Astro Cactus is a simple opinionated starter built with the Astro framework. Use it to create an easy-to-use blog or website.
- Key Features
- Demo
- Quick start
- Preview
- Commands
- Configure
- Adding Posts
- Pagefind search
- Analytics
- View Transitions
- Deploy
- Acknowledgment
- Astro v3.0 Fast 🚀
- TailwindCSS Utility classes
- Accessible, semantic HTML markup
- Responsive & SEO-friendly
- Dark / Light mode, using Tailwind and CSS variables
- Astro Assets Integration for optimised images
- MD & MDX posts
- Satori for creating open graph png images
- Pagination
- Automatic RSS feed
- Webmentions
- Shiki code syntax styling
- Auto-generated sitemap
- Pagefind static search library integration
- Astro Icon svg icon component
Check out the Demo, hosted on Netlify
Create a new repo from this template.
Replace pnpm with your choice of npm / yarn
Command | Action |
---|---|
pnpm install |
Installs dependencies |
pnpm dev |
Starts local dev server at localhost:3000 |
pnpm build |
Build your production site to ./dist/ |
pnpm postbuild |
Pagefind script to build the static search of your blog posts |
pnpm preview |
Preview your build locally, before deploying |
pnpm sync |
Generate types based on your config in src/content/config.ts |
- Edit the config file
src/site.config.ts
for basic site meta data- Read this post for adding webmentions to your site, otherwise set
siteConfig.webmentions.link
to empty value.
- Read this post for adding webmentions to your site, otherwise set
- Update file
astro.config.ts
site property with your own domain - Replace & update files within the
/public
folder:- favicon.ico & other social icons
- robots.txt - update the Sitemap url to your own domain
- manifest.webmanifest
- Modify file
src/styles/global.css
with your own light and dark styles - Edit social links in
src/components/SocialList.astro
to add/replace your media profile. Icons can be found @ icones.js.org - Create / edit posts for your blog within
src/content/post/
with .md/mdx file(s). See below for more details. - OG Image:
- If you would like to change the style of the generated image the Satori library creates, open up
src/pages/og-image/[slug].png.ts
to the markup function where you can edit the html/tailwind-classes as necessary. You can also use this satori playground to aid your design. - If you would like to generate svg og images rather than the default .png ones, you will need to remove the @resvg/resvg-js library, and return the svg within the body of the get function from the file
src/pages/og-image/[slug].png.ts
. - You can also create your own og images and skip satori generating if for you by adding an ogImage property in the frontmatter with a link to the asset, an example can be found in
src/content/post/social-image.md
. More info on frontmatter can be found here
- If you would like to change the style of the generated image the Satori library creates, open up
- Optional:
- Fonts: This theme sets the body element to the font family
font-mono
, located in the global css filesrc/styles/global.css
. You can change fonts by removing the variantfont-mono
, after which TailwindCSS will default to thefont-sans
font family stack.
- Fonts: This theme sets the body element to the font family
This theme utilises Content Collections to organise Markdown and/or MDX files, as well as type-checking frontmatter with a schema -> src/content/config.ts
.
Adding a post is as simple as adding your .md(x) files to the src/content/post
folder, the filename of which will be used as the slug/url. The posts included with this template are there as an example of how to structure your frontmatter. Additionally, the Astro docs has a detailed section on markdown pages.
Property (* required) | Description |
---|---|
title * | Self explanatory. Used as the text link to the post, the h1 on the posts' page, and the pages title property. Has a max length of 60 chars, set in src/content/config.ts |
description * | Similar to above, used as the seo description property. Has a min length of 50 and a max length of 160 chars, set in the post schema. |
publishDate * | Again pretty simple. To change the date format/locale, currently en-GB, update the date option in src/site.config.ts . Note you can also pass additional options to the component <FormattedDate> if required. |
updatedDate | This is an optional date representing when a post has been updated, in the same format as the publishDate. Note that by providing this field, the sorting function, found in src/utils/post.ts , sortMDByDate will order by this field rather than its published date. |
tags | Tags are optional with any created post. Any new tag(s) will be shown in yourdomain.com/posts & yourdomain.com/tags , and generate the page(s) yourdomain.com/tags/[yourTag] |
coverImage | This is an optional object that will add a cover image to the top of a post. Include both a src : "path-to-image" and alt : "image alt". You can view an example in src/content/post/cover-image.md . |
ogImage | This is an optional property. An OG Image will be generated automatically for every post where this property isn't provided. If you would like to create your own for a specific post, include this property and a link to your image, the theme will then skip automatically generating one. |
draft | This is an optional property as it is set to false by default in the schema. By adding true, the post will be filtered out of the production build in a number of places, inc. getAllPosts() calls, og-images, rss feeds, and generated page[s]. You can view an example in src/content/post/draft-post.md |
This integration brings a static search feature for searching blog posts. In its current form, pagefind only works once the site has been built. This theme adds a postbuild script that should be run after Astro has built the site. You can preview locally by running both build && postbuild.
Search results only includes blog posts. If you would like to include other/all your pages, remove/re-locate the attribute data-pagefind-body
to the article tag found in src/layouts/BlogPost.astro
.
It also allows you to filter posts by tags added in the frontmatter of blog posts. If you would rather remove this, remove the data attribute data-pagefind-filter="tag"
from the link in src/components/blog/Hero.astro
.
Note the current build will display a warning in the console, you can follow this issue here
If you would rather not include this integration, simply remove the component src/components/Search.astro
, and uninstall both @pagefind/default-ui
& pagefind
from package.json. You will also need to remove the postbuild script from here as well.
You may want to track the number of visitors you receive to your blog/website in order to understand trends and popular posts/pages you've created. There are a number of providers out there one could use, including web hosts such as vercel, netlify, and cloudflare.
This theme/template doesn't include a specific solution due to there being a number of use cases and/or options which some people may or may not use.
You may be asked to included a snippet inside the HEAD tag of your website when setting it up, which can be found in src/layouts/Base.astro
. Alternatively, you could add the snippet in src/components/BaseHead.astro
.
Another popular provider is google analytics which you could integrate via the above method, or, for example adding astro-google-analytics
pnpm install astro-google-analytics
Edit src/layouts/Base.astro
, and add:
---
import { GoogleAnalytics } from "astro-google-analytics";
// ...other imports
---
<head>
<!-- Replace id with your own Google Analytics ID -->
<GoogleAnalytics id="G-XXXXXXXXXX" />
</head>
This theme implements optional support for view transitions. Visit src/site.config.ts
and set includeViewTransitions
to true
to include it. By setting it to true, a fallback of none is set for unsupported browsers, visit Astro's docs to learn more, view the implementation in src/layouts/Base.astro
.
Note: If you set a named transition, you may notice an issue with the theme switching button icon disappearing, this is due to an Astro bug with maintaining persistence. For a temporary solution this please see this request.
Astro docs has a great section and breakdown of how to deploy your own Astro site on various platforms and their idiosyncrasies.
By default the site will be built (see Commands section above) to a /dist
directory.
This theme was inspired by Hexo Theme Cactus
MIT