A Jekyll plugin to generate a JSON feed of your Jekyll posts.
Add this line to your site's Gemfile:
gem 'jekyll-json-feed'
And then add this line to your site's _config.yml
:
plugins:
- jekyll-json-feed
gems
key instead of plugins
.
The plugin will automatically generate a JSON feed at /feed.json
.
The plugin will automatically use any of the following configuration variables, if they are present in your site's _config.yml
file.
title
orname
- The title of the site, e.g., "My awesome site"description
- A longer description of what your site is about, e.g., "Where I blog about Jekyll and other awesome things"url
- The URL to your site, e.g.,http://example.com
. If none is provided, the plugin will try to usesite.github.url
.author
- Global author information (see below)
The plugin will use the following post metadata, automatically generated by Jekyll, which you can override via a post's YAML front matter:
date
title
excerpt
id
tags
Additionally, the plugin will use the following values, if present in a post's YAML front matter:
image
- URL of an image that is representative of the post (can also be passed asimage.path
)banner_image
- URL of an image to use as a banner, like those used on Mediumauthor
- The author of the post, e.g., "Dr. Jekyll". If none is given, feed readers will look to the feed author as defined in_config.yml
. Like the feed author, this can also be an object or a reference to an author in_data/authors.yml
(see below).
TL;DR: In most cases, put author: [your name]
in the document's front matter, for sites with multiple authors. If you need something more complicated, read on.
There are several ways to convey author-specific information. Author information is found in the following order of priority:
- An
author
object, in the documents's front matter, e.g.:
author:
twitter: benbalter
- An
author
object, in the site's_config.yml
, e.g.:
author:
twitter: benbalter
site.data.authors[author]
, if an author is specified in the document's front matter, and a corresponding key exists insite.data.authors
. E.g., you have the following in the document's front matter:
author: benbalter
And you have the following in _data/authors.yml
:
benbalter:
picture: /img/benbalter.png
twitter: jekyllrb
potus:
picture: /img/potus.png
twitter: whitehouse
In the above example, the author benbalter
's Twitter handle will be resolved to @jekyllrb
. This allows you to centralize author information in a single _data/authors
file for site with many authors that require more than just the author's username.
Pro-tip: If authors
is present in the document's front matter as an array (and author
is not), the plugin will use the first author listed.
- An author in the document's front matter (the simplest way), e.g.:
author: benbalter
- An author in the site's
_config.yml
, e.g.:
author: benbalter
The plugin exposes a helper tag to expose the appropriate meta tags to support automated discovery of your feed. Simply place {% json_feed_meta %}
someplace in your template's <head>
section, to output the necessary metadata.
The plugin uses Jekyll's smartify
filter for processing the site title and post titles. This will translate plain ASCII punctuation into "smart" typographic punctuation. This will not render or strip any Markdown you may be using in a title.
Great question and I'll leave it to the spec to answer:
The JSON Feed format is a pragmatic syndication format, like RSS and Atom, but with one big difference: it’s JSON instead of XML.
For most developers, JSON is far easier to read and write than XML. Developers may groan at picking up an XML parser, but decoding JSON is often just a single line of code.
This plugin is heavily inspired by the Jekyll Feed plugin plugin. So much so, that it is a fork with JSON tweaks. Big thanks go to @benbalter for creating the Jekyll Feed plugin, licensing it under the MIT license and making it so easy to create this plugin (it took me an afternoon whilst I was doing other things).
- Fork it (https://github.com/lildude/jekyll-json-feed/fork)
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create a new Pull Request