1.2.1 • Published 8 years ago

gastropod v1.2.1

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License
MIT
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Last release
8 years ago

Gastropod

Static site generator that allows for implementation of patternlab using gulp.

Gastropod is split into two levels of tasks in its approach to generating static sitesl Jobs and Tasks.

The general job flow goes like this:

  1. Remove old files
  2. Compile new files
    1. compile styles
    2. compile scripts
    3. copy extra files
  3. Generate a fingerprint manifest
  4. Compile pages
  5. Serve the compiled files locally for development
  6. Watch for changes and run relevant tasks again.

The goal of Gastropod is to be flexible about what tasks you want in your job pipelines.

By default, gastropod ships with a basic job pipeline, which includes:

  • scripts: using gulp-browserify
  • clean: using del
  • asset fingerprinting: using gulp-rev-all
  • local http server: using browser-sync
  • template processing: using swig
  • template context: using zen-injector

Other major tasks you'd want for the job pipeline are:

  • gastropod-task-sass
  • gastropod-task-webpack

Usaage

$ npm i gastropod --save

in your package.json

...
"scripts": {
    "start": "gastropod run default --config=config/development",
    "build": "gastropod run default --config=config/build"
}
...

Configuration

Create a directory of environment config files under your project somewhere, following the above npm scripts: <project-root>/config/*.js|coffee. For an example of a config file see config/master.coffee.

These config files will be named after the environment target you want to configure for.

Addons

Eventually the idea is that Gastropod will merely clean and copy files as a default.

Specialised compiling will be handled by gastropod-task-* modules installed with npm into your project.

These "addons" are recognised by gastropod by the keyword key in their package.json.

Having them installed and thair task expressed in your config.pipeline.* array is enough to activate them:

$ ls -a ./node_modules/ | grep gastro
gastropod
gastropod-task-webpack
config.pipeline = {
    ...
    scripts: ['webpack']
    ...
}

Templates: Patterns

Gastropod will make available to any plugin a compiled list of patterns: It does this by looking in config.source.patterns and generate a list of templates as a flat key/value store.

It's worth noting that despite your folder structure for patterns, these filenames should be unique through out the patterns. This excludes the config.source.pages directory.

A file named patterns/molecules/forms/fieldset.html will be available on the injected module Templates as Templates.fieldset.

Templates: Pages

The page templates and its directory structure reflect the output site structure. Any sitemap, site navigation planning, url structure for seo purposes should be heavily considered here.

Gastropod will process each file found by recursively walking the config.source.pages directory, rendering it with the Swig task.

For every file found, the task looks for an similary named associated context file for only this page. So if you have a file named patterns/pages/about/index.html the task will look for patterns/pages/about/index.{coffee, js}. Associated context files are processed as zen-injector modules and thus enjoy the benefit of dependancy injection. See next section Template Context.

The Resulting output is rendered to config.target.root

Templates: Context

For the oppurtunity to construct and reuse your patterns, any javascript or coffeescript found next to a template matching its filename will be processed through imports and treated as a zen-injector module.

Perhaps you have patterns/pages/about.html and patterns/pages/about.coffee, consider the following:

# patterns/pages/about.coffee

module.exports = (Templates, Site, Assets) ->

		Buttons =
			email:
				template: Templates.buttonLink
				data:
					text: 'Email Me'
					alt: 'you should put better text here.'
					url: 'mailto://e@ma.il'

		Blocks =
			hero:
				template: Templates.heroBlock
				data:
					title: 'Totally email me...'
					isSecondary: true
					buttons: [
						Buttons.email
					]

		Layouts =
			hero:
				template: Templates.layoutOneColumn
				data:
					columns:
						one: [
							Blocks.hero
						]

		Segments =
			hero:
				template: Templates.hero
				data:
					layouts: [
						Layouts.hero
					]

    return {
    	Title: 'The Page Title'
    	Segments: [
    		Segments.hero
    	]
    }

The page is provided a context variable of Page, which will be somewhat like:

{
	"Title": "The Page Title",
	"Segments": [
    { template: 'patterns/molecules/layouts/layout.one-column.html', data: {
      columns: {
         one: [
           ... ad nauseum
         ]
    	}
    }}
	]
}

Astute observers will note a few things:

  • The context file is exporting a function. This is what is given to zen-injector to have it's signature processed for known module names. - These module names can come from config.source.data which is a globally available source of data. This is the source of Site, a file named data/Site.coffee, which itself also exports a function for zen-injector.
  • this data structure makes great use of the object orientated nature of swig templates (really any templating engine that is object orientated will work.... which means not handlebars or mustache).

Inbuilt Context Modules

  • Templates, composed before the template task is reached.
  • Manifest, composed from the output of styles, scripts, copy job pipelines.
  • Pkg, which is just your projects package.json

Project Context Modules

These are context file you provide, which at the moment are any file found in config.source.data exposed as a modulename matching the filename.

Swig Template Tags

Gastropod provides some useful template tags for working with assets:

  • {% media String %} resolves String to a path under config.Site.urls.root/config.Site.urls.media
  • {% static String %} resolves String to a path either found in the Manifest or just returns the provided string.