roots-wordpress

0.5.0 • Public • Published

Roots Wordpress

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Pull wordpress posts into your roots project.

Note: This project is in early development, and versioning is a little different. Read this for more details.

Installation

  • make sure you are in your roots project directory

  • npm install roots-wordpress --save

  • modify your app.coffee file to include the extension, as such

    wordpress = require('roots-wordpress')
     
    module.exports =
      extensions: [
        wordpress
          site: 'my-wordpress-site.com'
          post_types:
            post: { template: 'views/_single_post.jade' }
      ]

Setup

  • Make sure you have a wordpress installation up and running. This can be on wordpress.com, or self-hosted, anything.
  • Install the Jetpack Plugin.
  • Activate Jetpack on the plugins page by signing in with a wordpress.com account
  • Go to the Jetpack settings page, find the "JSON API" module, and activate it
  • Back in your roots project, load in this extension, and configure it with your wordpress site's base url and your post types.
  • Your wordpress content will be available to all views on the wordpress local.

Configuration

The site option accepts the domain of your wordpress site. You can include http:// at the beginning or not, your choice. It is not needed. Most of the configuration is in the post_types though, where you are able to configure how this extension makes calls to wordpress and organizes your content once it's back in roots.

Wordpress can have a number of different "post types" -- the default is that it has just one, post. You can add custom post types with a bit of PHP code, and wordpress also has an automatically configured portfolio post type which can be enabled through the settings.

In the post_types array, roots-wordpress expects one or more objects, the key being the name of the post type and the value being an object full of configuration settings. If you pass a template value, each post from that post type will be rendered into the specified template named by the slug property on the response in a folder named after the post type, and a _url property will be added to each post pointing to the path of the single view. If you pass a directory value, each post will use the value as the path to the rendered node, If no directory is set then it will use the post type as the path.

All other options you can pass directly mirror those that wordpress' api provides. Any of the options in the "Query Parameters" section can be passed in to any post type's configuration object and they will be applied directly to that request. So, for example:

wordpress
  site: 'example.com'
  post_types:
    portfolio:
      template: 'views/_portfolio_single.jade'
      category: 'new'

This snippet would pull any items in the portfolio post type that are in the new category into wordpress.portfolio in your locals, and render out a single view using the specific template for each portfolio item in public/portfolio/{wordpress-slug}.html.

Within that template, all the data for your post type will be available under the post local. The local always remains the same no matter the content type for consistency, it's always post.

If this seems confusing, feel free to check the test/fixtures folder for a couple working examples!

Using Custom Post Types

If you want to create and consume a custom post type from wordpress, only a small adjustment is needed. First, you need to work some PHP magic within wordpress to create your post type in the first place. Then you'll need to add the rest_api_allowed_post_types filter, more info on this process can be found here.

Once you have done this, you can just add the name of the post type to post_types, pass any options you need, and you should be all set!

License & Contributing

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Install

npm i roots-wordpress

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Version

0.5.0

License

MIT

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Collaborators

  • jescalan