This package can generate a sitemap without you having to add urls to it manually. This works by crawling your entire site.
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapGenerator;
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')->writeToFile($path);
You can also create your sitemap manually:
use Carbon\Carbon;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Sitemap;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Url;
Sitemap::create()
->add(Url::create('/home')
->setLastModificationDate(Carbon::yesterday())
->setChangeFrequency(Url::CHANGE_FREQUENCY_YEARLY)
->setPriority(0.1))
->add(...)
->writeToFile($path);
Or you can have the best of both worlds by generating a sitemap and then adding more links to it:
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')
->getSitemap()
->add(Url::create('/extra-page')
->setLastModificationDate(Carbon::yesterday())
->setChangeFrequency(Url::CHANGE_FREQUENCY_YEARLY)
->setPriority(0.1))
->add(...)
->writeToFile($path);
You can also control the maximum depth of the sitemap:
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')
->configureCrawler(function (Crawler $crawler) {
$crawler->setMaximumDepth(3);
})
->writeToFile($path);
The generator has the ability to execute JavaScript on each page so links injected into the dom by JavaScript will be crawled as well.
You can also use one of your available filesystem disks to write the sitemap to.
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')->getSitemap()->writeToDisk('public', 'sitemap.xml');
You may need to set the file visibility on one of your sitemaps. For example, if you are writing a sitemap to S3 that you want to be publicly available. You can set the third parameter to true
to make it public. Note: This can only be used on the ->writeToDisk()
method.
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')->getSitemap()->writeToDisk('public', 'sitemap.xml', true);
You can also add your models directly by implementing the \Spatie\Sitemap\Contracts\Sitemapable
interface.
use Spatie\Sitemap\Contracts\Sitemapable;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Url;
class Post extends Model implements Sitemapable
{
public function toSitemapTag(): Url | string | array
{
// Simple return:
return route('blog.post.show', $this);
// Return with fine-grained control:
return Url::create(route('blog.post.show', $this))
->setLastModificationDate(Carbon::create($this->updated_at))
->setChangeFrequency(Url::CHANGE_FREQUENCY_YEARLY)
->setPriority(0.1);
}
}
Now you can add a single post model to the sitemap or even a whole collection.
use Spatie\Sitemap\Sitemap;
Sitemap::create()
->add($post)
->add(Post::all());
This way you can add all your pages super fast without the need to crawl them all.
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First, install the package via composer:
composer require spatie/laravel-sitemap
The package will automatically register itself.
If you want to update your sitemap automatically and frequently you need to perform some extra steps.
You can override the default options for the crawler. First publish the configuration:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapServiceProvider" --tag=sitemap-config
This will copy the default config to config/sitemap.php
where you can edit it.
use GuzzleHttp\RequestOptions;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Crawler\Profile;
return [
/*
* These options will be passed to GuzzleHttp\Client when it is created.
* For in-depth information on all options see the Guzzle docs:
*
* http://docs.guzzlephp.org/en/stable/request-options.html
*/
'guzzle_options' => [
/*
* Whether or not cookies are used in a request.
*/
RequestOptions::COOKIES => true,
/*
* The number of seconds to wait while trying to connect to a server.
* Use 0 to wait indefinitely.
*/
RequestOptions::CONNECT_TIMEOUT => 10,
/*
* The timeout of the request in seconds. Use 0 to wait indefinitely.
*/
RequestOptions::TIMEOUT => 10,
/*
* Describes the redirect behavior of a request.
*/
RequestOptions::ALLOW_REDIRECTS => false,
],
/*
* The sitemap generator can execute JavaScript on each page so it will
* discover links that are generated by your JS scripts. This feature
* is powered by headless Chrome.
*/
'execute_javascript' => false,
/*
* The package will make an educated guess as to where Google Chrome is installed.
* You can also manually pass it's location here.
*/
'chrome_binary_path' => '',
/*
* The sitemap generator uses a CrawlProfile implementation to determine
* which urls should be crawled for the sitemap.
*/
'crawl_profile' => Profile::class,
];
The easiest way is to crawl the given domain and generate a sitemap with all found links.
The destination of the sitemap should be specified by $path
.
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')->writeToFile($path);
The generated sitemap will look similar to this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<urlset xmlns="http://www.sitemaps.org/schemas/sitemap/0.9">
<url>
<loc>https://example.com</loc>
<lastmod>2016-01-01T00:00:00+00:00</lastmod>
<changefreq>daily</changefreq>
<priority>0.8</priority>
</url>
<url>
<loc>https://example.com/page</loc>
<lastmod>2016-01-01T00:00:00+00:00</lastmod>
<changefreq>daily</changefreq>
<priority>0.8</priority>
</url>
...
</urlset>
You can create a custom crawl profile by implementing the Spatie\Crawler\CrawlProfiles\CrawlProfile
interface and by customizing the shouldCrawl()
method for full control over what url/domain/sub-domain should be crawled:
use Spatie\Crawler\CrawlProfiles\CrawlProfile;
use Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface;
class CustomCrawlProfile extends CrawlProfile
{
public function shouldCrawl(UriInterface $url): bool
{
if ($url->getHost() !== 'localhost') {
return false;
}
return $url->getPath() === '/';
}
}
and register your CustomCrawlProfile::class
in config/sitemap.php
.
return [
...
/*
* The sitemap generator uses a CrawlProfile implementation to determine
* which urls should be crawled for the sitemap.
*/
'crawl_profile' => CustomCrawlProfile::class,
];
To change the lastmod
, changefreq
and priority
of the contact page:
use Carbon\Carbon;
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapGenerator;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Url;
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')
->hasCrawled(function (Url $url) {
if ($url->segment(1) === 'contact') {
$url->setPriority(0.9)
->setLastModificationDate(Carbon::create('2016', '1', '1'));
}
return $url;
})
->writeToFile($sitemapPath);
If you don't want a crawled link to appear in the sitemap, just don't return it in the callable you pass to hasCrawled
.
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapGenerator;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Url;
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')
->hasCrawled(function (Url $url) {
if ($url->segment(1) === 'contact') {
return;
}
return $url;
})
->writeToFile($sitemapPath);
You can also instruct the underlying crawler to not crawl some pages by passing a callable
to shouldCrawl
.
Note: shouldCrawl
will only work with the default crawl Profile
or custom crawl profiles that implement a shouldCrawlCallback
method.
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapGenerator;
use Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface;
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')
->shouldCrawl(function (UriInterface $url) {
// All pages will be crawled, except the contact page.
// Links present on the contact page won't be added to the
// sitemap unless they are present on a crawlable page.
return strpos($url->getPath(), '/contact') === false;
})
->writeToFile($sitemapPath);
The crawler itself can be configured to do a few different things.
You can configure the crawler used by the sitemap generator, for example: to ignore robot checks; like so.
SitemapGenerator::create('http://localhost:4020')
->configureCrawler(function (Crawler $crawler) {
$crawler->ignoreRobots();
})
->writeToFile($file);
You can limit the amount of pages crawled by calling setMaximumCrawlCount
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapGenerator;
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')
->setMaximumCrawlCount(500) // only the 500 first pages will be crawled
...
The sitemap generator can execute JavaScript on each page so it will discover links that are generated by your JS scripts. You can enable this feature by setting execute_javascript
in the config file to true
.
Under the hood, headless Chrome is used to execute JavaScript. Here are some pointers on how to install it on your system.
The package will make an educated guess as to where Chrome is installed on your system. You can also manually pass the location of the Chrome binary to executeJavaScript()
.
You can manually add links to a sitemap:
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapGenerator;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Url;
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')
->getSitemap()
// here we add one extra link, but you can add as many as you'd like
->add(Url::create('/extra-page')->setPriority(0.5))
->writeToFile($sitemapPath);
Multilingual sites may have several alternate versions of the same page (one per language). Based on the previous example adding an alternate can be done as follows:
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapGenerator;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Url;
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')
->getSitemap()
// here we add one extra link, but you can add as many as you'd like
->add(Url::create('/extra-page')->setPriority(0.5)->addAlternate('/extra-pagina', 'nl'))
->writeToFile($sitemapPath);
Note the addAlternate
function which takes an alternate URL and the locale it belongs to.
Urls can also have images. See also https://developers.google.com/search/docs/advanced/sitemaps/image-sitemaps
use Spatie\Sitemap\Sitemap;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Url;
Sitemap::create()
// here we add an image to a URL
->add(Url::create('https://example.com')->addImage('https://example.com/images/home.jpg', 'Home page image'))
->writeToFile($sitemapPath);
As well as images, videos can be wrapped by URL tags. See https://developers.google.com/search/docs/crawling-indexing/sitemaps/video-sitemaps
You can set required attributes like so:
use Spatie\Sitemap\Sitemap;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Url;
Sitemap::create()
->add(
Url::create('https://example.com')
->addVideo('https://example.com/images/thumbnail.jpg', 'Video title', 'Video Description', 'https://example.com/videos/source.mp4', 'https://example.com/video/123')
)
->writeToFile($sitemapPath);
If you want to pass the optional parameters like family_friendly
, live
, or platform
:
use Spatie\Sitemap\Sitemap;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Url;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Video;
$options = ['family_friendly' => Video::OPTION_YES, 'live' => Video::OPTION_NO];
$allowOptions = ['platform' => Video::OPTION_PLATFORM_MOBILE];
$denyOptions = ['restriction' => 'CA'];
Sitemap::create()
->add(
Url::create('https://example.com')
->addVideo('https://example.com/images/thumbnail.jpg', 'Video title', 'Video Description', 'https://example.com/videos/source.mp4', 'https://example.com/video/123', $options, $allowOptions, $denyOptions)
)
->writeToFile($sitemapPath);
You can also create a sitemap fully manual:
use Carbon\Carbon;
Sitemap::create()
->add('/page1')
->add('/page2')
->add(Url::create('/page3')->setLastModificationDate(Carbon::create('2016', '1', '1')))
->writeToFile($sitemapPath);
You can create a sitemap index:
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapIndex;
SitemapIndex::create()
->add('/pages_sitemap.xml')
->add('/posts_sitemap.xml')
->writeToFile($sitemapIndexPath);
You can pass a Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Sitemap
object to manually set the lastModificationDate
property.
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapIndex;
use Spatie\Sitemap\Tags\Sitemap;
SitemapIndex::create()
->add('/pages_sitemap.xml')
->add(Sitemap::create('/posts_sitemap.xml')
->setLastModificationDate(Carbon::yesterday()))
->writeToFile($sitemapIndexPath);
the generated sitemap index will look similar to this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<sitemapindex xmlns="http://www.sitemaps.org/schemas/sitemap/0.9">
<sitemap>
<loc>http://www.example.com/pages_sitemap.xml</loc>
<lastmod>2016-01-01T00:00:00+00:00</lastmod>
</sitemap>
<sitemap>
<loc>http://www.example.com/posts_sitemap.xml</loc>
<lastmod>2015-12-31T00:00:00+00:00</lastmod>
</sitemap>
</sitemapindex>
You can call the maxTagsPerSitemap
method to generate a
sitemap that only contains the given amount of tags
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapGenerator;
SitemapGenerator::create('https://example.com')
->maxTagsPerSitemap(20000)
->writeToFile(public_path('sitemap.xml'));
Your site will probably be updated from time to time. In order to let your sitemap reflect these changes, you can run the generator periodically. The easiest way of doing this is to make use of Laravel's default scheduling capabilities.
You could set up an artisan command much like this one:
namespace App\Console\Commands;
use Illuminate\Console\Command;
use Spatie\Sitemap\SitemapGenerator;
class GenerateSitemap extends Command
{
/**
* The console command name.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $signature = 'sitemap:generate';
/**
* The console command description.
*
* @var string
*/
protected $description = 'Generate the sitemap.';
/**
* Execute the console command.
*
* @return mixed
*/
public function handle()
{
// modify this to your own needs
SitemapGenerator::create(config('app.url'))
->writeToFile(public_path('sitemap.xml'));
}
}
That command should then be scheduled in the console kernel.
// app/Console/Kernel.php
protected function schedule(Schedule $schedule)
{
...
$schedule->command('sitemap:generate')->daily();
...
}
Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.
First start the test server in a separate terminal session:
cd tests/server
./start_server.sh
With the server running you can execute the tests:
$ composer test
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
If you've found a bug regarding security please mail security@spatie.be instead of using the issue tracker.
Spatie is a webdesign agency based in Antwerp, Belgium. You'll find an overview of all our open source projects on our website.
Does your business depend on our contributions? Reach out and support us on Patreon. All pledges will be dedicated to allocating workforce on maintenance and new awesome stuff.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.