This plugin is in beta and not officially supported yet
Feel free to open issues for any questions or ideas
You can specify a list of queries to run and how to transform them into an array of objects to index. When you run gatsby build
, it will publish those to Algolia.
graph LR
A[Source 1] --> |query| Gatsby
B[Source 2] --> |query| Gatsby
C[Source 3] --> |query| Gatsby
Gatsby --> |gatsby build| Algolia
Here we have an example with some data that might not be very relevant, but will work with the default configuration of gatsby new
yarn add gatsby-plugin-algolia
First add credentials to a .env file, which you won't commit. If you track this in your file, and especially if the site is open source, you will leak your admin API key. This would mean anyone is able to change anything on your Algolia index.
// .env.production
ALGOLIA_APP_ID=XXX
ALGOLIA_API_KEY=XXX
ALGOLIA_INDEX_NAME=XXX
require('dotenv').config({
path: `.env.${process.env.NODE_ENV}`,
});
// gatsby-config.js
const myQuery = `
query {
pages: allSitePage {
nodes {
# querying id is required
id
component
path
componentChunkName
jsonName
internal {
# querying internal.contentDigest is required
contentDigest
type
owner
}
}
}
}
`;
const queries = [
{
query: myQuery,
queryVariables: {}, // optional. Allows you to use graphql query variables in the query
transformer: ({ data }) => data.pages.nodes, // optional
indexName: 'index name to target', // overrides main index name, optional
settings: {
// optional, any index settings
// Note: by supplying settings, you will overwrite all existing settings on the index
},
mergeSettings: false, // optional, defaults to false. See notes on mergeSettings below
},
];
module.exports = {
plugins: [
{
// This plugin must be placed last in your list of plugins to ensure that it can query all the GraphQL data
resolve: `gatsby-plugin-algolia`,
options: {
appId: process.env.ALGOLIA_APP_ID,
// Use Admin API key without GATSBY_ prefix, so that the key isn't exposed in the application
// Tip: use Search API key with GATSBY_ prefix to access the service from within components
apiKey: process.env.ALGOLIA_API_KEY,
indexName: process.env.ALGOLIA_INDEX_NAME, // for all queries
queries,
chunkSize: 10000, // default: 1000
settings: {
// optional, any index settings
// Note: by supplying settings, you will overwrite all existing settings on the index
},
mergeSettings: false, // optional, defaults to false. See notes on mergeSettings below
concurrentQueries: false, // default: true
dryRun: false, // default: false, only calculate which objects would be indexed, but do not push to Algolia
continueOnFailure: false, // default: false, don't fail the build if Algolia indexing fails
algoliasearchOptions: undefined, // default: { timeouts: { connect: 1, read: 30, write: 30 } }, pass any different options to the algoliasearch constructor
},
},
],
};
The index will be synchronised with the provided index name on Algolia on the build
step in Gatsby. This is not done earlier to prevent you going over quota while developing.
This plugin will update only the changed or deleted nodes on your Gatsby site.
We rely on Gatsby's default contentDigest
field, so make sure it is queried.
You can set settings for each index individually (per query), or otherwise it will keep your existing settings.
mergeSettings
allows you to preserve settings changes made on the Algolia website. The default behavior (mergeSettings: false
) will wipe out your index settings and replace them with settings from the config on each build.
When set to true, the config index settings will be merged with the existing index settings in Algolia (with the config index settings taking precendence).
NOTE: When using mergeSettings
, any deleted settings from the config settings will continue to be persisted since they will still exist in Algolia. If you want to remove a setting, be sure to remove it from both the config and on Algolia's website.
Sometimes, on limited platforms like Netlify, concurrent queries to the same index can lead to unexpected results or hanging builds. Setting concurrentQueries
to false
makes it such that queries are run sequentially rather than concurrently, which may solve some concurrent access issues. Be aware that this option may make indexing take longer than it would otherwise.
The transformer
field accepts a function and optionally you may provide an async
function.
Adding a transformer parameter can be useful if the internal.contentDigest
is more stable than your object. You can for example replace the Gatsby-provided internal.contentDigest
with a hash of the object.
const crypto = require('crypto');
function transformer(data) {
return data.map(item => {
const hash = crypto
.createHash('md5')
.update(JSON.stringify(item))
.digest('hex');
return {
...item,
internal: {
...item.internal,
contentDigest: hash,
},
};
});
}
This is the very first version of our plugin and isn't yet officially supported. Please leave all your feedback in GitHub issues 😊
This could be happening for a few reasons:
You are using the gatsby-plugin-algolia
plugin in development mode. The plugin will only push to Algolia when you run gatsby build
. This is to prevent you from going over your quota while developing.
Some Gatsby plugins don't create a new internal.contentDigest
, even if the content has changed. To fix this, use a transformer
to create a new internal.contentDigest
based on the content of the node.