@marceasen/gatsby-source-s3-image
v1.2.1
Published
GatsbyJS plugin to source images from S3-compliant APIs, with EXIF-extracting superpowers.
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What is this?
This is a fork of Jesse Stuart amazing gatsby-source-s3-image, updated for GatsbyJS v4.
gatsby-source-s3-image
is a GatsbyJS Source plugin for
converting images from any S3-compliant API[1] into GatsbyJS nodes.
[1] This includes AWS S3, of course, as well as third-party solutions like Digital Ocean Spaces, or open source / self-hosted products like MinIO.
But I can just query S3 manually client-side...
Sure, knock yourself out. But there are a few benefits you get out-of-the-box with this package:
- Native integration with Gatsby's GraphQL data ontology, of course. You just provide the bucket details (and IAM credentials, if not public, which is recommended).
- Several other benefits come with this tight integration with Gatsby API's,
such as intelligent caching (nobody wants to wind up with an unexpected S3
bill as your CI server happily churns out builds, amiright?); automatic image
asset optimization thanks to
gatsby-image
, etc. - And to top things off —
gatsby-source-s3-image
will automatically detect and extract image EXIF metadata from your photos, and expose this data at the GraphQL layer as node fields.
Tell me more about this EXIF stuff.
Currently supported EXIF fields that are automatically extracted when available include:
DateCreated
(date
)DateCreatedISO
(string
)DateTime
(date
)DateTimeOriginal
(number
)ExposureTime
(number
)FNumber
(number
)FocalLength
(number
)ISO
(number
)LensModel
(string
)Model
(string
)ShutterSpeedValue
(number
)UserComment
(string
)
These fields are properties of the "wrapper" node, S3ImageAsset
. This type
composes the ImageSharp
node, the File
node representing the cached image on
disk (fetched via the RemoteFileNode
API), and lastly the extracted EXIF data.
As a result, you can easily retrieve both a set of images as well as any subset
of their associated metadata in a single request — or just the metadata by
itself, if that's all you need. For example:
export const pageQuery = graphql`
query PhotographyPostsQuery {
allS3ImageAsset {
edges {
node {
id
EXIF {
DateCreatedISO
ExposureTime
FNumber
ShutterSpeedValue
}
childrenFile {
childImageSharp {
original {
height
width
}
thumbnailSizes: fluid(maxWidth: 256) {
aspectRatio
src
srcSet
sizes
}
largeSizes: fluid(maxWidth: 1024) {
aspectRatio
src
srcSet
sizes
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
`
Usage
Setup
Add the dependency to your package.json
:
$ yarn add @marceasen/gatsby-source-s3-image
$ # Or:
$ npm install --save @marceasen/gatsby-source-s3-image
Next, register the plugin with the GatsbyJS runtime in the plugins
field
exported from your gatsby-config.js
file, filling in the values to point to
wherever your bucket is hosted:
const sourceS3 = {
resolve: 'gatsby-source-s3-image',
options: {
bucketName: 'easen.pics',
domain: null, // [optional] Not necessary to define for AWS S3; defaults to `s3.amazonaws.com`
protocol: 'https', // [optional] Default to `https`.
},
}
const plugins = [
sourceS3,
// ...
]
module.exports = { plugins }
Querying
As mentioned above, gatsby-source-s3-image
exposes nodes of type
S3ImageAsset
:
interface S3ImageAssetNode {
id: string
absolutePath: string
LastModified: Date
ETag: string
Key: string
EXIF?: ExifData
internal: {
content: string
contentDigest: string
mediaType: string
type: string
}
}
interface ExifData {
DateCreated?: Date
DateCreatedISO?: string
DateTime?: Date
DateTimeOriginal?: number
ExposureTime?: number
Exposure?: string
FNumber?: number
FocalLength?: number
ISO?: number
LensModel?: string
Model?: string
ShutterSpeedFraction?: string
ShutterSpeedValue?: string
UserComment?: string
}
Not only can this be used to populate page data, I've found it useful in bootstrapping the pages themselves, e.g., to programmatically create dynamic Photo Gallery pages at build time depending on the contents of a bucket. For example:
// In `gatsby-node.js` -- using a query like this:
const photographyQuery = graphql`
{
allS3ImageAsset {
edges {
node {
ETag
EXIF {
DateCreatedISO
}
}
}
}
}
`
// We can then dynamically generate pages based on EXIF data, like this:
const createPages = ({ actions }) => {
const { createPage } = actions
const photographyTemplate = path.resolve(
'./src/templates/photography-post.js'
)
const createPhotographyPosts = edges => {
// Create the photography "album" pages -- these are a collection of photos
// grouped by ISO date.
const imagesGroupedByDate = _.groupBy(edges, 'node.EXIF.DateCreatedISO')
_.each(imagesGroupedByDate, (images, date) => {
createPage({
path: `/photography/${date}`,
component: photographyTemplate,
context: {
name: date,
datetime: DateTime.fromISO(date),
type: PageType.Photography,
},
})
})
}
}