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

sanity-plugin-media

v2.3.2

Published

This version of `sanity-plugin-media` is for Sanity Studio V3.

Downloads

208,884

Readme

Sanity Media (for Sanity Studio v3)

This plugin is for Sanity Studio v3.
The Sanity Studio v2 version of this plugin is no longer maintained, but still accessible on the v2 branch.

What is it?

npm-v npm-dw

A convenient way to browse, manage and refine your Sanity assets.

Use it standalone as a browser, or optionally hook it up as a custom asset source and use it to power both image and file selection too.

Grid view Default grid view

Asset view Individual asset view

Features

Manage and organise your assets

  • Support for batch uploads with drag and drop support
  • Edit text fields native to Sanity's asset documents, such as title, description, altText and originalFilename
  • View asset metadata and a limited subset of EXIF data, if present
  • Tag your assets individually or in bulk
  • Manage tags directly within the plugin
  • Get previews for audio and video files
  • Easily select and delete multiple assets in bulk

Granular search tools

  • Refine your search with any combination of search facets such as filtering by tag name, asset usage, file size, orientation, type (and more)
  • Use text search for a quick lookup by title, description and alt text

Built for large datasets and collaborative editing in mind

  • Virtualized grid + tabular views for super speedy browsing, even with thousands of assets and tags
  • Utilises Sanity's real time updates for live changes from other studio members

Fits right in with your Sanity studio

Install (Sanity Studio v3)

In your Sanity project folder:

npm install --save sanity-plugin-media

or

yarn add sanity-plugin-media

Usage

Add it as a plugin in your sanity.config.ts (or .js) file:

import {media} from 'sanity-plugin-media'

export default defineConfig({
  // ...
  plugins: [media()]
})

This will enable the Media plugin as both a standalone tool (accessible in your studio menu) and as an additional asset source for your image and file fields.

Customizing the asset source

You can configure your studio to use this asset source either exclusively, or conditionally enable it based on the type of asset (image or file).

import {media, mediaAssetSource} from 'sanity-plugin-media'

export default defineConfig({
  // ...
  plugins: [media()],
  form: {
    // Don't use this plugin when selecting files only (but allow all other enabled asset sources)
    file: {
      assetSources: previousAssetSources => {
        return previousAssetSources.filter(assetSource => assetSource !== mediaAssetSource)
      }
    }
  }
})

Plugin Config

// sanity.config.ts
export default defineConfig({
  //...
  plugins: [
    media({
      creditLine: {
        enabled: true,
        // boolean - enables an optional "Credit Line" field in the plugin.
        // Used to store credits e.g. photographer, licence information
        excludeSources: ['unsplash'],
        // string | string[] - when used with 3rd party asset sources, you may
        // wish to prevent users overwriting the creditLine based on the `source.name`
      },
      maximumUploadSize: 10000000
      // number - maximum file size (in bytes) that can be uploaded through the plugin interface
    })
  ],
})

Known issues

  • This is a bit of a sticking point, especially when working with large datasets
  • For example, if you want to edit fields for an already selected image – you'll need to go into the plugin and then have to manually find that image (which can be laborious when sifting through thousands of assets)
  • A future update will provide the ability to 'jump' straight to a selected asset
  • However, exposing plugin fields directly on the desk (e.g. via a custom input component) is currently outside the scope of this project
  • This is currently due to Sanity studio's file picker component taking precedence over window drag and drop events
  • For now, you'll need to manually press the 'upload' button if you want to add images whilst in a selecting context
  • Any images downloaded in the plugin are those already processed by Sanity without any image transformations applied
  • Please note these are not the original uploaded images: they will likely have a smaller file size and will be stripped of any EXIF data.
  • Currently, it's not possible in Sanity to grab these original image assets within the studio - but this may change in future!
  • Currently, opt.media.tags on assets aren't accessible via GraphQL. This is because opt is a custom object used by this plugin and not part of Sanity's asset schema.

FAQ

Asset fields

  • This plugin will read and write directly on the asset document itself. This will either a document of type sanity.imageAsset or sanity.fileAsset
  • This is analagous to setting values globally across all instances of these assets
  • This is in contrast to using the fields property when defining your document schema (on both image and file objects). Values that you define in the fields property can be considered 'local', or bound to the the document where that asset is linked.
  • In other words, if you want to set a caption for an image and have that change between different documents – customise the fields property in your document schema's file/image field
  • If you want to set values you can query in all instances of that asset (alternate text being a good example), consider setting those in the plugin

The following GROQ query will return an image with additional asset text fields as well as an array of tag names.

Note that tags are namespaced within opt.media and tag names are accessed via the current property (as they're defined as slugs on the tag.media document schema).

*[_id == 'my-document-id'] {
  image {
    asset->{
      _ref,
      _type,
      altText,
      description,
      "tags": opt.media.tags[]->name.current,
      title
    }
  }
}
  • ISO, aperture, focal length, exposure time and original date are displayed
  • By default, Sanity won't automatically extract EXIF data unless you explicitly tell it to
  • Manually tell Sanity to process EXIF metadata by updating your image field options accordingly
  • Note that all images uploaded directly within the plugin will include all metadata by default

Tags

  • This plugin defines the document type media.tag
  • All tags are stored as weak references and being a third-party plugin, are stored in the namespaced object opt.media
  • This behaviour differs from asset fields such as title, description and altText which are stored directly on the asset as they're part of Sanity's defined asset schema
  • If you're not using a custom desk, Sanity attaches custom schema defined by third party plugins to your desk. This is currently the default behaviour
  • However, you can override this behaviour by defining your own custom desk with Sanity's structure builder and simply omit the media.tag document type in your definition
  • You can create, rename and delete tags from directly within the plugin itself
  • It is strongly recommended that you manually delete tags directly from within the plugin – doing so will ensure that (weak) references are removed from any linked assets
  • Alternatively, you can delete tags either from the desk (if you're not using a custom desk) or via Sanity's API – just be mindful that any assets previously assigned to deleted tags will have 'hanging' weak references. This won't cause serious issues, but it may cause some false positives when searching. (E.g. a search for 'all assets where tags is not empty' will yield assets that have references to tags that no longer exist)

Deleting assets

  • Batch mutations are carried out via Sanity transactions. These transactions are atomic, meaning that if one deletion fails (often because it's referenced elsewhere), then all mutations in the transaction will fail and no changes will occur
  • To get around this, simply make sure that all assets you've marked for deletion are not referenced – this can be easily accomplished by using a search facet to only show assets which are not in use

Uploading assets

  • As a rule of thumb, when uploading when accessing the plugin as a tool (e.g. if you've acceessed it via the studio menu), it will look at any incoming files' MIME type. All files of type image/* will be uploaded as sanity.imageAsset whilst everything else will be treated as sanity.fileAsset
  • If you upload when using the plugin in a file selection context, these be uploaded as sanity.fileAsset regardless of their MIME type. This is probably not what you want, since images uploaded as files won't have associated metadata nor will they work in Sanity's image pipeline.

Contributing

Contributions, issues and feature requests are welcome!

License

MIT © Sanity.io

Develop & test

This plugin uses @sanity/plugin-kit with default configuration for build & watch scripts.

See Testing a plugin in Sanity Studio on how to run this plugin with hot-reload in the studio.

Release new version

Run the "CI & Release" workflow. Make sure to select the main branch and check "Release new version".

Semantic release will only release on configured branches, so it is safe to run the workflow on any branch.