statisk

1.0.1 • Public • Published

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This is a little experiment for building a static site generator that is based around routes.

Think of it like you define the desired routes, but instead of controllers (from a typical mvc application) the "routes" are matched from files.

For example

const routes = {
    // the / route will be matched from content/index.html
    '/': {
        from: 'content/index.html'
    },
    // :slug is a variable that will be taken from the file name
    '/blog/:slug/': {
        from: 'content/posts/:slug.md'
    },
    // :path+ means a repeating pattern, so we can deeply nest
    // for example categories
    '/categories/:path+/': {
        from: 'content/categories/:path+.md'
    }
    // parameters can also be optional using the :param? syntax
    // see https://www.npmjs.com/package/path-to-regexp for all
    // available types of parameters.
};

By default every file will be run through a default pipeline, which will basically read the contents of the file, and then write a new file in the dist folder at the given path.

In many cases we want to apply different transformations to a file, this is done by specifying a pipeline in the route definition.

The pipeline property can be an array of async functions (or promises) or an instance of the lib/Pipeline class.

What's a pipeline?

A pipeline is just a simple chain of functions. The order is important, because every function in the pipeline will be run one after another.

Important: always return a value from a pipeline function, because the next function in the line will receive it as the parameter, and if you forget to return, the data will be "lost".

Example pipeline

const routes = {
    '/blog/:slug/': {
        from: 'content/posts/:slug.md',
        pipeline: [
            matter      // parses front matter
            markdown    // transforms markdown to html
            async file => {
                // a step in the pipeline is just an async function
 
                // file.content is a Buffer by default, to allow
                // working with binary files
                file.content = file.content.toString().toUpperCase();
                return file;
            }
        ]
    },
}

This is a very simple example, and in some cases handling it inline can be tedious. When the routes definition gets out of hand, it's a good idea to move the pipeline definition into it's own file, and then require it in the route definition.

License

Released under the MIT license.

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1.0.1

License

MIT

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  • rigor789