netlify-react-cms

0.0.1 • Public • Published

Netlify CMS

A CMS for static site generators. Give non-technical users a simple way to edit and add content to any site built with a static site generator.

Netlify CMS is released under the MIT License. Please make sure you understand its implications and guarantees.

How it works

Netlify CMS is a single-page app that you pull into the /admin part of your site.

It presents a clean UI for editing content stored in a Git repository.

You setup a YAML config to describe the content model of your site, and typically tweak the main layout of the CMS a bit to fit your own site.

When a user navigates to /admin she'll be prompted to login, and once authenticated she'll be able to create new content or edit existing content.

Installing

Netlify CMS is a React app. To install it in your site, add an /admin folder in your public directory and use this index.html as a template:

<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
  <meta charset="utf-8" />
  <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" />
 
  <title>Content Manager</title>
  <!-- Include the stylesheets from your site here -->
  <link rel="stylesheet" href="//cms.netlify.com/assets/main.css" />
  <!-- Include a CMS specific stylesheet here -->
 
</head>
<body>
  <script src="//cms.netlify.com/assets/main.js"></script> 
</body>
</html>

Add a config.yml file to the /admin folder and configure your content model:

backend:
  name: github-api
  repo: owner/repo # Path to your Github repository 
  branch: master # Branch to update (master by default) 
 
media_folder: "img/uploads" # Folder where user uploaded files should go 
 
collections: # A list of collections the CMS should be able to edit 
  name: "post" # Used in routes, ie.: /admin/collections/:slug/edit 
    label: "Post" # Used in the UI, ie.: "New Post" 
    folder: "_posts" # The path to the folder where the documents are stored 
    create: true # Allow users to create new documents in this collection 
    fields: # The fields each document in this collection have 
      {label: "Title", name: "title", widget: "string", tagname: "h1"}
      {label: "Body", name: "body", widget: "markdown"}
      {label: "Foo", name: "foo", widget: "foo"}
    meta: # Meta data fields. Just like fields, but without any preview element 
      {label: "Publish Date", name: "date", widget: "datetime"}
  name: "settings"
    label: "Settings"
    files:
      name: "general"
        label: "General settings"
        file: "_settings/general.json"
        fields:
          {label: "Main site title", name: "site_title", widget: "string"}
          {label: "Number of fronpage posts", name: "post_count", widget: "number"}
          {label: "Site cover image", name: "cover", widget: "image"}

Netlify CMS works with the concept of collections of documents that a user can edit.

Collections basically comes in three forms:

  1. A folder. Set the folder attribute on the collection. Each document will be a file in this folder. Each document will have the same format, fields and meta fields.
  2. A list of files. Set the files attribute on the collection. You can set fields that all files in the folder shares directly on the collection, and set specific fields for each file. This is great when you have files with a different structure.
  3. A file. Warning, not implemented yet. This is a collection stored in a single file. Typically a YAML file or a CSV with an array of items.

Each collection has a list of fields (or files with their individual fields). Each field has a label, a name and a widget.

Setting up the right collections is the main part of integrating netlify CMS with your site. It's where you decide exactly what content editors can work with, and what widgets should be used to edit each field of your various files or content types.

GitHub as a Backend

The default Github-based authenticator integrates with Netlify's Authentication Provider feature and the repository backend integrates directly with Github's API.

To get everything hooked up, setup continuous deployment from Github to Netlify and then follow the documentation to setup Github as an authentication provider.

That's it, now you should be able to go to the /admin section of your site and log in.

Media folder and Public folder

Most static file generators, except from Jekyll, don't keep the files that'll be copied into the build folder when generating in their root folder.

This can create a problem for image and file paths when uploaded through the CMS.

Use the public_folder setting in config.yml to tell the CMS where the public folder is located in the sources. A typical Middleman setup would look like this:

media_folder: "source/uploads" # Media files will be stored in the repo under source/uploads
public_folder: "source" # CMS now knows 'source' is the public folder and will strip this from the path

Widgets

Actual content editing happens with a side by side view where each widget has a control for editing and a preview to give the content editor an idea of how the content will look in the context of the published site.

Currently these widgets are built-in:

  • string A basic text input
  • markdown A markdown editor
  • datetime A date and time input
  • image An uploaded image

Extending Netlify CMS

The Netlify CMS exposes an window.CMS global object that you can use to register custom widgets, previews and editor plugins. The available methods are:

  • registerPreviewStyle Register a custom stylesheet to use on the preview pane.
  • regsiterPreviewTemplate Registers a template for a collection.
  • registerWidget lets you register a custom widget.

Writing React Components inline

Both regsiterPreviewTemplate and registerWidget requires you to provide a React component. If you have a build process in place for your project, it is possible to integrate webpack and Babel for a complete React build flow.

Although possible, it may be cumbersome or even impractical to add a React build phase. For this reason, Netlify CMS exposes two React constructs globally to allow you to create components inline: ‘createClass’ and ‘h’ (alias for React.createElement).

registerPreviewStyle

Register a custom stylesheet to use on the preview pane.

CMS.registerPreviewStyle(file);

Params:

  • file: css file path.

Example:

CMS.registerPreviewStyle("/example.css");

regsiterPreviewTemplate

Registers a template for a collection.

CMS.registerPreviewTemplate(collection, react_component);

Params:

  • collection: The name of the collection which this preview component will be used for.
  • react_component: A React component that renders the collection data. Three props will be passed to your component during render:
    • entry: Immutable collection containing the entry data.
    • widgetFor: Returns the appropriate widget preview component for a given field.
    • getMedia: Returns the correct filePath or in-memory preview for uploaded images.

Example:

<script>
var PostPreview = createClass({
  render: function() {
    var entry = this.props.entry;
    var image = entry.getIn(['data', 'image']);
    var bg = this.props.getMedia(image);
    return h('div', {},
      h('h1', {}, entry.getIn(['data', 'title'])),
      h('img', {src: bg.toString()}),
      h('div', {"className": "text"}, this.props.widgetFor('body'))
    );
  }
});
 
CMS.registerPreviewTemplate("posts", PostPreview);
</script> 

registerWidget

lets you register a custom widget.

CMS.registerWidget(field, control, [preview])

Params:

  • field: The field type which this widget will be used for.
  • control: A React component that renders the editing interface for this field. Two props will be passed:
    • value: The current value for this field.
    • onChange: Callback function to update the field value.
  • preview (optional): A React component that renders the preview of how the content will look. A value prop will be passed to this component.

Example:

<script>
var CategoriesControl = createClass({
  handleChange: function(e) {
    this.props.onChange(e.target.value.split(',').map((e) => e.trim()));
  },
 
  render: function() {
    var value = this.props.value;
    return h('input', { type: 'text', value: value ? value.join('') : '', onChange: this.handleChange });
  }
});
 
CMS.registerWidget('categories', CategoriesControl);
</script> 

Coming Soon:

More built-in Widgets, CMS registry extendability endpoints, Docs on file formats, internal APIs etc...

This is obviously still early days for Netlify CMS, there's a long list of features and improvements on the roadmap.

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Install

npm i netlify-react-cms

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Version

0.0.1

License

MIT

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  • biilmann