A metalsmith plugin for layouts
This plugin allows you to wrap your files in a template (a layout
) and abstract repetitive html. The plugin will pass the contents of your files as the variable contents
and renders the result with the appropriate engine. It uses the file extension of your layout to infer which templating engine to use. So layouts with names ending in .njk
will be processed as nunjucks, .hbs
as handlebars, etc.
If you want to process templating syntax in your files, instead of wrapping them in a template, you can use metalsmith-in-place. For support questions please use stack overflow or our slack channel. For templating engine specific questions try the aforementioned channels, as well as the documentation for jstransformers and your templating engine of choice.
Under the hood this plugin uses jstransformers to render your layouts. Since there are over a 100 jstransformers we don't install them automatically, so you'll need to install the jstransformer for the language you want to use.
For example, to render nunjucks you would install jstransformer-nunjucks, to render handlebars you would install jstransformer-handlebars, etc. The plugin will then automatically detect which jstransformers you've installed. See the jstransformer organisation for all available jstransformers and this dictionary to see which extensions map to which jstransformer.
$ npm install metalsmith-layouts
You can pass options to metalsmith-layouts
with the Javascript API or CLI. The options are:
- default: optional. The default layout to apply to files.
- directory: optional. The directory for the layouts. The default is
layouts
. - pattern: optional. Only files that match this pattern will be processed. Accepts a string or an array of strings. The default is
**
. - engineOptions: optional. Use this to pass options to the jstransformer that's rendering your layouts. The default is
{}
. - suppressNoFilesError: optional. An error won’t be thrown if no files are present for processing.
The default layout to use. Can be overridden with the layout
key in each file's YAML frontmatter, by passing either a layout or false
. Passing false
will skip the file entirely.
If a default
layout has been specified, metalsmith-layouts
will apply layouts to all files, so you might want to ignore certain files with a pattern. Don't forget to specify the default template's file extension. So this metalsmith.json
:
{
"plugins": {
"metalsmith-layouts": {
"default": "default.hbs"
}
}
}
Will apply the default.hbs
layout to all files, unless overridden in the frontmatter.
The directory where metalsmith-layouts
looks for the layouts. By default this is layouts
. So this metalsmith.json
:
{
"plugins": {
"metalsmith-layouts": {
"directory": "templates"
}
}
}
Will look for layouts in the templates
directory, instead of in layouts
.
Only files that match this pattern will be processed. So this metalsmith.json
:
{
"plugins": {
"metalsmith-layouts": {
"pattern": "**/*.html"
}
}
}
Would process all files that have the .html
extension. Beware that the extensions might be changed by other plugins in the build chain, preventing the pattern from matching. We use multimatch for the pattern matching.
Use this to pass options to the jstransformer that's rendering your templates. So this metalsmith.json
:
{
"plugins": {
"metalsmith-layouts": {
"engineOptions": {
"cache": false
}
}
}
}
Would pass { "cache": false }
to the used jstransformer.
metalsmith-layouts
throws an error in metalsmith if it can’t find any files to process. If you’re doing any kind of incremental builds via something like metalsmith-watch
, this is problematic as you’re likely only rebuilding files that have changed. This flag allows you to suppress that error.
Note that if you have debugging turned on, you’ll see a message denoting when no files are present for processing.
$ npm install --save metalsmith metalsmith-layouts
In this case we'll use handlebars, so we'll install jstransformer-handlebars:
$ npm install --save jstransformer-handlebars
We'll create a metalsmith.json
configuration file in the root of the project, a file in ./src
that we want to render in a
layout and a handlebars layout for metalsmith-layouts to process in ./layouts
:
./metalsmith.json
{
"source": "src",
"destination": "build",
"plugins": {
"metalsmith-layouts": true
}
}
./src/index.html
---
title: The title
layout: layout.hbs
---
<p>Some text here.</p>
./layouts/layout.hbs
To build just run the metalsmith CLI:
$ node_modules/.bin/metalsmith
Which will output the following file:
./build/index.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>The title</title>
</head>
<body>
<p>Some text here.</p>
</body>
</html>
I want to use handlebars partials and or helpers.
Use metalsmith-discover-partials and metalsmith-discover-helpers.
I want to change the extension of my templates.
Use metalsmith-rename.
My templating language requires a filename property to be set.
Use metalsmith-filenames.
If you're encountering problems you can use debug to enable verbose logging. To enable debug
prefix your build command with DEBUG=metalsmith-layouts
. So if you normally run metalsmith
to build, use DEBUG=metalsmith-layouts metalsmith
(on windows the syntax is slightly different).
There are several things that might cause you to get a no files to process
error:
- Your pattern does not match any files
- None of your files pass validation, validation fails for files that:
- Have no layout
- Have a layout without an extension
- Are not utf-8
- Have a layout that needs a jstransformer that hasn't been installed
- Ian Storm Taylor for creating metalsmith-templates, on which this plugin was based
- Rob Loach for creating metalsmith-jstransformer, which inspired our switch to jstransformers