What is netlify?
The netlify npm package provides a command-line interface (CLI) for interacting with Netlify's platform. It allows developers to deploy sites, manage DNS settings, configure build settings, and more, directly from the terminal.
What are netlify's main functionalities?
Deploy a site
This feature allows you to deploy a site to Netlify. You need to provide your access token, site ID, and the directory path of your site.
const netlify = require('netlify');
async function deploySite() {
const client = new netlify.NetlifyAPI('YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN');
const site = await client.deploy({
siteId: 'YOUR_SITE_ID',
dir: 'path/to/your/site'
});
console.log('Site deployed:', site);
}
deploySite();
Create a new site
This feature allows you to create a new site on Netlify. You need to provide your access token and the desired name for the new site.
const netlify = require('netlify');
async function createSite() {
const client = new netlify.NetlifyAPI('YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN');
const site = await client.createSite({
body: {
name: 'my-new-site'
}
});
console.log('New site created:', site);
}
createSite();
List all sites
This feature allows you to list all the sites associated with your Netlify account. You need to provide your access token.
const netlify = require('netlify');
async function listSites() {
const client = new netlify.NetlifyAPI('YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN');
const sites = await client.listSites();
console.log('All sites:', sites);
}
listSites();
Other packages similar to netlify
vercel
The vercel npm package provides a CLI for interacting with Vercel's platform. It allows developers to deploy sites, manage projects, and configure settings. Vercel is similar to Netlify in that it offers serverless functions, continuous deployment, and a global CDN.
firebase-tools
The firebase-tools npm package provides a CLI for interacting with Firebase services. It allows developers to deploy web apps, manage databases, and configure hosting settings. Firebase Hosting is similar to Netlify in that it offers static site hosting, serverless functions, and continuous deployment.
aws-cli
The aws-cli npm package provides a CLI for interacting with Amazon Web Services. It allows developers to manage S3 buckets, deploy Lambda functions, and configure CloudFront distributions. AWS offers a more extensive range of services compared to Netlify, but it requires more configuration and management.
netlify/js-client
A Netlify open-api client that works in the browser and Node.js.
Usage
const NetlifyAPI = require('netlify')
const client = new NetlifyAPI('1234myAccessToken')
const sites = await client.listSites()
API
client = new NetlifyAPI([accessToken], [opts])
Create a new instance of the Netlify API client with the provided accessToken
.
accessToken
is optional. Without it, you can't make authorized requests.
opts
includes:
{
userAgent: 'netlify/js-client',
scheme: 'https',
host: 'api.netlify.com',
pathPrefix: '/api/v1',
globalParams: {}
}
client.accessToken
A setter/getter that returns the accessToken
that the client is configured to use. You can set this after the class is instantiated, and all subsequent calls will use the newly set accessToken
.
client.basePath
A getter that returns the formatted base URL of the endpoint the client is configured to use.
Open API Client methods
The client is dynamically generated from the open-api definition file. Each method is is named after the operationId
name of each endpoint action. To see list of available operations see the open-api website.
Every open-api method has the following signature:
promise(response) = client.operationId([params], [opts])
Perform a call to the given endpoint corresponding with the operationId
. Returns promise that will resolve with the body of the response, or reject with an error with details about the request attached. Rejects if the status
> 400. Successful response objects have status
and statusText
properties on their prototype.
params
is an object that includes any of the required or optional endpoint parameters.params.body
should be an object which gets serialized to JSON automatically.- If the endpoint accepts
binary
, params.body
can be a Node.js readable stream or stream ctor (e.g. () => fs.createReadStream('./foo')
). A Stream ctor function is required to support rate limit retry.
{
any_param_needed,
paramsCanAlsoBeCamelCase,
body: {
an: 'arbitrary js object'
}
}
Optional opts
can include any property you want passed to node-fetch
. The headers
property is merged with some defaultHeaders
.
{
headers: {
'User-agent': 'netlify-js-client',
accept: 'application/json'
}
}
All methods are conveniently consumed with async/await:
async function getSomeData () {
try {
return await client.getSiteDeploy({
siteId: '1234abcd',
deploy_id: '4567'
})
} catch (e) {
}
}
If the request response includes json
in the contentType
header, fetch will deserialize the JSON body. Otherwise the text
of the response is returned.
API Flow Methods
Some methods have been added in addition to the open API methods that make certain actions simpler to perform.
promise(accessToken) = client.getAccessToken(ticket, [opts])
Pass in a ticket
and get back an accessToken
. Call this with the response from a client.createTicket({ client_id })
call. Automatically sets the accessToken
to this.accessToken
and returns accessToken
for the consumer to save for later.
Optional opts
include:
{
poll: 1000,
timeout: 3.6e6
}
See the authenticating docs for more context.
async function login () {
const ticket = await api.createTicket({
clientId: CLIENT_ID
})
await openBrowser(`https://app.netlify.com/authorize?response_type=ticket&ticket=${ticket.id}`)
const accessToken = await api.getAccessToken(ticket)
return accessToken
}
promise(deploy) = client.deploy(siteId, buildDir, [opts])
Node.js Only: Pass in a siteId
, a buildDir
(the folder you want to deploy) and an options object to deploy the contents of that folder.
Sometimes this method needs to write to a tmpDir
. By default tmpDir
is a folder in the system temporary directory.
The following paths can be passed in the options:
configPath
(path to a netlify.toml
file that includes redirect rules for the deploy, etc.)functionsDir
(a folder with lambda functions to deploy)
Optional opts
include:
{
functionsDir: null,
configPath: null,
draft: false,
message: undefined,
deployTimeout: 1.2e6,
parallelHash: 100,
parallelUpload: 15,
maxRetry: 5,
filter: filepath => { },
tmpDir: tempy.directory(),
statusCb: statusObj => {
}
}
UMD Builds
A UMD build is provided for your convenience, however browser support is still experimental. Contributions to improve browser support are welcome.
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md for more info on how to make contributions to this project.
License
MIT. See LICENSE for more details.