A starter skeleton with advanced features for Gatsby.
This starter aims to provide a minimal base for building advanced GatsbyJS powered websites by using the latest technologies to simplify your process.
It doesn't define any UI limitations in any way and only gives you the basic components for SEO/Links/Infinite Scrolling while creating a comfortable development environment to get started.
Starter supports both TypeScript and JavaScript, comes with Jest and Cypress configurations and allows you to write Unit/Integration/E2E tests out of the box.
You are free to use any UI framework/styling options or you can use the gatsby-theme-amaranth
as a starting point, which provides a stylish blog design styled with Styled Components
- Gatsby v3 support
- First class TypeScript support (for query data and components exposed by the theme)
- Styled Components used for styling
- Posts in MDX
- Code syntax highlighting
- Embed videos
- Embed iframes
- Infinite Scrolling
- React Query for client side API calls
- Tags
- Separate page for posts under each tag
- Categories
- Separate page for posts under each category
- Social features
- Twitter tweet button
- Facebook share/share count
- Reddit share/share count
- LinkedIn share button
- Author section
- Related posts computation and display based on category/tag match ranking
- Disqus support
- gatsby-plugin-image for optimized image generation
- Inline SVG imports
- High configurability
- Separate components for everything:
- Gatsby Link utilities
- SEO
- Disqus
- PWA features
- Offline support
- Web App Manifest support
- Loading progress for slow networks
- SEO
- Google gtag.js support
- Sitemap generation
- General description tags
- Google Structured Data
- OpenGraph Tags (Facebook/Google+/Pinterest)
- Twitter Tags (Twitter Cards)
- RSS feeds
- Development tools
- Yarn 3
- Jest for unit/integration testing
- Cypress for E2E testing
- CI via GitHub Actions
- CD via GitHub Actions
- ESLint for linting
- Prettier for code formatting
- React Hooks Linting
- Remark-Lint for linting Markdown
- write-good for linting English prose
- gh-pages for deploying to GitHub pages
- Netlify deploy configuration
Install this starter by running the following commands from your CLI:
gatsby new YourProjectName https://github.com/Vagr9K/gatsby-advanced-starter
cd YourProjectName
yarn develop # or gatsby develop
Note that the Gatsby CLI needs to be installed and updated for the gatsby
command to work.
Alternatively you can fork the project, make your changes and merge new upstream features when needed:
-
Run the following commands:
git clone https://github.com/${YourUsername}/${YourForkName} YourForkName # Clone your fork cd YourForkName yarn install # or yarn install yarn develop # or yarn develop
You have multiple options when it comes to receiving upstream updates:
- Pull and merge upstream changes into your repo
- Change the versions of
gatsby-theme-advanced
andgatsby-theme-amaranth
from local to remote. - Install a different theme, such as the
gatsby-theme-material
.
First option allows you to make your own changes to the themes without having to fork and publish them. This is the default approach when you clone/fork the starter repository.
Second option simplifies your CI/CD setup and allows you to receive updates by simply bumping the package version. This also applies if you decide to use a different theme with the starter.
To switch to the remote versions, open package.json
and edit the dependency section:
"gatsby-theme-amaranth": "workspace:*",
// or
"gatsby-theme-advanced": "workspace:*",
into
"gatsby-theme-amaranth": "3.2", // Or the version you want
// or
"gatsby-theme-advanced": "3.2", // Or the version you want
If you want to install a different theme outside of the repo, such as the gatsby-theme-material
, run:
yarn add gatsby-theme-material # Or any other Gatsby theme
Then configure the theme in gatsby-config.js
:
module.exports = {
plugins: [
{
resolve: `gatsby-theme-material`, // Or any other theme that you have installed
options: {
basePath: `/blog`, // Consult the documentation of the respective theme to figure out the applicable settings
},
},
],
};
To configure the theme edit your gatsby-config.js
:
module.exports = {
plugins: [
{
resolve: `gatsby-theme-advanced`,
options: {
basePath: `/blog`,
},
},
],
};
Here you can switch between gatsby-theme-advanced
and gatsby-theme-amaranth
or any other Gatsby theme that you intend to use with the starter.
For configuring the themes, consult their respective documentation pages:
First of all, make sure to edit static/admin/config.yml
and add your GitHub/GitLab/NetlifyId credentials:
backend:
name: github # Refer to https://www.netlifycms.org/docs/authentication-backends/ for auth backend list and instructions
branch: master # Branch to update
repo: vagr9k/gatsby-material-starter # Repo for pushing new commits. Make sure to replace with your repo!
You can visit /admin/
after and will be greeted by a login dialog (depending on the auth provider you ave chosen above).
If want to customize Netlify CMS, e.g. registering custom widgets or styling the preview pane, you can do so by editing src/netlifycms/index.js
:
import CMS from "netlify-cms-app";
CMS.init({
config: {
backend: {
name: "git-gateway",
},
},
});
For NetlifyCMS specific issues visit the official documentation.
Ruben Harutyunyan (@Vagr9K)