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Version: 2.0.0-beta.3

Blog

Initial setup#

To setup your site's blog, start by creating a blog directory.

Then, add an item link to your blog within docusaurus.config.js:

docusaurus.config.js
module.exports = {  themeConfig: {    // ...    navbar: {      items: [        // ...        {to: 'blog', label: 'Blog', position: 'left'}, // or position: 'right'      ],    },  },};

Adding posts#

To publish in the blog, create a file within the blog directory with a formatted name of YYYY-MM-DD-my-blog-post-title.md. The post date is extracted from the file name.

For example, at my-website/blog/2019-09-05-hello-docusaurus-v2.md:

---title: Welcome Docusaurus v2author: Joel Marceyauthor_title: Co-creator of Docusaurus 1author_url: https://github.com/JoelMarceyauthor_image_url: https://graph.facebook.com/611217057/picture/?height=200&width=200tags: [hello, docusaurus-v2]description: This is my first post on Docusaurus 2.image: https://i.imgur.com/mErPwqL.pnghide_table_of_contents: false---Welcome to this blog. This blog is created with [**Docusaurus 2**](https://docusaurus.io/).
<!--truncate-->
This is my first post on Docusaurus 2.
A whole bunch of exploration to follow.

Header options#

The only required field is title; however, we provide options to add author information to your blog post as well along with other options.

  • author: The author name to be displayed.
  • author_url: The URL that the author's name will be linked to. This could be a GitHub, Twitter, Facebook profile URL, etc.
  • author_image_url: The URL to the author's thumbnail image.
  • author_title: A description of the author.
  • title: The blog post title.
  • slug: Allows to customize the blog post url (/<routeBasePath>/<slug>). Support multiple patterns: slug: my-blog-post, slug: /my/path/to/blog/post, slug: /.
  • date: The blog post creation date. If not specified, this could be extracted from the file name, e.g, 2021-04-15-blog-post.mdx. By default, it is the Markdown file creation time.
  • tags: A list of strings or objects of two string fields label and permalink to tag to your post.
  • draft: A boolean flag to indicate that the blog post is work-in-progress and therefore should not be published yet. However, draft blog posts will be displayed during development.
  • description: The description of your post, which will become the <meta name="description" content="..."/> and <meta property="og:description" content="..."/> in <head>, used by search engines. If this field is not present, it will default to the first line of the contents.
  • keywords: Keywords meta tag, which will become the <meta name="keywords" content="keyword1,keyword2,..."/> in <head>, used by search engines.
  • image: Cover or thumbnail image that will be used when displaying the link to your post.
  • hide_table_of_contents: Whether to hide the table of contents to the right. By default, it is false.

Summary truncation#

Use the <!--truncate--> marker in your blog post to represent what will be shown as the summary when viewing all published blog posts. Anything above <!--truncate--> will be part of the summary. For example:

---title: Truncation Example---All these will be part of the blog post summary.
Even this.
<!--truncate-->
But anything from here on down will not be.
Not this.
Or this.

Feed#

You can generate RSS/Atom feed by passing feedOptions. By default, RSS and Atom feeds are generated. To disable feed generation, set feedOptions.type to null.

feedOptions?: {  type?: 'rss' | 'atom' | 'all' | null;  title?: string;  description?: string;  copyright: string;  language?: string; // possible values: http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/struct/dirlang.html#langcodes};

Example usage:

docusaurus.config.js
module.exports = {  // ...  presets: [    [      '@docusaurus/preset-classic',      {        blog: {          feedOptions: {            type: 'all',            copyright: `Copyright © ${new Date().getFullYear()} Facebook, Inc.`,          },        },      },    ],  ],};

Accessing the feed:

The feed for RSS can be found at:

https://{your-domain}/blog/rss.xml

and for Atom:

https://{your-domain}/blog/atom.xml

Advanced topics#

Blog-only mode#

You can run your Docusaurus 2 site without a landing page and instead have your blog's post list page as the index page. Set the routeBasePath to be '/' to indicate it's the root path.

docusaurus.config.js
module.exports = {  // ...  presets: [    [      '@docusaurus/preset-classic',      {        docs: false,        blog: {          path: './blog',          routeBasePath: '/', // Set this value to '/'.        },      },    ],  ],};
caution

Don't forget to delete the existing homepage at ./src/pages/index.js or else there will be two files mapping to the same route!

You can also add meta description to the blog list page for better SEO:

docusaurus.config.js
module.exports = {  // ...  presets: [    [      '@docusaurus/preset-classic',      {        blog: {          blogTitle: 'Docusaurus blog!',          blogDescription: 'A Docusaurus powered blog!',        },      },    ],  ],};

Multiple blogs#

By default, the classic theme assumes only one blog per website and hence includes only one instance of the blog plugin. If you would like to have multiple blogs on a single website, it's possible too! You can add another blog by specifying another blog plugin in the plugins option for docusaurus.config.js.

Set the routeBasePath to the URL route that you want your second blog to be accessed on. Note that the routeBasePath here has to be different from the first blog or else there could be a collision of paths! Also, set path to the path to the directory containing your second blog's entries.

As documented for multi-instance plugins, you need to assign a unique id to the plugins.

docusaurus.config.js
module.exports = {  // ...  plugins: [    [      '@docusaurus/plugin-content-blog',      {        /**         * Required for any multi-instance plugin         */        id: 'second-blog',        /**         * URL route for the blog section of your site.         * *DO NOT* include a trailing slash.         */        routeBasePath: 'my-second-blog',        /**         * Path to data on filesystem relative to site dir.         */        path: './my-second-blog',      },    ],  ],};

As an example, we host a second blog here.