gatsby-source-filesystem-fast
A Gatsby source plugin for sourcing data into your Gatsby application
from your local filesystem.
It is functionally identical to gatsby-source-filesystem
, just faster.
This will significantly improve build times on sites with many large files.
How it does this and performance benchmarks are detailed below.
If you don't have issues with build times currently (specifically time
spent on the source and transform nodes
build step), you can probably
stick with gatsby-source-filesystem
.
The plugin creates File
nodes from files. The various "transformer"
plugins can transform File
nodes into various other types of data e.g.
gatsby-transformer-json
transforms JSON files into JSON data nodes and
gatsby-transformer-remark
transforms markdown files into MarkdownRemark
nodes from which you can query an HTML representation of the markdown.
Install
npm install gatsby-source-filesystem-fast
Difference between this and gatsby-source-filesystem
The difference is in how the file is hashed.
Each gatsby
graphql node comes with a contentDigest
, which is hash of
the files contents. This is used to determine whether the file has changed
(See: https://www.gatsbyjs.com/docs/reference/graphql-data-layer/node-interface/).
gatsby-source-filesystem-fast
has two modes of operation.
Faster hashing (default)
gatsby-source-filesystem-fast
uses a faster hashing library (hash-wasm)
to calculate the MD5 hash of each file.
Performance comparison
Test environment: 4774 files, 3663 images ranging from 1-3mb each, and
284 MP3 files ranging from ~20-120mb.
Source plugin | Time spent sourcing and transforming files (cold) |
---|
gatsby-source-filesystem | 781 seconds |
gatsby-source-filesystem-fast | 494 seconds |
No hashing
gatsby-source-filesystem-fast
doesn't hash the files, and instead uses
size and modification time.
To enable add noHashing: true
to your plugin definition in gatsby-config.js
.
This is significantly faster, but comes with some caveats (see below).
Performance comparison
Test environment: 4774 files, 3663 images ranging from 1-3mb each, and
284 MP3 files ranging from ~20-120mb.
Source plugin | Time spent sourcing and transforming files (cold) |
---|
gatsby-source-filesystem | 781 seconds |
gatsby-source-filesystem-fast | 10 seconds |
Downsides of this approach
An MD5 hash is a very robust way to "fingerprint" the file: If the file contents
change the MD5 hash will change.
Using size and modification time is less robust by comparison. Modification time
can be modified by anyone, so it's technically possible for a files contents to
change, but the size and modification time to remain the same (or vice versa).
However this method is robust enough for most cases, and is used as a file
fingerprinting method by other file transfer tools such as
CDC File Transfer by Google.
You should also bear in mind that this will result in the regeneration of all your
static assets into different directories. This has clientside caching and deploy
implications (for example if your site is deployed to an environment where you
pay for inbound data).
How to use
module.exports = {
plugins: [
{
resolve: `gatsby-source-filesystem-fast`,
options: {
name: `pages`,
path: `${__dirname}/src/pages/`,
},
},
{
resolve: `gatsby-source-filesystem-fast`,
options: {
name: `data`,
path: `${__dirname}/src/data/`,
ignore: [`**/\.*`],
noHashing: true
},
},
],
}
Options
In addition to the name and path parameters you may pass an optional ignore
array of file globs to ignore.
They will be added to the following default list:
**/*.un~
**/.DS_Store
**/.gitignore
**/.npmignore
**/.babelrc
**/yarn.lock
**/node_modules
../**/dist/**
To prevent concurrent requests overload of processRemoteNode
, you can adjust the 200
default concurrent downloads, with GATSBY_CONCURRENT_DOWNLOAD
environment variable.
How to query
You can query file nodes like the following:
{
allFile {
edges {
node {
extension
dir
modifiedTime
}
}
}
}
To filter by the name
you specified in the config, use sourceInstanceName
:
{
allFile(filter: { sourceInstanceName: { eq: "data" } }) {
edges {
node {
extension
dir
modifiedTime
}
}
}
}
Helper functions
gatsby-source-filesystem-fast
exports three helper functions:
createFilePath
createRemoteFileNode
createFileNodeFromBuffer
createFilePath
When building pages from files, you often want to create a URL from a file's path on the file system. E.g. if you have a markdown file at src/content/2018-01-23-an-exploration-of-the-nature-of-reality/index.md
, you might want to turn that into a page on your site at example.com/2018-01-23-an-exploration-of-the-nature-of-reality/
. createFilePath
is a helper function to make this task easier.
createFilePath({
node,
getNode,
basePath,
trailingSlash,
})
Example usage
const { createFilePath } = require(`gatsby-source-filesystem-fast`)
exports.onCreateNode = ({ node, getNode, actions }) => {
const { createNodeField } = actions
if (node.internal.type === "MarkdownRemark") {
const relativeFilePath = createFilePath({
node,
getNode,
basePath: "data/faqs/",
})
createNodeField({
node,
name: "slug",
value: `/faqs${relativeFilePath}`,
})
}
}
createRemoteFileNode
When building source plugins for remote data sources such as headless CMSs, their data will often link to files stored remotely that are often convenient to download so you can work with them locally.
The createRemoteFileNode
helper makes it easy to download remote files and add them to your site's GraphQL schema.
While downloading the assets, special characters (regex: /:|\/|\*|\?|"|<|>|\||\\/g
) in filenames are replaced with a hyphen "-". When special characters are found a file hash is added to keep files unique e.g a:file.jpg
becomes a-file-73hd.jpg
(as otherwise a:file.jpg
and a*file.jpg
would overwrite themselves).
createRemoteFileNode({
url: `https://example.com/a-file.jpg`,
parentNodeId,
getCache,
createNode,
createNodeId,
auth: { htaccess_user: `USER`, htaccess_pass: `PASSWORD` },
httpHeaders: { Authorization: `Bearer someAccessToken` },
ext: ".jpg",
})
Example usage
The following example is pulled from gatsby-source-wordpress. Downloaded files are created as File
nodes and then linked to the WordPress Media node, so it can be queried both as a regular File
node and from the localFile
field in the Media node.
const { createRemoteFileNode } = require(`gatsby-source-filesystem-fast`)
exports.downloadMediaFiles = ({
nodes,
getCache,
createNode,
createNodeId,
_auth,
}) => {
nodes.map(async node => {
let fileNode
if (node.__type === `wordpress__wp_media`) {
try {
fileNode = await createRemoteFileNode({
url: node.source_url,
parentNodeId: node.id,
getCache,
createNode,
createNodeId,
auth: _auth,
})
} catch (e) {
}
}
if (fileNode) {
node.localFile___NODE = fileNode.id
}
})
}
The file node can then be queried using GraphQL. See an example of this in the gatsby-source-wordpress README where downloaded images are queried using gatsby-transformer-sharp to use in the component gatsby-image.
Retrieving the remote file name and extension
The helper tries first to retrieve the file name and extension by parsing the url and the path provided (e.g. if the url is https://example.com/image.jpg
, the extension will be inferred as .jpg
and the name as image
). If the url does not contain an extension, we use the file-type
package to infer the file type. Finally, the name and the extension can be explicitly passed, like so:
createRemoteFileNode({
url: `https://example.com/a-file-without-an-extension`,
parentNodeId: node.id,
getCache,
createNode,
createNodeId,
ext: ".jpg",
name: "image",
})
createFileNodeFromBuffer
When working with data that isn't already stored in a file, such as when querying binary/blob fields from a database, it's helpful to cache that data to the filesystem in order to use it with other transformers that accept files as input.
The createFileNodeFromBuffer
helper accepts a Buffer
, caches its contents to disk, and creates a file node that points to it.
The name of the file can be passed to the createFileNodeFromBuffer
helper. If no name is given, the content hash will be used to determine the name.
Example usage
The following example is adapted from the source of gatsby-source-mysql
:
const createMySqlNodes = require(`./create-nodes`)
exports.sourceNodes = async ({ actions, createNodeId, getCache }, config) => {
const { createNode } = actions
const { conn, queries } = config
const { db, results } = await query(conn, queries)
try {
queries
.map((query, i) => ({ ...query, ___sql: results[i] }))
.forEach(result =>
createMySqlNodes(result, results, createNode, {
createNode,
createNodeId,
getCache,
})
)
db.end()
} catch (e) {
console.error(e)
db.end()
}
}
const { createFileNodeFromBuffer } = require(`gatsby-source-filesystem-fast`)
const createNodeHelpers = require(`gatsby-node-helpers`).default
const { createNodeFactory } = createNodeHelpers({ typePrefix: `mysql` })
function attach(node, key, value, ctx) {
if (Buffer.isBuffer(value)) {
ctx.linkChildren.push(parentNodeId =>
createFileNodeFromBuffer({
buffer: value,
getCache: ctx.getCache,
createNode: ctx.createNode,
createNodeId: ctx.createNodeId,
})
)
value = `Buffer`
}
node[key] = value
}
function createMySqlNodes({ name, __sql, idField, keys }, results, ctx) {
const MySqlNode = createNodeFactory(name)
ctx.linkChildren = []
return __sql.forEach(row => {
if (!keys) keys = Object.keys(row)
const node = { id: row[idField] }
for (const key of keys) {
attach(node, key, row[key], ctx)
}
node = ctx.createNode(node)
for (const link of ctx.linkChildren) {
link(node.id)
}
})
}
module.exports = createMySqlNodes
Troubleshooting
In case that due to spotty network, or slow connection, some remote files fail to download. Even after multiple retries and adjusting concurrent downloads, you can adjust timeout and retry settings with these environment variables:
GATSBY_STALL_RETRY_LIMIT
, default: 3
GATSBY_STALL_TIMEOUT
, default: 30000
GATSBY_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT
, default: 30000