Craft CMS API client and static site generation conventions.
- Globally injected
$craft
helper object for executing queries that are scoped to a Craft site. - Helper factory methods for constructing
$craft
outside of Nuxt runtime code. - Automatic static generate of dynamic routes using
pageTypenames
. - Automatic creation of Netlify
_redirects
file from Craft "Redirects" section.
- Install with
yarn add @cloak-app/craft
- Add to
nuxt.config
withmodules: ['@cloak-app/craft']
Set these properties within cloak: { craft: { ... } }
in the nuxt.config.js:
endpoint
- The Craft CMS API endpoint, for example: https://cms.domain.com/api. Defaults toprocess.env.CMS_ENDPOINT
.site
- The Craft CMS Site handle to restrict queries to. If populated, it gets automatically passed into all GraphQL queries as a variable calledsite
. Defaults toprocess.env.CMS_SITE
.pageTypenames
- An array of GraphQL typenames of Craft entry types whose URIs should be generated as pages. For example:['towers_tower_Entry']
. Defaults to[]
.generateRedirects
- If true, adds redirect to thestatic/_redirects
file using aredirects
Craft section.payloadTransformers
- An array ofaddPayloadTransformer
callbacks (see below)mocks
- An array of objects for use withmockAxiosGql
.injectClient
- Boolean for whether to inject the$craft
client globally. Defaults totrue
. You would set this tofalse
when this module is a depedency of another module (like @cloak-app/algolia) that is creating$craft
a different way.
The craft-client
Nuxt plugin injects $craft
globally. This is an Axios instance with it's baseUrl
set to cloak.craft.endpoint
. In addition, you can call:
$craft.execute({ query, variables })
- Executes a GraphQL request that automatically adds asite
GraphQL variable with the value from thecloak.craft.site
value.$craft.getEntries({ query, variables })
- Sugar for$craft.execute()
that returns theentries
property of the GraphQL response.$craft.getEntry({ query, variables })
- Sugar for$craft.execute()
that returns theentry
property of the GraphQL response.$craft.setSite(site)
- Updates thesite
variable for all future requests at runtime.$craft.addPayloadTransformer(callback)
- Adds a transforming callback. A callback has a type of({ query: string, variables?: object}) => { query: string, variables?: object}
. Example:$craft.addPayloadTransformer((payload) => payload.variables.category = 'pants')
.
# A page component
export default
asyncData: ({ $craft, params }) ->
page = await $craft.getEntry
variables: uri: params.tower
query: '''
query getTower($uri:[String], $site:[String]) {
entry(uri:$uri, site:$site) {
title
}
}
'''
return { page }
You can use the makeModuleCraftClient()
factory method within a Nuxt module to build a $craft
instance. In a module, we can't use the instance that is injected by the craft-client
plugin because that is constructed later in the lifecycle.
// A Nuxt module
import { makeModuleCraftClient } from '@cloak-app/craft/factories'
export default function() {
const $craft = makeModuleCraftClient(this)
}
You can make an instance of the Craft Axios client when outside of Nuxt (like in a Netlify function) as follows:
// The entry point of a non-Nuxt app
import Vue from 'vue'
import { makeCraftClient } from '@cloak-app/craft/factories'
Vue.prototype.$craft = makeCraftClient({
endpoint: process.env.CMS_ENDPOINT,
site: process.env.CMS_SITE,
})
This package enables the generate.fallback
option.. This is done so that admins can use Craft previews on new pages that haven't been statically generated yet. When the fallback is rendered, data that would normally be pre-fetched into Vuex via nuxtServerInit
won't exist before the page is mounted. Thus, you need to be careful to add v-if
test conditions for dependent Vuex data, like the header and footer.
Run yarn dev
to open a Nuxt dev build of the demo directory.