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group | weight | title |
---|---|---|
Configuration | 200 | Beta Features! |
We run new functionality in an open beta format from time to time. That means that this functionality is totally available for use, and we think it might be ready for primetime, but it could break or change without notice.
Use these features at your own risk.
Working with a Local Git Repository
added in netlify-cms@2.10.17 / netlify-cms-app@2.11.14
You can connect Netlify CMS to a local Git repository, instead of working with a live repo.
- Navigate to a local Git repository configured with the CMS.
- Add the top-level property
local_backend
configuration to yourconfig.yml
:
backend:
name: git-gateway
# when using the default proxy server port
local_backend: true
-
Run
npx netlify-cms-proxy-server
from the root directory of the above repository.- If the default port (8081) is in use, the proxy server won't start and you will see an error message. In this case, follow these steps before proceeding.
-
Start your local development server (e.g. run
gatsby develop
). -
Open http://localhost:8000/admin to verify that your can administer your content locally.
Note: netlify-cms-proxy-server
runs an unauthenticated express server. As any client can send requests to the server, it should only be used for local development.
Configure the Netlify CMS proxy server port number
- Create a
.env
file in the project's root folder and define the PORT you'd like the proxy server to use
PORT=8082
- Update the
local_backend
object inconfig.yml
and specify aurl
property to use your custom port number
backend:
name: git-gateway
local_backend:
# when using a custom proxy server port
url: http://localhost:8082/api/v1
# when accessing the local site from a host other than 'localhost' or '127.0.0.1'
allowed_hosts: ['192.168.0.1']
GitLab and BitBucket Editorial Workflow Support
added in netlify-cms@2.10.6 / netlify-cms-app@2.11.3
You can enable the Editorial Workflow with the following line in your Netlify CMS config.yml
file:
publish_mode: editorial_workflow
In order to track unpublished entries statuses the GitLab implementation uses merge requests labels and the BitBucket implementation uses pull requests comments.
i18n Support
The CMS can provide a side by side interface for authoring content in multiple languages. Configuring the CMS for i18n support requires top level configuration, collection level configuration and field level configuration.
Top level configuration
i18n:
# Required and can be one of multiple_folders, multiple_files or single_file
# multiple_folders - persists files in `<folder>/<locale>/<slug>.<extension>`
# multiple_files - persists files in `<folder>/<slug>.<locale>.<extension>`
# single_file - persists a single file in `<folder>/<slug>.<extension>`
structure: multiple_folders
# Required - a list of locales to show in the editor UI
locales: [en, de, fr]
# Optional, defaults to the first item in locales.
# The locale to be used for fields validation and as a baseline for the entry.
default_locale: en
Collection level configuration
collections:
- name: i18n_content
# same as the top level, but all fields are optional and defaults to the top level
# can also be a boolean to accept the top level defaults
i18n: true
When using a file collection, you must also enable i18n for each individual file:
collections:
- name: pages
label: Pages
# Configure i18n for this collection.
i18n:
structure: single_file
locales: [en, de, fr]
files:
- name: about
label: About Page
file: site/content/about.yml
# Enable i18n for this file.
i18n: true
fields:
- { label: Title, name: title, widget: string, i18n: true }
Field level configuration
fields:
- label: Title
name: title
widget: string
# same as 'i18n: translate'. Allows translation of the title field
i18n: true
- label: Date
name: date
widget: datetime
# The date field will be duplicated from the default locale.
i18n: duplicate
- label: Body
name: body
# The markdown field will be omitted from the translation.
widget: markdown
Example configuration:
i18n:
structure: multiple_folders
locales: [en, de, fr]
collections:
- name: posts
label: Posts
folder: content/posts
create: true
i18n: true
fields:
- label: Title
name: title
widget: string
i18n: true
- label: Date
name: date
widget: datetime
i18n: duplicate
- label: Body
name: body
widget: markdown
Limitations
- File collections support only
structure: single_file
. - List widgets only support
i18n: true
.i18n
configuration on sub fields is ignored. - Object widgets only support
i18n: true
andi18n
configuration should be done per field:
- label: 'Object'
name: 'object'
widget: 'object'
i18n: true
fields:
- { label: 'String', name: 'string', widget: 'string', i18n: true }
- { label: 'Date', name: 'date', widget: 'datetime', i18n: duplicate }
- { label: 'Boolean', name: 'boolean', widget: 'boolean', i18n: duplicate }
- {
label: 'Object',
name: 'object',
widget: 'object',
i18n: true,
field: { label: 'String', name: 'string', widget: 'string', i18n: duplicate },
}
GitHub GraphQL API
Experimental support for GitHub's GraphQL API is now available for the GitHub backend.
Note: not currently compatible with Git Gateway.
For many queries, GraphQL allows data to be retrieved using less individual API requests compared to a REST API. GitHub's GraphQL API still does not support all mutations necessary to completely replace their REST API, so this feature only calls the new GraphQL API where possible.
You can use the GraphQL API for the GitHub backend by setting backend.use_graphql
to true
in your CMS config:
backend:
name: github
repo: owner/repo # replace this with your repo info
use_graphql: true
Learn more about the benefits of GraphQL in the GraphQL docs.
Open Authoring
When using the GitHub backend, you can use Netlify CMS to accept contributions from GitHub users without giving them access to your repository. When they make changes in the CMS, the CMS forks your repository for them behind the scenes, and all the changes are made to the fork. When the contributor is ready to submit their changes, they can set their draft as ready for review in the CMS. This triggers a pull request to your repository, which you can merge using the GitHub UI.
At the same time, any contributors who do have write access to the repository can continue to use Netlify CMS normally.
More details and setup instructions can be found on the Open Authoring docs page.
Folder Collections Path
By default the CMS stores folder collection content under the folder specified in the collection setting.
For example configuring folder: posts
for a collection will save the content under posts/post-title.md
.
You can now specify an additional path
template (similar to the slug
template) to control the content destination.
This allows saving content in subfolders, e.g. configuring path: '{{year}}/{{slug}}'
will save the content under posts/2019/post-title.md
.
Folder Collections Media and Public Folder
By default the CMS stores media files for all collections under a global media_folder
directory as specified in the configuration.
When using the global media_folder
directory any entry field that points to a media file will use the absolute path to the published file as designated by the public_folder
configuration.
For example configuring:
media_folder: static/media
public_folder: /media
And saving an entry with an image named image.png
will result in the image being saved under static/media/image.png
and relevant entry fields populated with the value of /media/image.png
.
Some static site generators (e.g. Gatsby) work best when using relative image paths.
This can now be achieved using a per collection media_folder
configuration which specifies a relative media folder for the collection.
For example, the following configuration will result in media files being saved in the same directory as the entry, and the image field being populated with the relative path to the image.
media_folder: static/media
public_folder: /media
collections:
- name: posts
label: Posts
label_singular: 'Post'
folder: content/posts
path: '{{slug}}/index'
media_folder: ''
public_folder: ''
fields:
- label: Title
name: title
widget: string
- label: 'Cover Image'
name: 'image'
widget: 'image'
More specifically, saving an entry with a title of example post
with an image named image.png
will result in a directory structure of:
content
posts
example-post
index.md
image.png
And for the image field being populated with a value of image.png
.
Note: When specifying a path
on a folder collection, media_folder
defaults to an empty string.
Available template tags:
Supports all of the slug
templates and:
{{dirname}}
The path to the file's parent directory, relative to the collection'sfolder
.{{filename}}
The file name without the extension part.{{extension}}
The file extension.{{media_folder}}
The globalmedia_folder
.{{public_folder}}
The globalpublic_folder
.
List Widget: Variable Types
Before this feature, the list widget allowed a set of fields to be repeated, but every list item had the same set of fields available. With variable types, multiple named sets of fields can be defined, which opens the door to highly flexible content authoring (even page building) in Netlify CMS.
Note: this feature does not yet support default previews and requires registering a preview template in order to show up in the preview pane.
To use variable types in the list widget, update your field configuration as follows:
- Instead of defining your list fields under
fields
orfield
, define them undertypes
. Similar tofields
,types
must be an array of field definition objects. - Each field definition under
types
must use theobject
widget (this is the default value forwidget
).
Additional list widget options
types
: a nested list of object widgets. All widgets must be of typeobject
. Every object widget may define different set of fields.typeKey
: the name of the field that will be added to every item in list representing the name of the object widget that item belongs to. Ignored iftypes
is not defined. Default istype
.summary
: allows customization of a collapsed list item object in a similar way to a collection summary
Example Configuration
The example configuration below imagines a scenario where the editor can add two "types" of content, either a "carousel" or a "spotlight". Each type has a unique name and set of fields.
- label: 'Home Section'
name: 'sections'
widget: 'list'
types:
- label: 'Carousel'
name: 'carousel'
widget: object
summary: '{{fields.header}}'
fields:
- { label: Header, name: header, widget: string, default: 'Image Gallery' }
- { label: Template, name: template, widget: string, default: 'carousel.html' }
- label: Images
name: images
widget: list
field: { label: Image, name: image, widget: image }
- label: 'Spotlight'
name: 'spotlight'
widget: object
fields:
- { label: Header, name: header, widget: string, default: 'Spotlight' }
- { label: Template, name: template, widget: string, default: 'spotlight.html' }
- { label: Text, name: text, widget: text, default: 'Hello World' }
Example Output
The output for the list widget will be an array of objects, and each object will have a type
key
with the name of the type used for the list item. The type
key name can be customized via the
typeKey
property in the list configuration.
If the above example configuration were used to create a carousel, a spotlight, and another carousel, the output could look like this:
title: Home
sections:
- type: carousel
header: Image Gallery
template: carousel.html
images:
- images/image01.png
- images/image02.png
- images/image03.png
- type: spotlight
header: Spotlight
template: spotlight.html
text: Hello World
- type: carousel
header: Image Gallery
template: carousel.html
images:
- images/image04.png
- images/image05.png
- images/image06.png
Custom Mount Element
Netlify CMS always creates its own DOM element for mounting the application, which means it always takes over the entire page, and is generally inflexible if you're trying to do something creative, like injecting it into a shared context.
You can now provide your own element for Netlify CMS to mount in by setting the target element's ID as nc-root
. If Netlify CMS finds an element with this ID during initialization, it will mount within that element instead of creating its own.
Manual Initialization
Netlify CMS can now be manually initialized, rather than automatically loading up the moment you import it. The whole point of this at the moment is to inject configuration into Netlify CMS before it loads, bypassing need for an actual Netlify CMS config.yml
. This is important, for example, when creating tight integrations with static site generators.
Assuming you have the netlify-cms package installed to your project, manual initialization works by setting window.CMS_MANUAL_INIT = true
before importing the CMS:
// This global flag enables manual initialization.
window.CMS_MANUAL_INIT = true
// Usage with import from npm package
import CMS, { init } from 'netlify-cms'
// Usage with script tag
const { CMS, initCMS: init } = window
/**
* Initialize without passing in config - equivalent to just importing
* Netlify CMS the old way.
*/
init()
/**
* Optionally pass in a config object. This object will be merged into
* `config.yml` if it exists, and any portion that conflicts with
* `config.yml` will be overwritten. Arrays will be replaced during merge,
* not concatenated.
*
* For example, the code below contains an incomplete config, but using it,
* your `config.yml` can be missing its backend property, allowing you
* to set this property at runtime.
*/
init({
config: {
backend: {
name: 'git-gateway',
},
},
})
/**
* Optionally pass in a complete config object and set a flag
* (`load_config_file: false`) to ignore the `config.yml`.
*
* For example, the code below contains a complete config. The
* `config.yml` will be ignored when setting `load_config_file` to false.
* It is not required if the `config.yml` file is missing to set
* `load_config_file`, but will improve performance and avoid a load error.
*/
init({
config: {
backend: {
name: 'git-gateway',
},
load_config_file: false,
media_folder: "static/images/uploads",
public_folder: "/images/uploads",
collections: [
{ label: "Blog", name: "blog", folder: "_posts/blog", create: true, fields: [
{ label: "Title", name: "title", widget: "string" },
{ label: "Publish Date", name: "date", widget: "datetime" },
{ label: "Featured Image", name: "thumbnail", widget: "image" },
{ label: "Body", name: "body", widget: "markdown" },
]},
],
},
})
// The registry works as expected, and can be used before or after init.
CMS.registerPreviewTemplate(...);
Raw CSS in registerPreviewStyle
registerPreviewStyle
can now accept a CSS string, in addition to accepting a url. The feature is activated by passing in an object as the second argument, with raw
set to a truthy value. This is critical for integrating with modern build tooling. Here's an example using webpack:
/**
* Assumes a webpack project with `sass-loader` and `css-loader` installed.
* Takes advantage of the `toString` method in the return value of `css-loader`.
*/
import CMS from 'netlify-cms';
import styles from '!css-loader!sass-loader!../main.scss';
CMS.registerPreviewStyle(styles.toString(), { raw: true });
Squash merge GitHub pull requests
When using the Editorial Workflow with the github
or GitHub-connected git-gateway
backends, Netlify CMS creates a pull request for each unpublished entry. Every time the unpublished entry is changed and saved, a new commit is added to the pull request. When the entry is published, the pull request is merged, and all of those commits are added to your project commit history in a merge commit.
The squash merge option causes all commits to be "squashed" into a single commit when the pull request is merged, and the resulting commit is rebased onto the target branch, avoiding the merge commit altogether.
To enable this feature, you can set the following option in your Netlify CMS config.yml
:
backend:
squash_merges: true
Commit Message Templates
You can customize the templates used by Netlify CMS to generate commit messages by setting the commit_messages
option under backend
in your Netlify CMS config.yml
.
Template tags wrapped in curly braces will be expanded to include information about the file changed by the commit. For example, {{path}}
will include the full path to the file changed.
Setting up your Netlify CMS config.yml
to recreate the default values would look like this:
backend:
commit_messages:
create: Create {{collection}} “{{slug}}”
update: Update {{collection}} “{{slug}}”
delete: Delete {{collection}} “{{slug}}”
uploadMedia: Upload “{{path}}”
deleteMedia: Delete “{{path}}”
openAuthoring: '{{message}}'
Netlify CMS generates the following commit types:
Commit type | When is it triggered? | Available template tags |
---|---|---|
create |
A new entry is created | slug , path , collection , author-login , author-name |
update |
An existing entry is changed | slug , path , collection , author-login , author-name |
delete |
An existing entry is deleted | slug , path , collection , author-login , author-name |
uploadMedia |
A media file is uploaded | path , author-login , author-name |
deleteMedia |
A media file is deleted | path , author-login , author-name |
openAuthoring |
A commit is made via a forked repository | message , author-login , author-name |
Template tags produce the following output:
{{slug}}
: the url-safe filename of the entry changed{{collection}}
: the name of the collection containing the entry changed{{path}}
: the full path to the file changed{{message}}
: the relevant message based on the current change (e.g. thecreate
message when an entry is created){{author-login}}
: the login/username of the author{{author-name}}
: the full name of the author (might be empty based on the user's profile)
Image widget file size limit
You can set a limit to as what the maximum file size of a file is that users can upload directly into a image field.
Example config:
- label: 'Featured Image'
name: 'thumbnail'
widget: 'image'
default: '/uploads/chocolate-dogecoin.jpg'
media_library:
config:
max_file_size: 512000 # in bytes, only for default media library
Summary string template transformations
You can apply transformations on fields in a summary string template using filter notation syntax.
Example config:
collections:
- name: 'posts'
label: 'Posts'
folder: '_posts'
summary: "{{title | upper}} - {{date | date('YYYY-MM-DD')}}"
fields:
- { label: 'Title', name: 'title', widget: 'string' }
- { label: 'Publish Date', name: 'date', widget: 'datetime' }
The above config will transform the title field to uppercase and format the date field using YYYY-MM-DD
format.
Available transformations are upper
, lower
and date('<format>')
Registering to CMS Events
You can execute a function when a specific CMS event occurs.
Example usage:
CMS.registerEventListener({
name: 'prePublish',
handler: ({ author, entry }) => console.log(JSON.stringify({ author, data: entry.get('data') })),
});
Supported events are prePublish
, postPublish
, preUnpublish
, postUnpublish
, preSave
and postSave
. The preSave
hook can be used to modify the entry data like so:
CMS.registerEventListener({
name: 'preSave',
handler: ({ entry }) => {
return entry.get('data').set('title', 'new title');
},
});
Dynamic Default Values
When linking to /admin/#/collections/posts/new
you can pass URL parameters to pre-populate an entry.
For example given the configuration:
collections:
- name: posts
label: Posts
folder: content/posts
create: true
fields:
- label: Title
name: title
widget: string
- label: Object
name: object
widget: object
fields:
- label: Title
name: title
widget: string
- label: body
name: body
widget: markdown
clicking the following link: /#/collections/posts/new?title=first&object.title=second&body=%23%20content
will open the editor for a new post with the title
field populated with first
, the nested object.title
field
with second
and the markdown body
field with # content
.
Note: URL Encoding might be required for certain values (e.g. in the previous example the value for body
is URL encoded).
Nested Collections
Allows a folder collection to show a nested structure of entries and edit the locations of the entries.
Example configuration:
collections:
- name: pages
label: Pages
label_singular: 'Page'
folder: content/pages
create: true
# adding a nested object will show the collection folder structure
nested:
depth: 100 # max depth to show in the collection tree
summary: '{{title}}' # optional summary for a tree node, defaults to the inferred title field
fields:
- label: Title
name: title
widget: string
- label: Body
name: body
widget: markdown
# adding a meta object with a path property allows editing the path of entries
# moving an existing entry will move the entire sub tree of the entry to the new location
meta: { path: { widget: string, label: 'Path', index_file: 'index' } }
Nested collections expect the following directory structure:
content
└── pages
├── authors
│ ├── author-1
│ │ └── index.md
│ └── index.md
├── index.md
└── posts
├── hello-world
│ └── index.md
└── index.md
Remark plugins
You can register plugins to customize remark
, the library used by the richtext editor for serializing and deserializing markdown.
// register a plugin
CMS.registerRemarkPlugin(plugin);
// provide global settings to all plugins, e.g. for customizing `remark-stringify`
CMS.registerRemarkPlugin({ settings: { bullet: '-' } });
Note that netlify-widget-markdown
currently uses remark@10
, so you should check a plugin's compatibility first.