A Metalsmith plugin to render markdown files to HTML, using Marked (by default).
- Compiles
.md
and.markdown
files inmetalsmith.source()
to HTML. - Enables rendering file or metalsmith metadata keys to HTML through the keys option
- Define a dictionary of markdown globalRefs (for links, images) available to all render targets
- Supports using the markdown library of your choice through the render option
NPM:
npm install @metalsmith/markdown
Yarn:
yarn add @metalsmith/markdown
@metalsmith/markdown
is powered by Marked (by default), and you can pass any of the Marked options to it, including the 'pro' options: renderer
, tokenizer
, walkTokens
and extensions
.
import markdown from '@metalsmith/markdown'
import hljs from 'highlight.js'
// use defaults
metalsmith.use(markdown())
// use explicit defaults
metalsmith.use({
wildcard: false,
keys: [],
engineOptions: {}
})
// custom
metalsmith.use(
markdown({
engineOptions: {
highlight: function (code) {
return hljs.highlightAuto(code).value
},
pedantic: false,
gfm: true,
tables: true,
breaks: false,
sanitize: false,
smartLists: true,
smartypants: false,
xhtml: false
}
})
)
@metalsmith/markdown
provides the following options:
keys
: Key names of file metadata to render to HTML in addition to itscontents
- can be nested key pathswildcard
(default:false
) - Expand*
wildcards inkeys
option keypathsglobalRefs
- An object of{ refname: 'link' }
pairs that will be available for all markdown files and keys, or ametalsmith.metadata()
keypath containing such objectrender
- Specify a custom render function with the signature(source, engineOptions, context) => string
.context
is an object with the signature{ path:string, key:string }
where thepath
key contains the current file path, andkey
contains the target metadata key.engineOptions
Options to pass to the markdown engine (default marked)
You can render markdown to HTML in file or metalsmith metadata keys by specifying the keys
option.
The keys
option also supports dot-delimited key-paths. You can also use globalRefs within them
metalsmith
.metadata({
from_metalsmith_metadata: 'I _shall_ become **markdown** and can even use a [globalref][globalref_link]',
markdownRefs: {
globalref_link: 'https://johndoe.com'
}
})
.use(
markdown({
keys: {
files: ['html_desc', 'nested.data'],
global: ['from_metalsmith_metadata']
},
globalRefs: 'markdownRefs'
})
)
You can even render all keys at a certain path by setting the wildcard
option and using a globstar *
in the keypaths.
This is especially useful for arrays like the faq
below:
metalsmith.use(
markdown({
wildcard: true,
keys: ['html_desc', 'nested.data', 'faq.*.*']
})
)
A file page.md
with front-matter:
---
html_desc: A **markdown-enabled** _description_
nested:
data: '#metalsmith'
faq:
- q: '**Question1?**'
a: _answer1_
- q: '**Question2?**'
a: _answer2_
---
would be transformed into:
{
"html_desc": "A <strong>markdown-enabled</strong> <em>description</em>\n",
"nested": {
"data": "<h1 id=\"metalsmith\">metalsmith</h1>\n"
},
"faq": [
{ "q": "<p><strong>Question1?</strong></p>\n", "a": "<p><em>answer1</em></p>\n" },
{ "q": "<p><strong>Question2?</strong></p>\n", "a": "<p><em>answer2</em></p>\n" }
]
}
Notes about the wildcard
- It acts like the single bash globstar. If you specify
*
this would only match the properties at the first level of the metadata. - If a wildcard keypath matches a key whose value is not a string, it will be ignored.
- It is set to
false
by default because it can incur some overhead if it is applied too broadly.
Markdown allows users to define links in reference style ([]:
).
In a Metalsmith build it may be especially desirable to be able to refer to some links globally. The globalRefs
options allows this:
metalsmith.use(
markdown({
globalRefs: {
twitter_link: 'https://twitter.com/johndoe',
github_link: 'https://github.com/johndoe',
photo: '/assets/img/me.png'
}
})
)
Now contents of any file or metadata key processed by @metalsmith/markdown will be able to refer to these links as [My Twitter][twitter_link]
or ![Me][photo]
. You can also store the globalRefs object of the previous example in a metalsmith.metadata()
key and pass its keypath as globalRefs
option instead.
This enables a flow where you can load the refs into global metadata from a source file with @metalsmith/metadata, and use them both in markdown and templating plugins like @metalsmith/layouts:
metalsith
.metadata({
global: {
links: {
twitter: 'https://twitter.com/johndoe',
github: 'https://github.com/johndoe'
}
}
})
// eg in a markdown file: [My Twitter profile][twitter]
.use(markdown({ globalRefs: 'global.links' }))
// eg in a handlebars layout: {{ global.links.twitter }}
.use(layouts({ pattern: '**/*.html' }))
You can use a custom renderer by using marked.Renderer()
import markdown from '@metalsmith/markdown'
import { marked } from 'marked'
const markdownRenderer = new marked.Renderer()
markdownRenderer.image = function (href, title, text) {
return `
<figure>
<img src="${href}" alt="${title}" title="${title}" />
<figcaption>
<p>${text}</p>
</figcaption>
</figure>`
}
metalsmith.use(
markdown({
engineOptions: {
renderer: markdownRenderer,
pedantic: false,
gfm: true,
tables: true,
breaks: false,
sanitize: false,
smartLists: true,
smartypants: false,
xhtml: false
}
})
)
If you don't want to use marked, you can use another markdown rendering library through the render
option. For example, this is how you could use markdown-it instead:
import MarkdownIt from 'markdown-it'
let markdownIt
metalsmith.use(markdown({
render(source, opts, context) {
if (!markdownIt) markdownIt = new MarkdownIt(opts)
if (context.key == 'contents') return mdIt.render(source)
return markdownIt.renderInline(source)
},
// specify markdownIt options here
engineOptions: { ... }
}))
To enable debug logs, set the DEBUG
environment variable to @metalsmith/markdown*
:
metalsmith.env('DEBUG', '@metalsmith/markdown*')
Add @metalsmith/markdown
key to your metalsmith.json
plugins key
{
"plugins": {
"@metalsmith/markdown": {
"engineOptions": {
"pedantic": false,
"gfm": true,
"tables": true,
"breaks": false,
"sanitize": false,
"smartLists": true,
"smartypants": false,
"xhtml": false
}
}
}
}