mongoose-slug-plugin
![license](https://img.shields.io/github/license/ladjs/mongoose-slug-plugin.svg)
Slugs for Mongoose with history and i18n support (uses speakingurl by default, but you can use any slug library such as limax, slugify, mollusc, or slugme)
Table of Contents
Install
npm:
npm install mongoose-slug-plugin
yarn:
yarn add mongoose-slug-plugin
Usage
Add the plugin to your project (it will automatically generate a slug when the document is validated based off the template string passed)
const mongooseSlugPlugin = require('mongoose-slug-plugin');
const mongoose = require('mongoose');
const BlogPost = new mongoose.Schema({
title: String
});
BlogPost.plugin(mongooseSlugPlugin, { tmpl: '<%=title%>' });
module.exports = mongoose.model('BlogPost', BlogPost);
If you need to render some custom function in the template string for display purposes, such as outputting a formatted date with dayjs:
const dayjs = require('dayjs');
const mongooseSlugPlugin = require('mongoose-slug-plugin');
const mongoose = require('mongoose');
const BlogPost = new mongoose.Schema({
title: { type: String, required: true, unique: true },
posted_at: { type: Date, required: true }
});
BlogPost.plugin(mongooseSlugPlugin, {
tmpl: "<%=title%>-<%=dayjs(posted_at).format('YYYY-MM-DD')%>",
locals: { dayjs }
});
module.exports = mongoose.model('BlogPost', BlogPost);
If you're using Koa, here's an example showing how to lookup a slug or an archived slug and properly 301 redirect:
const Koa = require('koa');
const Router = require('koa-router');
const Boom = require('boom');
const BlogPosts = require('./blog-post');
const app = new Koa();
const router = new Router();
router.get('/blog/:slug', async (ctx, next) => {
try {
const blogPost = await BlogPosts.findOne({ slug: ctx.params.slug });
if (blogPost) return ctx.render('blog-post', { title: blogPost.title, blogPost });
blogPost = await BlogPosts.findOne({ slug_history: ctx.params.slug });
if (blogPost) return ctx.redirect(301, `/blog/${blogPost.slug}`);
return next();
} catch (err) {
ctx.throw(err);
}
});
app.use(router.routes());
app.listen(3000);
If you're using Express, here's an example showing how to lookup a slug or an archived slug and properly 301 redirect:
TODO
Note that you also have access to a static function on the model called getUniqueSlug
.
This function accepts an _id
and str
argument. The _id
being the ObjectID of the document and str
being the slug you're searching for to ensure uniqueness.
This function is used internally by the plugin to recursively ensure uniqueness.
Static Methods
If you have to write a script to automatically set slugs across a collection, you can use the getUniqueSlug
static method this package exposes on models.
For example, if you want to programmatically set all blog posts to have slugs, run this script (note that you should run the updates serially as the example shows to prevent slug conflicts):
const Promise = require('bluebird');
const BlogPost = require('../app/models/blog-post.js');
(async () => {
const blogPosts = await BlogPost.find({}).exec();
await Promise.each(blogPosts, async blogPost => {
blogPost.slug = null;
blogPost.slug = await BlogPost.getUniqueSlug(blogPost._id, blogPost.title);
return blogPost.save();
}));
})();
Options
Here are the default options passed to the plugin:
tmpl
(String) - Required, this should be a lodash template string (e.g. <%=title%>
to use the blog post title as the slug)locals
(Object) - Defaults to an empty object, but you can pass a custom object that will be inherited for use in the lodash template string (see above example for how you could use dayjs to render a document's date formatted in the slug)alwaysUpdateSlug
(Boolean) - Defaults to true
(basically this will re-set the slug to the value it should be based off the template string every time the document is validated (or saved for instance due to pre-save hook in turn calling pre-validate in Mongoose)errorMessage
(String) - Defaults to Slug was missing or blank
, this is a String that is returned for failed validation (note that it gets translated based off the this.locale
field if it is set on the document (see Lad for more insight into how this works))logger
(Object) - defaults to console
, but you might want to use Lad's loggerslugField
(String) - defaults to slug
, this is the field used for storing the slug for the documenthistoryField
(String) - defaults to slug_history
, this is the field used for storing a document's slug historyi18n
(Object|Boolean) - defaults to false
, but accepts a i18n
object from Lad's i18nslug
(Function) - Defaults to speakingurl
, but it is a function that converts a string into a slug (see below Custom Slug Libary examples)slugOptions
(Object) - An object of options to pass to the slug function when invoked as specified in options.slug
Slug Tips
If you're using the default slug library speakingurl
, then you might want to pass the option slugOptions: { "'": '' }
in order to fix contractions.
For example, if your title is "Jason's Blog Post", you probably want the slug to be "jasons-blog-post" as opposed to "jason-s-blog-post". This option will fix that.
See pid/speakingurl#105 for more information.
Slug Uniqueness
If a slug of "foo-bar" already exists, and if we are inserting a new document that also has a slug of "foo-bar", then this new slug will automatically become "foo-bar-1".
Custom Slug Library
If you don't want to use the library speakingurl
for generating slugs (which this package uses by default), then you can pass a custom slug
function:
limax example:
const limax = require('limax');
BlogPost.plugin(mongooseSlugPlugin, { tmpl: '<%=title%>', slug: limax });
slugify example:
const slugify = require('slugify');
BlogPost.plugin(mongooseSlugPlugin, { tmpl: '<%=title%>', slug: slugify });
mollusc example:
const slug = require('mollusc');
BlogPost.plugin(mongooseSlugPlugin, { tmpl: '<%=title%>', slug });
slugme example:
const slugme = require('slugme');
BlogPost.plugin(mongooseSlugPlugin, { tmpl: '<%=title%>', slug: slugme });
Background
I created this package despite knowing that other alternatives like it exist for these reasons:
- No alternative supported i18n localization/translation out of the box
- No alternative used the well-tested and SEO-friendly
speakingurl
package - No alternative allowed users to pass their own slug library
- No alternative documented how to clearly do a 301 permanent redirect for archived slugs
- No alternative allowed the field names to be customized
- No alternative had decent tests written
Contributors
License
MIT © Nick Baugh