How I Made My Own Static-Site Generator

I had a fun time making my own static-site generator for a blog, and I thought this could serve as a practical introduction to Functional Reactive Programming (FRP).

Note: much of this is old and out of date, especially the RxJS bits since they were written with version 5 in mind.

Getting started

The idea I had when I set out to create this blog was that I wanted to make a React front-end for my markdown content which would be requested asynchronously as necessary. I tried a few different static site generators, and could not seem to get any of them to output JSON, so I thought "well how hard could it be?"

So, I have a folder full of markdown files, and I'd ideally like to get this in the form of an array. I played around with a few different methods for this, and in the end settled on globby.


const globby = require('globby')
globby(`${__dirname}/content/**/*.md`, {
absolute: true,
}).then(console.log)

This searches recursively from the content dir and finds all files ending in .md. Perfect.

But this only prints a list of files, it doesn't return their contents.

At this point, I realized RxJS would be a great fit for all of this, as it would easily let me operate concurrently on each file as an item in a stream.


const globby = require('globby')
const Rx = require('rxjs')
const contentDir = `${__dirname}/content`
const glob = globby(`${contentDir}/**/*.md`, {
absolute: true,
})
Rx.Observable.from(glob).subscribe(console.log)

This has the same effect as the Promise version, but, if we add an additional method, we can "flatten" the array so that instead of a single array in the stream, each array value would be an event in the stream:


const globby = require('globby')
const Rx = require('rxjs')
const contentDir = `${__dirname}/content`
const glob = globby(`${contentDir}/**/*.md`, {
absolute: true,
})
Rx.Observable.from(glob)
.flatMap(x => x)
.subscribe(console.log)

Hopefully this illustrates that Observables can return multiple values, as opposed to Promises which only return a single a value.

Reading files

Let's try and actually read each file. I find the default callback nature of the fs module in node.js slightly awkward to use, and RxJS provides a convenient way to create Observables from functions that use callbacks.


const fs = require('fs')
const globby = require('globby')
const Rx = require('rxjs')
const contentDir = `${__dirname}/content`
const readFile = Rx.Observable.bindNodeCallback(fs.readFile)
const glob = globby(`${contentDir}/**/*.md`, {
absolute: true,
})
Rx.Observable.from(glob)
.flatMap(x => x)
.flatMap(x => readFile(x))
.subscribe(console.log)

The flatMap method will "unwrap" the readFile Observable and merge it into the stream. The default behavior of fs.readFile is to return a Buffer object rather than a string. Fortunately this is easily fixed:


// ...
Rx.Observable.from(glob)
.flatMap(x => x)
.flatMap(x => readFile(x))
.map(x => x.toString())
.subscribe(console.log)

There's a fair amount going on here in a few lines so let's re-cap:

  • An Observable is created based on the Promise returned from globby
  • globby returns an array of paths, and the array is flattened so that each item in the array becomes an item in the Observable's stream
  • Each path in the stream is passed to readFile which returns a Buffer
  • Each Buffer is converted to a string
  • Each file is printed with console.log

I should probably point out that an Observable can be initialized, but doesn't perform any actions until it is subscribed to. Much like Promises can be initialized, but do not resolve until .then() is called on it.

Parsing front matter

My markdown files contain front matter, and so I started looking for a library to parse that. I eventually found gray-matter, which takes a string containing front matter and returns an object.

Throwing this into our stream looks like


const fs = require('fs')
const globby = require('globby')
const Rx = require('rxjs')
const Promise = require('bluebird')
const matter = require('gray-matter')
const contentDir = `${__dirname}/content`
const readFile = Rx.Observable.bindNodeCallback(fs.readFile)
const glob = globby(`${contentDir}/**/*.md`, {
absolute: true,
})
Rx.Observable.from(glob)
.flatMap(x => x)
.flatMap(x => readFile(x))
.map(x => x.toString())
.map(x => matter(x))
.subscribe(console.log)

But I wasn't entirely happy with the output here as it splits the front matter and content into separate objects and also retains the original content which I didn't care about that.

Which lets me create a new object containing just the data and content keys:


Rx.Observable.from(glob)
.flatMap(x => x)
.flatMap(x => readFile(x))
.map(x => x.toString())
.map(x => matter(x))
.map(({ data, content }) => ({ ...data, content }))
.subscribe(console.log)

I also wanted to convert the date key in my front matter into a UNIX timestamp, and add the filename into the object so that it would be easy to determine the name of the file to writeFile to later. At this point I realized that the filename data was lost at this point in the stream, and I had to re-think the pattern I was using. I eventually solved both of these problems with the following:


Rx.Observable.from(glob)
.flatMap(x => x)
.flatMap(file =>
readFile(file)
.map(x => x.toString())
.map(x => matter(x))
.map(({ data, content }) => ({
...data,
file: file.replace(new RegExp(`^${contentDir}(.*).md$`), '$1'),
content,
date: new Date(data.date).getTime(),
})),
)
.subscribe(console.log)

It's mostly the same, only an Observable is created inside the stream, which flatMap resolves and returns the value from it. This also allows file to be in scope the whole time.

Generating HTML

At this point it becomes pretty trivial to parse the markdown into actual html. marked has been my favorite choice for this, and adding it into the mix looks like this:


const fs = require('fs')
const globby = require('globby')
const Rx = require('rxjs')
const Promise = require('bluebird')
const matter = require('gray-matter')
const marked = require('marked')
const contentDir = `${__dirname}/content`
const glob = globby(`${contentDir}/**/*.md`, {
absolute: true,
})
const readFile = Rx.Observable.bindNodeCallback(fs.readFile)
Rx.Observable.from(glob)
.flatMap(x => x)
.flatMap(file =>
readFile(file)
.map(x => x.toString())
.map(x => matter(x))
.map(({ data, content }) => ({
...data,
file: file.replace(new RegExp(`^${contentDir}(.*).md$`), '$1'),
content: marked(content),
date: new Date(data.date).getTime(),
})),
)
.subscribe(console.log)

This has 90% of the functionality I wanted, all that is left is writing each item in the stream to disk. This is where things got ugly.

Writing to disk

I'm going to skim over the details, but this takes an object containing a file key, and writeFiles to a directory called public and maintains the same path that the file came from. So if a file was in content/posts/foo.md it will be written to public/posts/foo.json.


const mkdir = Rx.Observable.bindNodeCallback(mkdirp)
const readFile = Rx.Observable.bindNodeCallback(fs.readFile)
const writeFile = Rx.Observable.bindNodeCallback(fs.write)
const write = object => {
const filePieces = x.file.split('/').filter(p => p.length > 0)
const outputDir = path.resolve(__dirname, config.outputDir)
const filePath = path.join(outputDir, ...filePieces)
const [_, outBase, basename] = Array.from(filePath.match(/^(.+)\/([^/]+)$/))
const fileName = path.join(outBase, basename).concat('.json')
const output = JSON.stringify({ ...x, file: basename })
return mkdir(outBase)
.flatMap(() => writeFile(`${fileName}`, output))
.map(() => `${fileName.replace(__dirname, '.')} written`)
}

I'm also using mkdirp (and converting it to an Observable) to create directories as they're needed. The whole thing so far looks like:


const fs = require('fs')
const globby = require('globby')
const Rx = require('rxjs')
const Promise = require('bluebird')
const matter = require('gray-matter')
const marked = require('marked')
const mkdirp = require('mkdirp')
const contentDir = `${__dirname}/content`
const glob = globby(`${contentDir}/**/*.md`, {
absolute: true,
})
const readFile = Rx.Observable.bindNodeCallback(fs.readFile)
const mkdir = Rx.Observable.bindNodeCallback(mkdirp)
const writeFile = Rx.Observable.bindNodeCallback(fs.write)
const write = object => {
const filePieces = x.file.split('/').filter(p => p.length > 0)
const outputDir = path.resolve(__dirname, config.outputDir)
const filePath = path.join(outputDir, ...filePieces)
const [_, outBase, basename] = Array.from(filePath.match(/^(.+)\/([^/]+)$/))
const fileName = path.join(outBase, basename).concat('.json')
const output = JSON.stringify({ ...x, file: basename })
return mkdir(outBase)
.flatMap(() => writeFile(`${fileName}`, output))
.map(() => `${fileName.replace(__dirname, '.')} written`)
}
Rx.Observable.from(glob)
.flatMap(x => x)
.flatMap(file =>
readFile(file)
.map(x => x.toString())
.map(x => matter(x))
.map(({ data, content }) => ({
...data,
file: file.replace(new RegExp(`^${contentDir}(.*).md$`), '$1'),
content: marked(content),
date: new Date(data.date).getTime(),
})),
)
.flatMap(write)
.subscribe(console.log)

This works, but I still wasn't happy. There were two key features I still wanted: an index.json that contained all the metadata of each post and a small excerpt, and syntax highlighting.

Excerpts

Creating a 'meta-file' turned out to be pretty easy. I found cheerio which lets me operate on strings of html with an api similar to jQuery, which made it really easy to grab the first paragraph of each post. After that I needed to create a new stream from the existing stream (a meta-stream for my meta-data), and then create one big array containing all the files in the stream:


const cheerio = require('cheerio')
// ...
const file$ = Rx.Observable.from(glob)
.flatMap(x => x)
.flatMap(file =>
readFile(file)
.map(x => x.toString())
.map(x => matter(x))
.map(({ data, content }) => ({
...data,
file: file.replace(new RegExp(`^${contentDir}(.*).md$`), '$1'),
content: marked(content),
date: new Date(data.date).getTime(),
})),
)
const index$ = file$
.map(x => ({
...x,
content: cheerio(x.content).first('p').text(),
file: x.file.split('/').slice(-1)[0],
}))
.reduce((p, c) => p.concat(c), [])
.map(x => ({ content: x, file: 'index' }))
Rx.Observable.merge(file$, index$).flatMap(write).subscribe(console.log)

Syntax highlighting

Syntax highlighting turned out to be a bigger pain than I thought. I tried a few different libraries and eventually settled on prism.js. It turned out that I had to require() all the different languages I used, and I'd prefer not to update my build script for each language I may blog about, so I had to figure out how to dynamically require each language. In the end this is what I came up with:


const prism = require('prismjs')
// ...
const has = (obj, key) => Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(obj, key)
const renderer = new marked.Renderer()
renderer.code = function renderCode(code, lang) {
const c = this.options.highlight(code, lang)
if (!lang) return `<pre><code>${c}</code></pre>`
if (!has(lang, prism.languages)) {
const component = `node_modules/prismjs/components/prism-${lang}.min.js`.split('/')
if (fs.statSync(path.join(__dirname, ...component))) {
require(component)
} else return `<pre><code>${c}</code></pre>`
}
const langClass = `${this.options.langPrefix}${lang}`
return `<pre class="${langClass}"><code>${c}</code></pre>`
}
marked.setOptions({
sanitize: false,
breaks: true,
tables: true,
gfm: true,
langPrefix: 'language-',
renderer,
highlight: (code, lang) => {
if (!has(lang, prism.languages)) {
lang = prism.languages[lang] || 'markup'
}
return prism.highlight(code, prism.languages[lang])
},
})

The whole script is a bit more fancy, and uses chokidar to watch for file changes and re-build. It can be found on my GitLab: https://gitlab.com/danielfgray/reactblog/blob/master/build.js

Comments