A Metalsmith plugin that applies a custom permalink pattern to files, and renames them so that they're nested properly for static sites (converting about.html
into about/index.html
).
NPM:
npm install @metalsmith/permalinks
Yarn:
yarn add @metalsmith/permalinks
By default @metalsmith/permalinks
moves all HTML source files at :dirname?/:basename
to the build as :dirname/:basename/index.html
and adds a customizable permalink
property to te file metadata. You can tweak which files to match
, set fixed permalinks, use a permalink pattern
with :placeholder
's that will be read from the file's metadata, and finetune how that metadata and the final permalink are formatted as a string through the directoryIndex
, slug
, date
and trailingSlash
options.
Fixed permalinks or permalink patterns can be defined in file front-matter, or for a set of files through plugin options. Permalink patterns defined in file front-matter take precedence over plugin options.
import { dirname } from 'path'
import { fileURLToPath } from 'url'
import Metalsmith from 'metalsmith'
import permalinks from '@metalsmith/permalinks'
const __dirname = dirname(fileURLToPath(import.meta.url))
// defaults
Metalsmith(__dirname).use(permalinks())
// explicit defaults
Metalsmith(__dirname).use(
permalinks({
// files to target
match: '**/*.html',
// permalink pattern with placeholders
pattern: ':dirname?/:basename',
// how to format Date values when substituting pattern parts
date: {
format: 'YYYY/MM/DD',
locale: 'en-US' // only relevant if you use textual date part formats
},
// how to postprocess a resolved permalink in a URL (and filesystem)-friendly way
slug: {
lowercase: true,
remove: /[<>:"\'|?*]|[^\\w\\s$_+~.()!\\-@\\/]+/g,
extend: { ':': '-', '|': '-', '/': '-', '<': '', '>': '' }
},
trailingSlash: false,
directoryIndex: 'index.html',
// throw an error when 2 files have the same target permalink
duplicates: 'error',
// additional linksets
linksets: []
})
)
Every permalinks()
instantiation supports the following options:
- directoryIndex - traditionally
index.html
, but servers could be configured with alternatives. See Overriding the default index.html file - trailingSlash - whether to add a trailing
/
so that the permalink becomesblog/post/
instead ofblog/post
. Useful to avoid redirects on servers which do not have a built-in rewrite module enabled. - duplicates - what to do when 2 files have the same target destination. See Ensure files have unique URI's
- linksets, see Defining linksets
Placeholder substitution will always toString
the value. For example, when you have an :array
placeholder and a file with front-matter array: ['one','two']
, it will substitute into 'onetwo'
, but you can refer to the nth value with a dot-delimited keypath (eg :array.0
). A boolean false
will result in an error unless the placeholder is optional (it would then be an empty string = omitted), a boolean true
will result in the string 'true'
.
The match
option can be 1 or multiple glob patterns, or an object with key-value pairs that will be matched on either... or... basis.
// only match non-root html files
metalsmith.use(permalinks({ match: '*/**/*.html' }))
// match templates so you can use the permalink property in @metalsmith/layouts later
metalsmith.use(permalinks({ match: '**/*.hbs' }))
// match files that are either primary:false or have id:1
metalsmith.use(permalinks({ match: { primary: false, id: 1 } }))
If a match
object property targets an array in file metadata, it will be matched if the array contains the value in the match
object.
Whereas the default match
option globally defines which files are permalinked, additional linksets
can be defined with their own match
, pattern
, date
and slug
options.
metalsmith.use(
permalinks({
// original options act as the keys of a `default` linkset,
pattern: ':dirname?/:basename',
date: 'YYYY',
// each linkset defines a match, and any other desired option
linksets: [
{
match: { collection: 'blogposts' },
pattern: 'blog/:date/:title',
date: 'MM-DD-YYYY'
},
{
match: { collection: 'pages' },
pattern: 'pages/:title'
}
]
})
)
Every matched file is only permalinked once, even if it is matched by multiple linksets. The linksets defined in linksets
take precedence over the default match, and the first linkset in linksets
takes precedence over the next. In the example above, a file which has collection: ['pages','blogposts']
would be permalinked to blog/:date/:title
.
You can declare a fixed permalink in file front-matter:
---
# src/topic_metalsmith.html
permalink: topics/static-site/metalsmith
---
@metalsmith/permalinks
will move the source file topic_metalsmith.html
to the build path topics/static-site/metalsmith/index.html
and add permalink: 'topics/static-site/metalsmith'
to the file metadata.
Setting an explicit front-matter permalink overrides any other match
that also matched the file from plugin options.
Typical use case: SEO-sensitive links that should be preserved, even if you moved or renamed the file or updated its front-matter.
File permalinks can be computed from other (own) file metadata properties.
---
# src/topic_metalsmith.html
topic: static-site
subtopic: metalsmith
permalink: topics/:topic/:subtopic
---
Just like the previous example, this will also move the source file topic_metalsmith.html
to the build path topics/static-site/metalsmith/index.html
and add permalink: 'topics/static-site/metalsmith'
to the file metadata.
Placeholders can also refer to a keypath within the front-matter permalink
or plugin option linkset, e.g. permalink: blog/:postData.html.slug
.
An otherwise linkset-matched file can be excluded from permalinking by setting permalink: false
in its front-matter:
---
title: error
permalink: false
---
Explicitly disabling a permalink in front-matter overrides any other pattern that also matched the file from plugin options.
Typical use case: hosting static sites on third-party providers with specific conventions, e.g. on AWS S3 there must be a top level error.html
file and not an error/index.html
file.
The pattern
can contain a reference to any piece of metadata associated with the file by using the :PROPERTY
syntax for placeholders.
By default, all files get a :dirname?/:basename
(+ directoryIndex = /index.html
) pattern, i.e. the original filepath blog/post1.html
becomes blog/post1/index.html
. The dirname
and basename
values are automatically made available by @metalsmith/permalinks for the purpose of generating the permalink.
If you want to tweak how the characters in the permalink are transformed (for example to handle unicode & non-ascii characters),see slug options.
The pattern
can also be set as such:
metalsmith.use(
permalinks({
// original options act as the keys of a `default` linkset,
pattern: ':title',
date: 'YYYY',
// each linkset defines a match, and any other desired option
linksets: [
{
match: { collection: 'blogposts' },
pattern: 'blog/:date/:title',
date: 'MM-DD-YYYY'
},
{
match: { collection: 'pages' },
pattern: 'pages/:title'
}
]
})
)
The permalink example in Computed permalinks would result in an error if subtopic
or topic
were not defined. To allow this add a question mark to the placeholder like :topic/:subtopic?
. If the property is not defined in a file's metadata, it will be replaced with an empty string ''
. For example the pattern :category?/:title
applied to a source directory with 2 files:
|
|
would generate the file tree:
build
├── category1/with-category/index.html
└── no-category/index.html
By default any date will be converted to a YYYY/MM/DD
format when using in a permalink pattern, but you can change the conversion by passing a date
option:
metalsmith.use(
permalinks({
pattern: ':date/:title',
date: 'YYYY'
})
)
Starting from v3 @metalsmith/permalinks
no longer uses moment.js. A subset of date-formatting tokens relevant to site URI's are made available that are largely compatible with those defined at moment.js:
Token | Description | Examples |
---|---|---|
D | Date numeric | 1 2 ... 30 31 |
DD | Date numeric zero-padded | 01 02 ... 30 31 |
d | Day of week numeric | 0 1 ... 5 |
dd | Day of week 2-letter (*) | Su Mo ... Sa |
ddd | Day of week short (*) | Sun Mon ... Sat |
dddd | Day of week long (*) | Sunday Monday ... Saturday |
M | Month numeric | 1 2 ... 11 12 |
MM | Month numeric zero-padded | 01 02 ... 11 12 |
MMM | Month short (*) | Jan, Feb |
MMMM | Month full (*) | January, February |
Q | Quarter | 1 2 3 4 |
YY | Year 2 last digits | 70, 24 |
YYYY | Year full | 1970, 2024 |
W | Week of year | 1 2 ... 51 52 |
WW | Week of year zero-padded | 01 02 ... 51 52 |
x | Unix milliseconds timestamp | 1697401520387 |
X | Unix timestamp | 1697401520 |
Tokens marked with (*) use the Node.js Intl API which is not available by default in every Node.js distribution.
The date
option can be a string of date-formatting tokens and will default to en-US
for the locale, or an object in the format { format: 'YYYY', locale: 'en-US' }
. However, if your Node.js distribution does not have support for the Intl API, or the locale you specified is missing, the build will throw an error.
If you need more customization you can also pass a date formatting function:
metalsmith.use(
permalinks({
pattern: ':date',
// will result in sun/jan/01/2024/index.html for date 2024-01-01
date(value) {
return value.toDateString().toLowerCase().replace(/\W/g, '/')
}
})
)
You can finetune how a pattern is processed by providing custom slug options. By default slugify is used and patterns will be lowercased.
You can pass custom slug options:
metalsmith.use(
permalinks({
slug: {
replacement: '_',
lower: false
}
})
)
The following makes everything snake-case but allows '
to be converted to -
metalsmith.use(
permalinks({
slug: {
remove: /[^a-z0-9- ]+/gi,
lower: true,
extend: {
"'": '-'
}
}
})
)
If the result is not to your liking, you can replace the slug function altogether. For now only the js version of syntax is supported and tested.
import { slugify } from 'transliteration'
metalsmith.use(
permalinks({
pattern: ':title',
slug: slugify
})
)
There are plenty of other options on npm for transliteration and slugs. https://www.npmjs.com/browse/keyword/transliteration.
Use directoryIndex
to define a custom index file.
metalsmith.use(
permalinks({
directoryIndex: 'alt.html'
})
)
Use an empty directoryIndex
to create extensionless files that can be accompanied by a matching Content-Type Response header with a server like Apache or Nginx, so you could call https://mysite.com/api/plugins
supposing you have files at src/api/plugins.json
metalsmith.use(
permalinks({
match: '**/*.json',
directoryIndex: ''
})
)
Normally you should take care to make sure your source files do not permalink to the same target.
When URI clashes occur nevertheless, the build will halt with an error stating the target file conflict.
metalsmith.use(
permalinks({
duplicates: 'error'
})
)
There are 3 other possible values for the duplicates
option: index
will add an -<index>
suffix to other files with the same target URI, overwrite
will silently overwrite previous files with the same target URI.
The third possibility is to provide your own function to handle duplicates, with the signature:
function paginateDupes(targetPath, files, filename, options) => {
let target,
counter = 0,
postfix = ''
while (files[target]) {
postfix = `/${++counter}`
target = path.join(`${targetPath}${postfix}`, options.indexFile)
}
return target
}
Return an error in the custom duplicates handler to halt the build.
The example above is a variant of the index
value, where 2 files targeting the URI gallery
will be written to gallery/1/index.html
and gallery/2/index.html
.
Note: The duplicates
option combines the unique
and duplicatesFail
options of version < 2.4.1. Specifically, duplicatesFail:true
maps to duplicates:'error'
, unique:true
maps to duplicates:'index'
, and unique:false
or duplicatesFail:false
map to duplicates:'overwrite'
.
Previously this plugin had a relative: true
option that allowed one to transform a file structure such as:
|_ posts
|_ hello-world.html
|_ post-image.png
into
|_ posts
|_ hello-world
| |_ index.html
| |_ post-image.png
|_ post-image.png
This allowed users to reference post-image.png as <img src="./post-image.png">
, but also duplicated the asset and resulted in other unexpected side-effects.
Our advice is to keep your media in an assets
or similar folder that does not undergo path transforms, and reference it with a root-relative URI (eg /assets/hello-world/post-image.png
). If this is not an option for you, the better way to structure your source folder is to have the source path of the referencing HTML file equal to its destination permalink:
|_ posts
|_ hello-world
|_ index.html
|_ post-image.png
The v2 -> v3 update had a lot of breaking changes, but the good news is v3 can do all that v2 did, just a bit differently, and more. v3 is less forgiving (and more predictable) in that it will throw errors when a (required) :placeholder
resolves to an undefined value.
Previously permalinks would omit that pattern part so that a my-post.html
with pattern :category/:title
and title: My post
but without a defined category would be output to blog/my-post/index.html
. To preserve this behavior, make the failing :placeholder?
optional by adding a question mark.
The indexFile
option has been renamed to directoryIndex
.
The options duplicatesFail
and unique
have been condensed into duplicates
, see also Ensure files have unique URI's.
To enable debug logs, set the DEBUG
environment variable to @metalsmith/permalinks
:
metalsmith.env('DEBUG', '@metalsmith/permalinks*')
Alternatively you can set DEBUG
to @metalsmith/*
to debug all Metalsmith core plugins.
To use this plugin with the Metalsmith CLI, add @metalsmith/permalinks
to the plugins
key in your metalsmith.json
file:
{
"plugins": [
{
"permalinks": {
"pattern": ":title"
}
}
]
}