/blog-gatsby-frontend

A starter template to build lightning fast websites with Ghost & Gatsby

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Gatsby Blog

Forked & modified from the Gatsby Starter Ghost.

A blog built to be lightning fast using Ghost (CMS) & Gatsby (frontend).

Installing

git clone https://github.com/DMeechan/blog-gatsby-frontend
cd blog-gatsby-frontend

Then install dependencies

yarn install

 

Running

Start the development server. You now have a Gatsby site pulling content from headless Ghost.

yarn run dev

By default, the starter will populate content from a default Ghost install located at https://gatsby.ghost.io.

To use your own install, you will need to edit the .ghost.json config file with your credentials. Change the apiUrl value to the URL of your Ghost site. For people using the self-hosted version of Ghost, it's the same URL used to access your site.

Next, update the contentApiKey value to a key associated with the Ghost site. A key can be provided by creating an integration within Ghost Admin. Navigate to Integrations and click "Add new integration". Name the integration appropriately and click create.

To use this starter without issues, your Ghost installation needs to be at least on version 2.10.0.

The default Ghost version that is used for this starter is 3.x. If your Ghost installation is on a lower version, you'll also need to pass in a version property in your .ghost.json settings:

Ghost <=3.0.0

{
    "apiUrl": "https://gatsby.ghost.io",
    "contentApiKey": "9cc5c67c358edfdd81455149d0"
}

 

Deploying with Netlify

The starter contains three config files specifically for deploying with Netlify. A netlify.toml file for build settings, a /static/_headers file with default security headers set for all routes, and /static/_redirects to set Netlify custom domain redirects.

To deploy to your Netlify account, hit the button below.

Content API Keys are generally not considered to be sensitive information, they exist so that they can be changed in the event of abuse; so most people commit it directly to their .ghost.json config file. If you prefer to keep this information out of your repository you can remove this config and set Netlify ENV variables for production builds instead.

Once deployed, you can set up a Ghost + Netlify Integration to use deploy hooks from Ghost to trigger Netlify rebuilds. That way, any time data changes in Ghost, your site will rebuild on Netlify.

 

Optimising

You can disable the default Ghost Handlebars Theme front-end by enabling the Make this site private flag within your Ghost settings. This enables password protection in front of the Ghost install and sets <meta name="robots" content="noindex" /> so your Gatsby front-end becomes the source of truth for SEO.

 

Extra options

# Create a production build, locally
yarn run build
# Or serve a production build, locally
yarn run serve

Gatsby develop uses the development config in .ghost.json - while Gatsby build uses the production config.