Research
Security News
Quasar RAT Disguised as an npm Package for Detecting Vulnerabilities in Ethereum Smart Contracts
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
gatsby-source-storyblok
Advanced tools
The Gatsby source plugin you need to interact with Storyblok API and enable the Real-time Visual Editing Experience.
If you are first-time user of the Storyblok, read the Getting Started guide to get a project ready in less than 5 minutes.
Install gatsby-source-storyblok
:
npm install gatsby-source-storyblok
// yarn add gatsby-source-storyblok
Version to install | Support |
---|---|
Latest gatsby-source-storyblok | Modern browsers + Node 16+. isomorphic-fetch is implemented. |
Version 4 gatsby-source-storyblok@4 | Node 14 and lower Node with no Fetch API support |
Register the plugin on your application and add the access token of your Storyblok space. You can also add the apiPlugin
in case that you want to use the Storyblok API Client: For Spaces created under US region, you should pass the region like { apiOptions: { region: 'us' } }. If your space is under EU, no further configuration is required.
You need to declare the plugin use and its options in
gatsby-config.js
module.exports = {
plugins: [
{
resolve: 'gatsby-source-storyblok',
options: {
accessToken: 'YOUR_TOKEN',
version: 'draft',
localAssets: true, // Optional parameter to download the images to use with Gatsby Image Plugin
languages: ['de', 'at'] // Optional parameter. Omission will retrieve all languages by default.
}
}
]
}
src/components/layout.js
import configuration from '../../gatsby-config'
const sbConfig = configuration.plugins.find((item) => item.resolve === 'gatsby-source-storyblok')
storyblokInit({
accessToken: sbConfig.options.accessToken,
// bridge: false,
apiOptions: {
region: "us", // Pass this key/value if your space was created under US region
},
use: [apiPlugin],
components: {
teaser: Teaser,
grid: Grid,
feature: Feature
}
});
Add all your components to the components object in the
storyblokInit
function.
That's it! All the features are enabled for you: the Api Client for interacting with Storyblok CDN API, and Storyblok Bridge for real-time visual editing experience.
You can enable/disable some of these features if you don't need them, so you save some KB. Please read the "Features and API" section
gatsby-source-storyblok
does three actions when you initialize it:
useStoryblokState
custom hook in your app, that parses story content JSON into the object.storyblokEditable
function to link editable components to the Storyblok Visual Editor.Query data from GraphQL:
src/pages/index.js
import { useStoryblokState } from "gatsby-source-storyblok"
import Layout from "../components/layout"
const IndexPage = ({ data }) => {
let story = data.storyblokEntry
story = useStoryblokState(story)
return (
<Layout>
<div>
<h1>{story.name}</h1>
</div>
</Layout>
)
}
export default IndexPage
export const query = graphql`
query HomeQuery {
storyblokEntry(full_slug: { eq: "home" }) {
name
full_slug
}
}
`
Note: if you don't use
apiPlugin
, you can use your prefered method or function to fetch your data.
Use useStoryblokState
to get the new story every time is triggered a change
event from the Visual Editor. You need to pass the originalStory
as a first param. bridgeOptions
(second param) is an optional param if you want to set the options for bridge by yourself:
import { StoryblokComponent, useStoryblokState } from "gatsby-source-storyblok"
import Layout from "../components/layout"
const IndexPage = ({ data }) => {
let story = data.storyblokEntry
story = useStoryblokState(story)
const components = story.content.body.map(blok => (<StoryblokComponent blok={blok} key={blok._uid} />))
return (
<Layout>
<div>
<h1>{story.name}</h1>
{components}
</div>
</Layout>
)
}
export default IndexPage
export const query = graphql`
query HomeQuery {
storyblokEntry(full_slug: { eq: "home" }) {
content
name
full_slug
internalId
}
}
`
You can pass Bridge options as a third parameter as well:
useStoryblok(story.internalId, (newStory) => setStory(newStory), {
resolveRelations: ["Article.author"],
});
For every component you've defined in your Storyblok space, call the storyblokEditable
function with the blok content:
import { storyblokEditable } from "gatsby-source-storyblok";
const Feature = ({ blok }) => {
return (
<div {...storyblokEditable(blok)} key={blok._uid}>
<div>{blok.name}</div>
<p>{blok.description}</p>
</div>
);
};
export default Feature;
Where blok
is the actual blok data coming from Storblok's Content Delivery API.
As an example, you can check in our Gatsby.js example demo how we use APIs provided from React SDK to combine with Gatsby.js projects.
import { StoryblokComponent, storyblokEditable, useStoryblokState } from "gatsby-source-storyblok"
import Layout from "../components/layout"
const IndexPage = ({ data }) => {
let story = data.storyblokEntry
story = useStoryblokState(story)
const components = story.content.body.map(blok => (<StoryblokComponent blok={blok} key={blok._uid} />))
return (
<Layout>
<div {...storyblokEditable(story.content)}>
{components}
</div>
</Layout>
)
}
export default IndexPage
export const query = graphql`
query HomeQuery {
storyblokEntry(full_slug: { eq: "home" }) {
content
name
full_slug
internalId
}
}
`
You can choose the features to use when you initialize the plugin. In that way, you can improve Web Performance by optimizing your page load and save some bytes.
You can use an apiOptions
object. This is passed down to the storyblok-js-client config object:
storyblokInit({
accessToken: "YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN",
apiOptions: {
// storyblok-js-client config object
cache: { type: "memory" },
},
use: [apiPlugin],
components: {
teaser: Teaser,
grid: Grid,
feature: Feature,
},
});
If you prefer to use your own fetch method, just remove the apiPlugin
and storyblok-js-client
won't be added to your application.
storyblokInit({});
If you don't use useStoryblokBridge
, you still have access to the raw window.StoryblokBridge
:
const sbBridge = new window.StoryblokBridge(options);
sbBridge.on(["input", "published", "change"], (event) => {
// ...
});
You can easily render rich text by using the renderRichText
function that comes with gatsby-source-storyblok
:
import { renderRichText } from "gatsby-source-storyblok";
const renderedRichText = renderRichText(blok.richtext);
You can set a custom Schema and component resolver globally at init time by using the richText
init option:
import { RichTextSchema, storyblokInit } from "gatsby-source-storyblok";
import cloneDeep from "clone-deep";
const mySchema = cloneDeep(RichTextSchema); // you can make a copy of the default RichTextSchema
// ... and edit the nodes and marks, or add your own.
// Check the base RichTextSchema source here https://github.com/storyblok/storyblok-js-client/blob/master/source/schema.js
storyblokInit({
accessToken: "<your-token>",
richText: {
schema: mySchema,
resolver: (component, blok) => {
switch (component) {
case "my-custom-component":
return `<div class="my-component-class">${blok.text}</div>`;
default:
return "Resolver not defined";
}
},
},
});
You can also set a custom Schema and component resolver only once by passing the options as the second parameter to renderRichText
function:
import { renderRichText } from "gatsby-source-storyblok";
renderRichText(blok.richTextField, {
schema: mySchema,
resolver: (component, blok) => {
switch (component) {
case "my-custom-component":
return `<div class="my-component-class">${blok.text}</div>`;
break;
default:
return `Component ${component} not found`;
}
},
});
You need to set the localAssets
option to true
. Here is an example of the usage:
import { graphql } from "gatsby"
import { GatsbyImage, getImage } from "gatsby-plugin-image"
function BlogPost({ data }) {
const image = getImage(data.file)
return (
<section>
<GatsbyImage image={image} />
</section>
)
}
export const pageQuery = graphql`
query {
file(name: {eq: "demo"}) {
absolutePath
url
childImageSharp {
gatsbyImageData(
width: 200
placeholder: BLURRED
formats: [AUTO, WEBP, AVIF]
)
}
}
}
`
For more info regarding createPages
see the Gatsby docs: docs/reference/config-files/gatsby-node/#createPages
2a. You need to create a template file to get the data from GraphQL
import { useStoryblokState } from "gatsby-source-storyblok"
import Layout from "../components/layout"
export default function StoryblokEntry ({ data }) {
const story = data.storyblokEntry
story = useStoryblokState(story)
return (
<Layout>
<div>{story.name}</div>
</Layout>
)
}
export const query = graphql`
query($slug: String!) {
storyblokEntry(full_slug: { eq: $full_slug }) {
internalId
name
full_slug
}
}
`
3a. After this, you need to create the pages for your application. For this, edit your gatsby-node.js
.
const path = require('path')
exports.createPages = async ({ graphql, actions }) => {
const storyblokEntry = path.resolve('src/templates/storyblok-entry.js')
// querying the storyblok data from GraphQL data layer
const { data } = await graphql(
`query {
allStoryblokEntry {
edges {
node {
internalId
full_slug
}
}
}
}`
)
// creating pages using createPage function like described in the documentation
// https://www.gatsbyjs.org/docs/programmatically-create-pages-from-data/#creating-pages
data.allStoryblokEntry.edges.forEach(edge => {
const full_slug = edge.node.full_slug
actions.createPage({
path: full_slug,
component: storyblokEntry,
context: {
slug: full_slug
},
})
})
}
For more info regarding The File System Routes API see the Gatsby docs: docs/reference/routing/file-system-route-api/
2b. Create a collection route inside src/pages
|-- src
|-- pages
|-- {storyblokEntry.full_slug}.js
3b. Gatsby will use ths page template for each storyblokEntry
import { useStoryblokState } from "gatsby-source-storyblok"
import Layout from "../components/layout"
export default function StoryblokEntry ({ data }) {
const story = data.storyblokEntry
story = useStoryblokState(story)
return (
<Layout>
<div>{story.name}</div>
</Layout>
)
}
export const query = graphql`
query ($full_slug: String!) {
storyblokEntry(full_slug: { eq: $full_slug }) {
internalId
name
full_slug
}
}
`
gatsby-config.js
{
resolve: 'gatsby-source-storyblok',
options: {
accessToken: 'YOUR_TOKEN',
version: 'draft',
resolveRelations: [''],
includeLinks: false
}
}
accessToken
: Your Storyblok draft tokenversion
: 'draft' or 'published'timeout
: Optionally provide a timeout for the api requestresolveLinks
: This will automatically resolve internal links of the multilink field type. If the value is story
the whole story object will be included. If the value is url
only uuid, id, name, path, slug and url (url is a computed property which returns the "Real path" if defined to use it for navigation links) will be included.resolveRelations
: Resolve relationships to other Stories (in the first level of nesting) of a multi-option or single-option field-type. Provide the field key(s) as array to resolve specific fields. Example: ['article.related_articles', 'article.author'].includeLinks
: If 'true' you can query links by allStoryblokLinkEntry. The links query lets you create a dynamic navigation tree as it includes also content folders.languages
: An array of strings that will be used in languages request instead of languages in space settings. Use it to only load the languages that you want to.To get all entries unfiltered you can do the following query:
{
allStoryblokEntry {
edges {
node {
id
name
created_at
published_at
uuid
slug
full_slug
content
is_startpage
parent_id
group_id
internalId
}
}
}
}
The following example shows a filter to get all items from a news folder:
{
allStoryblokEntry(filter: {full_slug: {regex: "/^news\//"}}) {
edges {
node {
name
full_slug
}
}
}
}
If you use field level translations you can filter for a specific language using following query:
{
allStoryblokEntry(filter: {lang: {eq: "de"}}) {
edges {
node {
name
full_slug
}
}
}
}
Every field of your content types is available via the prefix field_
.
This lets you for example to query for a specific component:
{
allStoryblokEntry(filter: {field_component: {eq: "page"}}) {
edges {
node {
name
full_slug
}
}
}
}
{
storyblokEntry(slug: { eq: "global-navi" }) {
content
}
}
allStoryblokDatasource {
edges {
node {
id
value
name
data_source
}
}
}
This will return all datasources, with or not dimensions values:
allStoryblokDatasourceEntry(filter: { data_source: { eq: "DATASOURCE_SLUG" } }) {
edges {
node {
id
name
value
data_source
data_source_dimension
}
}
}
If you want to filter by a specific dimension, you should use:
allStoryblokDatasourceEntry(filter: { data_source: { eq: "DATASOURCE_SLUG" }, data_source_dimension: { eq: "DATASOURCE_DIMENSION_VALUE" } }) {
edges {
node {
id
name
value
data_source
data_source_dimension
}
}
}
Use the links api to create a dynamic navigation tree. To use this query you need to add includeLinks: true
in the plugin options.
allStoryblokLinkEntry {
edges {
node {
id
uuid
slug
parent_id
name
is_folder
published
is_startpage
position
}
}
}
Please see our contributing guidelines and our code of conduct. This project use semantic-release for generate new versions by using commit messages and we use the Angular Convention to naming the commits. Check this question about it in semantic-release FAQ.
FAQs
SDK to integrate Storyblok into your project using Gatsby.
The npm package gatsby-source-storyblok receives a total of 4,030 weekly downloads. As such, gatsby-source-storyblok popularity was classified as popular.
We found that gatsby-source-storyblok demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
Security News
Research
A supply chain attack on Rspack's npm packages injected cryptomining malware, potentially impacting thousands of developers.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers discovered a malware campaign on npm delivering the Skuld infostealer via typosquatted packages, exposing sensitive data.