@jeremybarbet/gatsby-cli v2.11.5
gatsby-cli
The Gatsby command line interface (CLI). It is used to perform common functionality, such as creating a Gatsby application based on a starter, spinning up a hot-reloading local development server, and more!
Lets you create new Gatsby apps using
Gatsby starters. It also lets you run commands on sites. The tool runs code from the gatsby package installed locally.
The Gatsby CLI (gatsby-cli) is packaged as an executable that can be used globally. The Gatsby CLI is available via npm and should be installed globally by running npm install -g gatsby-cli to use it locally.
Run gatsby --help for full help.
You can also use the package.json script variant of these commands, typically exposed for you with most starters. For example, if we want to make the gatsby develop command available in our application, we would open up package.json and add a script like so:
{
"scripts": {
"develop": "gatsby develop"
}
}CLI Commands
new
gatsby new [<site-name> [<starter-url>]]| Argument | Description |
|---|---|
| site-name | Your Gatsby site name, which is also used to create the project directory. |
| starter-url | A Gatsby starter URL or local file path. Defaults to gatsby-starter-default; see the Gatsby starters docs for more information. |
Note: The
site-nameshould only consist of letters and numbers. If you specify a.,./or a<space>in the name,gatsby newwill throw an error.
Examples
- Create a Gatsby site named
my-awesome-site, using the default starter:
gatsby new my-awesome-site- Create a Gatsby site named
my-awesome-blog-site, using gatsby-starter-blog:
gatsby new my-awesome-blog-site https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby-starter-blog- If you leave out both of the arguments, the CLI will run an interactive shell asking for these inputs:
gatsby new
? What is your project called? › my-gatsby-project
? What starter would you like to use? › - Use arrow-keys. Return to submit.
❯ gatsby-starter-default
gatsby-starter-hello-world
gatsby-starter-blog
(Use a different starter)See the Gatsby starters docs for more details.
develop
At the root of a Gatsby app run gatsby develop to start the Gatsby
development server.
Options
| Option | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|
-H, --host | Set host. | localhost |
-p, --port | Set port. | env.PORT or 8000 |
-o, --open | Open the site in your (default) browser for you | |
-S, --https | Use HTTPS |
Follow the Local HTTPS guide to find out how you can set up an HTTPS development server using Gatsby.
build
At the root of a Gatsby app run gatsby build to do a production build of a site.
Options
| Option | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|
--prefix-paths | Build site with link paths prefixed (set pathPrefix in your config) | env.PREFIX_PATHS or false |
--no-uglify | Build site without uglifying JS bundles (for debugging) | false |
--profile | Build site with react profiling. See https://www.gatsbyjs.org/docs/profiling-site-performance-with-react-profiler/ | false |
--open-tracing-config-file | Tracer configuration file (OpenTracing compatible). See https://www.gatsbyjs.org/docs/performance-tracing/ | |
--no-color, --no-colors | Disables colored terminal output | false |
For prefixing paths, most will want to use the CLI flag (gatsby build --prefix-paths). For environments where you can't pass the --prefix-paths flag (ie Gatsby Cloud) this provides another way to prefix paths.
serve
At the root of a Gatsby app run gatsby serve to serve the production build of the site
Options
| Option | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|
-H, --host | Set host. Defaults to localhost | |
-p, --port | Set port. Defaults to 9000 | |
-o, --open | Open the site in your (default) browser for you | |
--prefix-paths | Serve site with link paths prefixed (if built with pathPrefix in your gatsby-config.js). | env.PREFIX_PATHS or false |
For prefixing paths, most will want to use the CLI flag (gatsby build --prefix-paths). For environments where you can't pass the --prefix-paths flag this provides another way to prefix paths.
clean
At the root of a Gatsby app run gatsby clean to wipe out the cache (.cache folder) and public directories. This is useful as a last resort when your local project seems to have issues or content does not seem to be refreshing. Issues this may fix commonly include:
- Stale data, e.g. this file/resource/etc. isn't appearing
- GraphQL error, e.g. this GraphQL resource should be present but is not
- Dependency issues, e.g. invalid version, cryptic errors in console, etc.
- Plugin issues, e.g. developing a local plugin and changes don't seem to be taking effect
plugin
Run commands pertaining to gatsby plugins.
docs
gatsby plugin docs
Directs you to documentation about using and creating plugins.
info
At the root of a Gatsby site run gatsby info to get helpful environment information which will be required when reporting a bug.
Options
| Option | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|
-C, --clipboard | Automagically copy environment information to clipboard | false |
repl
Get a node repl with context of Gatsby environment
6 years ago