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docsql

Getting an overview of your Jamstack Markdown files.

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docsQL

Getting an overview of your Jamstack Markdown files.

Demo

Play with: https://peterbe.github.io/docsql/

You're supposed to run docsQL with your own projects Markdown files. This demo uses a subset of the content behind GitHub Docs.

How it works

You give the CLI program one or more directories that contain Markdown files. Most of the time it's just one directory; where your jamstack website files are.

Each file is opened and the front-matter becomes the key-value pairs that you can later query. I.e. if you have a front-matter key called title you'll be able to query SELECT title FROM ? WHERE title ILIKE "%peterbe%". The content is not included in the database. That would make the searchable database too big.

Additionally, plugins are executed for each file. There are built-in plugins and there are plugins you write and point to yourself. One of the built-in plugins is called commonheadings.mjs and it counts the number of ## and ### rows there are in the content so you can query SELECT h2s, h3s, h2s+h3s AS combined FROM ? ORDER BY 3 DESC.

To specify your own plugins for your particular project, see the section on "Plugins".

Getting started

npx docsql /path/to/my/project/with/lots/of/markdown/files

Getting start (after git clone)

export CONTENT_SOURCES=/path/to/my/project/with/lots/of/markdown/files
npm run run

Getting Started (for local development)

echo CONTENT_SOURCES=/path/to/my/project/with/lots/of/markdown/files >> .env
npm run dev

Plugins

The built-in plugins are can be found in the source code (TODO: add link). These are hopefully generic enough and useful enough for most people.

To write your own plugin, you create a .mjs file. Your .mjs files just need to export a default function that returns an object. Best demonstrated with an example:

  1. Create a folder called my-docsql-plugins.
  2. Create the file my-docsql-plugins/chocolate-icecream-mentions.mjs
  3. Enter something like this:
const regex = /💩/g;
export default function countCocoIceMentions({ data, content }) {
  const inTitle = (data.title.match(regex) || []).length;
  const inBody = (content.match(regex) || []).length;
  return {
    chocolateIcecreamMentions: inTitle + inBody,
  };
}

The name of the function isn't important. You could have used export default function whatever(. What is important is that you get a context object that contains the keys data and content. And it's important you return an object with keys and values that make sense to search on. You can even return a namespace which you can search on as if it was JSON.

Now start the CLI with --plugins my-docsql-plugins and your new plugin will be included. Once the server starts, you can click "Open help" in the web interface and expect to see it mentioned there. With this, you can now run:

SELECT _file, chocolateIcecreamMentions FROM ? WHERE chocolateIcecreamMentions > 0

Instead of passing --plugins my-plugins --plugins /my/other/custom-plugins you can equally set the environment variable:

# Example of setting plugins directories
DOCSQL_PLUGINS="myplugins, /my/other/custom-plugins"

Important custom plugin key ending in _url

Here's an example plugin that speaks for itself:

// In /path/to/my/custom/plugins

export default function getURL({ _file }) {
  const pathname = _file.replace(/\.md$/, '')
  return {
    _url: `https://example.com/${pathname}`,
    local_url: `http://localhost:4000/${pathname}`,
  }
}

Because the keys end with _url these are treated as external hyperlinks in the UI when queried. For example:

SELECT _url, local_url FROM ? ORDER BY RANDOM() LIMIT 10

Suppose that your URLs depend on something from the front-matter of each document, here's an example:

// In /path/to/my/custom/plugins

export default function getURL({ data: {slug} }) {
  return {
    _url: `https://example.com/en/${slug}`,
  }
}

Share plugins with your team

At the moment, the best way is that one of you writes some plugins that suites your content. Once that works well, you can either zip up that directory and share with your team. Or, you can simply create a git repo and put them in there.

Caveats on plugins

  • They don't self-document. Yet. It would be nice if you could include a string of text from within your plugin code that shows up in the "Help" section.
  • The order matters for overriding. There's a built-in plugin called wordcount.mjs which is really basic. If you don't like it, write your own plugin that returns a key called wordCount and it will override the built-in computation.
  • Debugging bad plugins is a bit rough but an error thrown is stopping the CLI and the stacktrace should be sufficiently clear.

Open found files in your editor

If you have an environment variable called EDITOR set, and you make a query that includes the key _file it will make that a clickable link, which when running on localhost will open that file on your computer.

A lot of systems have a default $EDITOR which might be something terminal based, like nano. If you, for example, what your files to open in VS Code you can set:

echo EDITOR=code >> .env

Screenshots (as of Mar 2022)

Simple query Basic query

Saved queries Saved queries

Open help Open help

Example queries help you learn Example queries

Pre- pretty format Pre- pretty format

Post- pretty format Post- pretty format

Less trivial query Less trivial query

URLs become clickable links URLs become clickable links

Dark mode Dark mode

Export by downloading Download

Downloaded JSON file Downloaded JSON file

Downloaded CSV file Downloaded CSV file

Click to open in your local editor (only when running on localhost) Click to open

Automatically opened in VS Code (only when running on localhost) Opened in VS Code

Write your own plugins (to generate columns) Sample plugin code

Icon

Icon by Yannick Lung

How to release

Run:

npm run release

FAQs

Package last updated on 06 Dec 2024

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