eleventy-plugin-json-feed

0.0.8 • Public • Published

eleventy-plugin-json-feed

An Eleventy plugin for generating a JSON Feed using the Nunjucks templating engine.

Installation

Available on npm.

npm install --save eleventy-plugin-json-feed

Using the plugin

Open up your Eleventy config file, require the plugin, and then use addPlugin to activate and configure it:

const pluginJsonFeed = require("eleventy-plugin-json-feed");
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
  eleventyConfig.addPlugin(pluginJsonFeed, options);
};

Copy the provided sample feed template into your working directory and then customize it for your site:

cp node_modules/eleventy-plugin-json-feed/sample/json.feed.njk
$EDITOR ./json.feed.njk

Note that you will need to have "njk" listed in the templateFormats list in your .eleventy.js.

How this plugin works

This plugin makes a jsonFeed shortcode available to the Nunjucks templater. It expects to be called like this:

{% jsonFeed collections.posts, metadata, 10 %}

The third argument is the number of most recent posts to be included in the feed. If not provided, it defaults to 10. If 0 is provided, all posts will be included in the generated feed.

The sample template at sample/json.feed.njk should provide a good starting point for almost every use case.

Options

You can modify the behavior of this plugin by passing an options object as the second argument to addPlugin. The default options set by the plugin are:

const defaultOptions = {
  banner_image_metadata_field_name: "banner_image",
  content_html: true,
  content_text: false,
  filter_posts_tag: true,
  image_metadata_field_name: "image",
  summary_metadata_field_name: "summary",
  tags_metadata_field_name: "tags",
};
  • banner_image_metadata_field_name: will be used as the name of the YAML front matter attribute where the URL of an banner image is stored. If found, the value of this attribute will be used to set the item.banner_image value for the corresponding post item in the generated feed. Note that this field, if present, must contain a string value, or an error will be thrown.
  • content_html: boolean indicating if post HTML should be included in the feed.
  • content_text: boolean indicating if a text version of post content should be included in the feed.
  • filter_posts_tag: boolean indicating if a tag of posts should be filtered out of the tags metadata if it is present.
  • image_metadata_field_name: will be used as the name of the YAML front matter attribute where the URL of an image associated with the post is stored. If found, the value of this attribute will be used to set the item.image value for the corresponding post item in the generated feed. Note that this field, if present, must contain a string value, or an error will be thrown.
  • summary_metadata_field_name: will be used as the name of the YAML front matter attribute where the short summary of a post is stored. If found, the value of this attribute will be used to set the item.summary value for the corresponding post item in the generated feed. Note that this field, if present, must contain a string value, or an error will be thrown.
  • tags_metadata_field_name: will be used as the name of the YAML front matter attribute where an array of tags categorizing a post is stored. If found, the value of this attribute will be used to set the `item.summary** value for the corresponding post item in the generated feed. Note that this field must contain an array of strings or an error will be thrown.

IMPORTANT NOTE: At least one of content_html and content_text MUST be true, or an error will be thrown. It is allowed to set them both to true.

Example options

Say you've got a blog and want to generate a JSON feed containing the HTML representation of your posts. You sometimes use a social_media_image key in your front matter when you want to feature an image on social media, and each post has an attribute called categories that's an array of category names. You have an attribute called description that's a short synopsis of your post content.

If that's the case, you'd want to load this plugin like this:

const pluginJsonFeed = require("eleventy-plugin-json-feed");
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
  eleventyConfig.addPlugin(pluginJsonFeed, {
    content_html: true,
    image_metadata_field_name: "social_media_image",
    summary_metadata_field_name: "description",
    tags_metadata_field_name: "categories"
  });
};

Icon

If you'd like to display a JSON Feed icon on your site, I recommend the one in openwebicons

Testing & Validation

The test suite can be run with npm test. An ASCII coverage report can be generated with npm run cover; an HTML version can be generated with npm run html-cover.

Feeds generated with this module should correctly validate with jsonfeed-validator.

Contributing

Patches and pull requests welcome.

License

MIT © John SJ Anderson

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Install

npm i eleventy-plugin-json-feed

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Version

0.0.8

License

MIT

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  • genehack