraphViz |
| Batch export for print/PDF (100+ diagrams) | mmdr + mermaid-cli fallback | Fast for most, accurate for edge cases |
| Desktop apps (Electron/Obsidian/VS Code) | Built-in mermaid.js | Chromium already embedded |
Anti-Patterns
SSR Obsession
Wrong: Spending 3 days setting up Puppeteer in CI to avoid 480 KB of client JS. Right: Lazy-load mermaid.js. The 480 KB is only fetched on pages with diagrams. Most users won't notice.
foreignObject Surprise
Wrong: Exporting SVGs from mermaid-cli and wondering why Inkscape can't open them.
Right: Set "htmlLabels": false in config, or export to PNG directly.
One Tool for Everything
Wrong: Using mermaid-cli for 500 diagrams in CI (25 minutes of build time). Right: Use mmdr for batch, mermaid-cli for the few diagrams that need full parity.
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