GithubHelp home page GithubHelp logo

doytsujin / metalsmith Goto Github PK

View Code? Open in Web Editor NEW

This project forked from metalsmith/metalsmith

0.0 1.0 0.0 3.63 MB

An extremely simple, pluggable static site generator.

Home Page: https://metalsmith.io

License: MIT License

JavaScript 100.00%

metalsmith's Introduction

Metalsmith

npm: version ci: build code coverage license: MIT Gitter chat

An extremely simple, pluggable static site generator.

In Metalsmith, all of the logic is handled by plugins. You simply chain them together.

Here's what the simplest blog looks like:

const Metalsmith = require('metalsmith')
const layouts = require('@metalsmith/layouts')
const markdown = require('@metalsmith/markdown')

Metalsmith(__dirname)
  .use(markdown())
  .use(layouts())
  .build(function (err) {
    if (err) throw err
    console.log('Build finished!')
  })

Installation

NPM:

npm install metalsmith

Yarn:

yarn add metalsmith

Quickstart

What if you want to get fancier by hiding unfinished drafts, grouping posts in collections, and using custom permalinks? Just add plugins...

const Metalsmith = require('metalsmith')
const collections = require('@metalsmith/collections')
const layouts = require('@metalsmith/layouts')
const markdown = require('@metalsmith/markdown')
const permalinks = require('@metalsmith/permalinks')

Metalsmith(__dirname)
  .source('./src')
  .destination('./build')
  .clean(true)
  .frontmatter({
    excerpt: true
  })
  .env({
    NAME: process.env.NODE_ENV,
    DEBUG: '@metalsmith/*',
    DEBUG_LOG: 'metalsmith.log'
  })
  .metadata({
    sitename: 'My Static Site & Blog',
    siteurl: 'https://example.com/',
    description: "It's about saying »Hello« to the world.",
    generatorname: 'Metalsmith',
    generatorurl: 'https://metalsmith.io/'
  })
  .use(
    collections({
      posts: 'posts/*.md'
    })
  )
  .use(markdown())
  .use(
    permalinks({
      relative: false
    })
  )
  .use(layouts())
  .build(function (err) {
    if (err) throw err
  })

How does it work?

Metalsmith works in three simple steps:

  1. Read all the files in a source directory.
  2. Invoke a series of plugins that manipulate the files.
  3. Write the results to a destination directory!

Each plugin is invoked with the contents of the source directory, and each file can contain YAML front-matter that will be attached as metadata, so a simple file like...

---
title: A Catchy Title
date: 2021-12-01
---

An informative article.

...would be parsed into...

{
  'path/to/my-file.md': {
    title: 'A Catchy Title',
    date: <Date >,
    contents: <Buffer 7a 66 7a 67...>,
    stats: {
      ...
    }
  }
}

...which any of the plugins can then manipulate however they want. Writing plugins is incredibly simple, just take a look at the example drafts plugin.

Of course they can get a lot more complicated too. That's what makes Metalsmith powerful; the plugins can do anything you want!

Plugins

A Metalsmith plugin is a function that is passed the file list, the metalsmith instance, and a done callback. It is often wrapped in a plugin initializer that accepts configuration options.

Check out the official plugin registry at: https://metalsmith.io/plugins.
Find all the core plugins at: https://github.com/search?q=org%3Ametalsmith+metalsmith-plugin
See the draft plugin for a simple plugin example.

API

Check out the full API reference at: https://metalsmith.io/api.

CLI

In addition to a simple Javascript API, the Metalsmith CLI can read configuration from a metalsmith.json file, so that you can build static-site generators similar to Jekyll or Hexo easily. The example blog above would be configured like this:

metalsmith.json

{
  "source": "src",
  "destination": "build",
  "clean": true,
  "metadata": {
    "sitename": "My Static Site & Blog",
    "siteurl": "https://example.com/",
    "description": "It's about saying »Hello« to the world.",
    "generatorname": "Metalsmith",
    "generatorurl": "https://metalsmith.io/"
  },
  "plugins": [
    { "@metalsmith/drafts": true },
    { "@metalsmith/collections": { "posts": "posts/*.md" } },
    { "@metalsmith/markdown": true },
    { "@metalsmith/permalinks": "posts/:title" },
    { "@metalsmith/layouts": true }
  ]
}

Then run:

metalsmith

# Metalsmith · reading configuration from: /path/to/metalsmith.json
# Metalsmith · successfully built to: /path/to/build

Options recognised by metalsmith.json are source, destination, concurrency, metadata, clean and frontmatter. Checkout the static site, Jekyll examples to see the CLI in action.

Local plugins

If you want to use a custom plugin, but feel like it's too domain-specific to be published to the world, you can include plugins as local npm modules: (simply use a relative path from your root directory)

{
  "plugins": [{ "./lib/metalsmith/plugin.js": true }]
}

The secret...

We often refer to Metalsmith as a "static site generator", but it's a lot more than that. Since everything is a plugin, the core library is just an abstraction for manipulating a directory of files.

Which means you could just as easily use it to make...

Resources

Troubleshooting

Use debug to debug your build with export DEBUG=metalsmith-*,@metalsmith/* (Linux) or set DEBUG=metalsmith-*,@metalsmith/* for Windows.
Use the excellent metalsmith-debug-ui plugin to get a snapshot UI for every build step.

Node Version Requirements

Future Metalsmith releases will at least support the oldest supported Node LTS versions.

Metalsmith 2.5.x supports NodeJS versions 12 and higher.
Metalsmith 2.4.x supports NodeJS versions 8 and higher.
Metalsmith 2.3.0 and below support NodeJS versions all the way back to 0.12.

Compatibility & support policy

Metalsmith is supported on all common operating systems (Windows, Linux, Mac). Metalsmith releases adhere to semver (semantic versioning) with 2 minor gray-area exceptions for what could be considered breaking changes:

  • Major Node version support for EOL (End of Life) versions can be dropped in minor releases
  • If a change represents a major improvement that is backwards-compatible with 99% of use cases (not considering outdated plugins), they will be considered eligible for inclusion in minor version updates.

Credits

Special thanks to Ian Storm Taylor, Andrew Meyer, Dominic Barnes, Andrew Goodricke, Ismay Wolff, Kevin Van Lierde and others for their contributions!

metalsmith's People

Contributors

ianstormtaylor avatar webketje avatar ajedi32 avatar zearin avatar woodyrew avatar dominicbarnes avatar lambtron avatar adrieankhisbe avatar moozzyk avatar iwootten avatar srcreigh avatar calvinmetcalf avatar gamingcoder avatar ansballard avatar treygriffith avatar tschaub avatar f2prateek avatar mayo avatar sigo avatar come-maiz avatar justaboutjeff avatar winniehell avatar wdullaer avatar karland avatar ws avatar tmcw avatar shinnn avatar sethfalco avatar ry5n avatar rwilhelm avatar

Watchers

 avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    🖖 Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. 📊📈🎉

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google ❤️ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.