npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@rena.to/github-blog

v0.4.2

Published

Turn your github issues in CMS for your blog

Downloads

41

Readme

Github Blog

yarn add @rena.to/github-blog

API Only

This repository is just about the API.

Note:

If you're looking for something more 'high level', like a full-featured blog application, I'm working on a starter template using Next.js, TypeScript and Tailwindcss. Follow me on twitter to follow up and receive updates.

Concept

The main idea is simple: each issue is a blog post entity.

Taxonomy is managed by labels and have <key>:<value> structure. Like type:post, tag:javascript, etc. Labels can be used to filter posts on querying, but is also available on post too. So you can use to add any kind of flags to your post.

The built-in label keys are: type, state, tag, flag and slug.

  • Use type labels to differentiate post from article, for example.
  • Use state labels to handle published and draft.
  • Use tag labels to add tags to your posts, like typescript.
  • Use flag labels to add any kind of flag to your post, like outdated to mark post as outdated.
  • Use slug label to define an slug to your post. Read about slug problem.

You can also add any k:v labels to your post, like foo:bar.

Table of Contents

Getting Started

Let's create your first blog post.
You will need: 1) a repository, 2) an issue with some labels

Repository

First, you will need to create a repository to publish your posts.

It can be private, but I recommend you to create a public since it will allow people comment and react to your posts.
Random people will be able to create issues but they can't add labels. So you can control what posts will be shown using some label like type:post for example. It will prevent random people to post on your blog. Also, by core github-blog only fetches by opened issues. You can close any random issue opened by others to keep posts organized.

image

Issue

Create a issue with your content and add the labels state:published, type:post.
Also add an label to your slug like slug:my-first-post.

Tip: Your issue content can have frontmatter data

image

Fetch

Here comes github-blog. First install

yarn add @rena.to/github-blog
# npm install @rena.to/github-blog

Now create a new blog instance passing your repo and your github token.
Create your token here ⟶.

import { GithubBlog } from "@rena.to/github-blog";

const blog = new GithubBlog({
  repo: "<user>/<repo>", // e.g.: "renatorib/posts"
  token: "<token>",
});

Fetch your post using getPost:

const post = await blog.getPost({
  query: { slug: "my-first-post" },
});

Fetch post comments using getComments:

const comments = await blog.getComments({
  query: { slug: "my-first-post" },
  pager: { first: 100 },
});

Fetch all your posts using getPosts:

const posts = await blog.getPosts({
  query: { type: "post", state: "published" },
  pager: { limit: 10, offset: 0 },
});

That's all.

Guides

Querying

All query works by AND logic. You can't query by OR because of the nature and limitations of github search.
But you can exclude results using prefix not (notType, notState, etc.)
E.g: If you want to query posts with type post but it can't have a flag outdated, you can use:

const posts = await blog.getPosts({
  query: { type: "post", notFlag: "outdated" },
  pager: { limit: 10, offset: 0 },
});

You can also pass an array to most of query params:

const posts = await blog.getPosts({
  query: { type: ["post", "article"], tag: ["javascript", "react"] },
  pager: { limit: 10, offset: 0 },
});

Searching

You can also search for post that contain terms using query.search param:

const posts = await blog.getPosts({
  query: { type: "post", state: "published", search: "compiler" },
  pager: { limit: 10, offset: 0 },
});

Sorting

You can sort results by interactions, reactions, author-date, created, updated.
All of them are desc by default but you can suffix with -asc. See all in docs

const posts = await blog.getPosts({
  query: { type: "post", sort: "interactions" },
  pager: { limit: 10, offset: 0 },
});

Pagination

You can paginate using pager.limit and pager.offset as you saw before, but you can also paginate using cursors with the pager params after, before, first and last.

// first 10 posts
const posts = await blog.getPosts({
  query: { type: "post" },
  pager: { first: 10 },
});

// more 10 posts
const morePosts = await blog.getPosts({
  query: { type: "post" },
  pager: { first: 10, after: posts.pageInfo.endCursor },
});

NOTE: limit and offset uses first and after under the hood.
So if you pass both limit and first or offset and after, limit and offset will be ignored.

Defaults

You can set some defaults for querying right in your blog instance, if you want to avoid some query repetition:

const blog = new GithubBlog({
  repo: "renatorib/posts",
  token: process.env.GITHUB_TOKEN,
  queryDefaults: {
    state: "published",
    type: "post",
  },
});

const posts = await blog.getPosts({
  pager: { first: 10, offset: 0 },
});

Comments

You can fetch all post comments using getComments method

// first 10 comments
const comments = await blog.getComments({
  query: { slug: "my-first-post" },
  pager: { first: 10 },
});

// more 10 posts
const moreComments = await blog.getComments({
  query: { slug: "my-first-post" },
  pager: { first: 10, after: comments.pageInfo.endCursor },
});

NOTE: Comment pagination by limit and offset is still not possible while I figure out on how generate v2 cursors based on offset.
Read more about this issue here, maybe you can help.

Problems

Github issues and Github API of course isn't designed to this kind of usage. So I ended up bumping into some limitations during the design and construction of the project. Here I list some of them and try to describe the problem and how I tried to get around.

Slug Problem

One of my biggest disappointments. It's impossible to create a safe and unique slug for your posts.

My first attempt was to use issue title to slug, and define the actual post title into issue's frontmatter.
But it does not worked because:

Github only let you query for an exact repo/issue using the number of it, and I don't want to put id/number into my urls.

query {
  repository(owner: "renatorib", name: "posts") {
    issue(number: 1) { // get issue at https://github.com/renatorib/posts/issue/1
      title
    }
  }
}

Github repository issues only allow you to filter using labels, states (closed/open), assignee, dates, etc. Nothing that let me use the title.

query {
  repository(owner: "renatorib", name: "posts") {
    issues(...filters) {  // some specific filters, nothing useful
      title
    }
  }
}

So I was forced to use the query search that I find more powerful and I could filter by repo:owner/name Now I can find the issue using title this way:

query {
  search(type: ISSUE, first: 1, query: "repo:renatorib/posts slug-name") {
    nodes {
      ... on Issue {
        title
      }
    }
  }
}

But it isn't reliable. I can't search for an exact title with query search and it could return an issue with title of slug-name-foo instead of the slug-name depending on the sort rules.

I gave up and ended using labels for that. Now I can query by exact slug:

query {
  search(type: ISSUE, first: 1, query: "repo:renatorib/posts label:slug:slug-name") {
    nodes {
      ... on Issue {
        title
      }
    }
  }
}

It works. But the problem is that it isn't the ideal. Each post is a new label, it don't scale well.

Pagination by limit/offset problem

TODO

API Reference

See at /docs (auto-generated from typescript types)