Contentful provides a content infrastructure for digital teams to power content in websites, apps, and devices. Unlike a CMS, Contentful was built to integrate with the modern software stack. It offers a central hub for structured content, powerful management and delivery APIs, and a customizable web app that enable developers and content creators to ship digital products faster.
Jekyll-Contentful-Data-Import is a Jekyll extension to use the Jekyll static site generator together with Contentful. It is powered by the Contentful Ruby Gem.
Experience the power of Jekyll while staying sane as a developer by letting end-users edit content in a web-based interface.
Create a Gemfile in your Jekyll project and add the following:
source 'https://rubygems.org'
group :jekyll_plugins do
gem "jekyll-contentful-data-import"
end
Then as usual, run:
bundle install
Run jekyll contentful
in your terminal. This will fetch entries for the configured
spaces and content types and put the resulting data in the
local data folder as yaml files.
The contentful
command has a --rebuild
option which will trigger a rebuild of your site
To configure the extension, add the following configuration block to Jekyll's _config.yml
:
contentful:
spaces:
- example: # Jekyll _data folder identifier - Required
space: cfexampleapi # Required
access_token: b4c0n73n7fu1 # Required
environment: master # Optional
cda_query: # Optional
include: 2
limit: 100
all_entries: true # Optional - Defaults to false, only grabbing the amount set on CDA Query
all_entries_page_size: 1000 # Optional - Defaults to 1000, maximum amount of entries per CDA Request for all_entries
content_types: # Optional
cat: MyCoolMapper
client_options: # Optional
api_url: 'preview.contentful.com' # Defaults to 'api.contentful.com' which is Production
max_include_resolution_depth: 5 # Optional - Defaults to 20, maximum amount of levels to resolve includes
base_path: app_path # Optional - Defaults to Current directory
destination: destination_in_data # Optional - Defaults to _data/contentful/spaces
individual_entry_files: true # Optional - Defaults to false
rich_text_mappings: # Optional - Defaults to {}
embedded-entry-block: MyEntryRenderer
Parameter | Description |
---|---|
space | Contentful Space ID |
access_token | Contentful Delivery API access token |
environment | Space environment, defaults to master |
cda_query | Hash describing query configuration. See contentful.rb for more info (look for filter options there). Note that by default only 100 entries will be fetched, this can be configured to up to 1000 entries using the limit option. |
all_entries | Boolean, if true will run multiple queries to the API until it fetches all entries for the space |
all_entries_page_size | Integer, the amount of maximum entries per CDA Request when fetching :all_entries |
content_types | Hash describing the mapping applied to entries of the imported content types |
client_options | Hash describing Contentful::Client configuration. See contentful.rb for more info. |
base_path | String with path to your Jekyll Application, defaults to current directory. Path is relative to your current location. |
destination | String with path within _data under which to store the output yaml file. Defaults to contentful/spaces |
individual_entry_files | Boolean, if true will create an individual file per entry separated in folders by content type, file path will be {space_alias}/{content_type_id}/{entry_id}.yaml . Default behavior is to create a file per space. Usage is affected when this is set to true, please look in the section below. |
rich_text_mappings | Hash with 'nodeTyoe' => RendererClass pairs determining overrides for the RichTextRenderer library configuration. |
You can add multiple spaces to your configuration
The extension will transform every fetched entry before storing it as a yaml file in the local data folder. If a custom mapper is not specified a default one will be used.
The default mapper will map fields, assets and linked entries.
You can create your own mappers if you need to. The only requirement for a class to behave as a
mapper is to have a map
instance method.
Following is an example of such custom mapper that reverses all entry field IDs:
class MyReverseMapper < ::Jekyll::Contentful::Mappers::Base
def map
result = super
reversed_result = {}
result.each do |k, v|
reversed_result[k.reverse] = v
end
reversed_result
end
end
Note: This has changed since previous version.
When creating custom mappers, you should create them in a file under #{source_dir}/_plugins/mappers/
.
This will allow the autoload mechanism that has been included in the latest version.
With the autoload mechanism, there is no longer a need to create a rake
task for importing using custom mappers.
If you already have a custom rake
task, the new autoload mechanism will not affect it from working as it was working previously.
To render rich text in your views, you can use the rich_text
filter:
{{ entry.rich_text_field | rich_text }}
This will output the generated HTML generated by the RichTextRenderer
library.
When using rich text, if you're planning to embed entries, then you need to create your custom renderer for them. You can read how create your own renderer classes here.
To configure the mappings, you need to add them in your contentful
block like follows:
contentful:
spaces:
- example:
# ... all the regular config ...
rich_text_mappings:
embedded-entry-block: MyCustomRenderer
You can also add renderers for all other types of nodes if you want to have more granular control over the rendering.
This will use the same autoload strategy included for custom entry mappers, therefore, you should include your mapper classes in #{source_dir}/_plugins/mappers/
.
In case you have multiple configured spaces, and have different mapping configurations for them. You can specify which space you want to pull the configuration from when using the helper.
The helper receives an additional optional parameter for the space name. By default it is nil
, indicating the first available space.
So, if for example you have 2 spaces with different configurations, to use the space called foo
, you should call the helper as: {{ entry.field | rich_text: "foo" }}
.
In most cases you may want to avoid including your credentials in publicly available sites, therefore you can do the following:
bundle update
— make sure your gem version supports ENV_
variables
Set up your _config
like so:
contentful:
spaces:
- example:
space: ENV_CONTENTFUL_SPACE_ID
access_token: ENV_CONTENTFUL_ACCESS_TOKEN
environment: ENV_CONTENTFUL_ENVIRONMENT
(Your Space ID will be looked upon on ENV['CONTENTFUL_SPACE_ID']
, your Access Token on ENV['CONTENTFUL_ACCESS_TOKEN']
and your environment on ENV['CONTENTFUL_ENVIRONMENT']
.)
export CONTENTFUL_ACCESS_TOKEN=abc123
export CONTENTFUL_SPACE_ID=abc123
export CONTENTFUL_ENVIRONMENT=master
(And run source ~/.bashrc
or open new terminal to enable changes.)
Or specify them on the command line:
CONTENTFUL_ACCESS_TOKEN=abc123 CONTENTFUL_SPACE_ID=abc123 CONTENTFUL_ENVIRONMENT=master jekyll contentful
This way, it is safe to share your code without having to worry about your credentials.
When setting the individual_entry_files
flag to true, the usage pattern changes a little,
as Jekyll does not allow for variable unpacking when iterating.
A usage example is as follows:
<ul class="cat-list">
<!-- Each element in the array of entries for a content type is an array of the form ['entry_id', { ... entry_data ...}] -->
{% for cat_data in site.data.contentful.spaces.example.cat %}
{% assign cat_id = cat_data[0] %} <!-- Entry ID is the first element of the array -->
{% assign cat = cat_data[1] %} <!-- Entry data is the second element of the array -->
<li>
<p>{{ cat_id }}: {{ cat.name }}</p>
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
You can find working examples of multiple uses here.
Feel free to add your own examples by submitting a Pull Request. For more information, please check CONTRIBUTING.md