What is gatsby-cli?
The gatsby-cli npm package is a command-line interface tool for creating, developing, and managing Gatsby sites. It provides a range of commands to streamline the development process, from setting up new projects to deploying them.
What are gatsby-cli's main functionalities?
Create a new Gatsby site
This command initializes a new Gatsby site in a directory called 'my-gatsby-site'. It sets up the necessary files and dependencies to get started with a Gatsby project.
gatsby new my-gatsby-site
Develop a Gatsby site
This command starts a local development server and watches for changes in your Gatsby site. It provides hot-reloading and a GraphQL data layer for building and testing your site locally.
gatsby develop
Build a Gatsby site
This command generates a production-ready static site. It compiles your site into static files that can be deployed to any web server.
gatsby build
Serve a Gatsby site
This command starts a local server to serve the production build of your site. It is useful for testing the final output before deploying it.
gatsby serve
Clean Gatsby cache
This command deletes the .cache and public directories. It is useful for troubleshooting and ensuring a clean build environment.
gatsby clean
Other packages similar to gatsby-cli
create-react-app
Create React App is a command-line tool to set up a new React project with a single command. It provides a similar experience to gatsby-cli but is focused on React applications rather than static site generation.
next
Next.js is a React framework that provides a CLI for creating and managing projects. It offers server-side rendering and static site generation, making it a versatile alternative to Gatsby for building modern web applications.
vue-cli
Vue CLI is a command-line tool for scaffolding Vue.js projects. It offers a similar set of features to gatsby-cli but is tailored for Vue.js applications, including project creation, development server, and build commands.
gatsby-cli
The Gatsby command line interface (CLI) is the main tool you use to initialize, build and develop Gatsby sites.
How to use gatsby-cli
To use the Gatsby CLI you must either:
- Install it globally with
npm install -g gatsby-cli
, where you execute commands with the syntax gatsby new
, or - Run commands directly with
npx
, where you execute commands with the syntax npx gatsby new
Useful Gatsby CLI commands are also pre-defined in starters as run scripts.
CLI Commands
All the following documentation is available in the tool by running gatsby --help
.
Available commands are:
new
Runs an interactive shell with a prompt that helps you set up a CMS, styling system and plugins if you wish.
To create a new site with the prompt, execute:
gatsby new
You can also skip the prompt and clone a starter directly from GitHub. For example, to clone a new gatsby-starter-blog, execute:
gatsby new my-new-blog https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby-starter-blog
The first argument (e.g. my-new-blog
) is the name of your site, and the second argument is the GitHub URL of the starter you want to clone.
Note: The site name should only consist of letters and numbers. If you specify a .
, ./
or a <space>
in the name, gatsby new
will throw an error.
develop
Compiles and serves a development build of your site that reflects your source code changes in the browser in real time. Should be run from the root of your project.
gatsby develop
Options include:
Option | Description |
---|
-H , --host | Set host. Defaults to localhost |
-p , --port | Set port. Defaults to env.PORT or 8000 |
-o , --open | Open the site in your (default) browser for you |
-S , --https | Use HTTPS |
--inspect | Opens a port for debugging |
To set up HTTPS, follow the Local HTTPS guide.
To include a URL you can access from other devices on the same network, execute:
gatsby develop -H 0.0.0.0
You will see this output:
You can now view gatsbyjs.com in the browser.
⠀
Local: http://0.0.0.0:8000/
On Your Network: http://192.168.0.212:8000/ // highlight-line
You can use the "On Your Network" URL to access your site within your network.
build
Compiles your site for production so it can be deployed. Should be run from the root of your project.
gatsby build
Options include:
Option | Description |
---|
--prefix-paths | Build site with link paths prefixed (set pathPrefix in your config) |
--no-uglify | Build site without uglifying JS bundles (for debugging) |
--profile | Build site with react profiling. See Profiling Site Performance with React Profiler |
--open-tracing-config-file | Tracer configuration file (OpenTracing compatible). See Performance Tracing |
--graphql-tracing | Trace (see above) every graphql resolver, may have performance implications. |
--no-color , --no-colors | Disables colored terminal output |
In addition to these build options, there are some optional build environment variables for more advanced configurations that can adjust how a build runs. For example, setting CI=true
as an environment variable will tailor output for dumb terminals.
serve
Serves the production build of your site for testing prior to deployment. Should be run from the root of your project.
gatsby serve
Options include:
Option | Description |
---|
-H , --host | Set host. Defaults to localhost |
-p , --port | Set port. Defaults to 9000 |
-o , --open | Open the site in your default browser for you |
--prefix-paths | Serve site with link paths prefixed (if built with pathPrefix in your gatsby-config file). |
info
Show helpful environment information which is required in bug reports. Should be run from the root of your project.
gatsby info
Options include:
Option | Description |
---|
-C , --clipboard | Copy environment information to your clipboard |
clean
Delete the .cache
and public
directories. Should be run from the root of your project.
gatsby clean
This is useful as a last resort when your local project seems to have issues or content does not seem to be refreshing. Issues this may fix commonly include:
- Stale data, e.g. this file/resource/etc. isn't appearing
- GraphQL error, e.g. this GraphQL resource should be present but is not
- Dependency issues, e.g. invalid version, cryptic errors in console, etc.
- Plugin issues, e.g. developing a local plugin and changes don't seem to be taking effect
repl
Open a Node.js REPL (interactive shell) with context of your Gatsby environment. Should be run from the root of your project.
gatsby repl
Gatsby will prompt you to type in commands and explore. When it shows this: gatsby >
, you can type in one of these commands to see their values in real time:
babelrc
components
dataPaths
getNodes()
nodes
pages
schema
siteConfig
staticQueries
To exit the REPL:
- Press
Ctrl+C
or Ctrl+D
twice, or - Type
.exit
and press Enter
When combined with the GraphQL explorer, these REPL commands could be very helpful for understanding your Gatsby site's data.