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使用 Next.js 和 Sanity 构建现代博客:分步指南

WBOY
WBOY原创
2024-08-19 17:14:03791浏览

没有 CMS 的博客可能会导致无尽的挫败感和浪费时间。 Sanity.io 简化了整个流程,让您能够专注于您的内容。

在今天的文章中,您将学习如何使用 Sanity CMS 和 Next.js 14 构建博客。

在本指南结束时,您将拥有一个功能齐全且易于管理并运行的博客。

先决条件

要阅读本文,您必须具备以下技能:

  1. HTML、CSS 和 JavaScript 知识
  2. Next.js 和 TypeScript 基础知识
  3. Tailwind CSS 的基本了解
  4. 并且 Node.js 安装在您的计算机上。

什么是理智?

Sanity 是一个无头 CMS,它使内容管理变得简单而高效。借助 Sanity Studio 直观的仪表板,您可以按照自己想要的方式轻松创建、编辑和组织内容。

Sanity 还提供灵活的 API 和 Webhook 支持,让您可以完全控制内容的交付方式和地点。无论是网站、移动应用程序还是任何其他平台,Sanity 都能确保您的内容始终是最新的且易于访问。

初始化 Next.js 项目

我们正在将 Sanity 集成到 Next.js 项目中。所以,我们需要先建立一个next.js项目。

要创建 next.js 项目,请运行以下命令:

npx create-next-app@latest

按照终端上的说明进行操作并选择名称,之后即可使用默认建议。

Build a Modern Blog with Next.js & Sanity: A Step-by-Step Guide

这将生成一个简单的 Next.js 项目。

现在,让我们在代码编辑器上打开项目。

cd sanity-blog
code .

现在运行 dev 命令在 Localhost:3000 上打开项目

npm run dev

设置 Sanity Studio

Sanity Studio 是您管理内容的仪表板。

您可以独立构建Studio并部署。但我们会将 Studio 嵌入到 Next.js 项目中。易于维护和使用。

因此,我们将创建一个 Sanity 项目,然后将其集成到我们的 Next.js 项目中。

运行此命令来初始化 Sanity 项目。

npm create sanity@latest

当您运行此命令时,系统会要求您登录 Sanity。如果您已经有帐户,请选择提供商并登录您的帐户。
如果您没有帐户,请创建一个帐户并再次运行安装命令。

运行此命令后,它会询问您一系列问题来配置您的项目。

您可以使用默认选项。

我们只需要项目名称,其余的并不重要。

Looks like you already have a Sanity-account. Sweet!

✔ Fetching existing projects
? Select project to use Create new project
? Your project name: sanity-blog
Your content will be stored in a dataset that can be public or private, depending on
whether you want to query your content with or without authentication.
The default dataset configuration has a public dataset named "production".
? Use the default dataset configuration? Yes
✔ Creating dataset
? Project output path: /home/amrin/Desktop/writing/sanity-blog
? Select project template Clean project with no predefined schema types
? Do you want to use TypeScript? Yes
✔ Bootstrapping files from template
✔ Resolving latest module versions
✔ Creating default project files
? Package manager to use for installing dependencies? npm
Running 'npm install --legacy-peer-deps'

安装依赖项

在我们将 sanity studio 集成到 Next.js 博客之前,我们需要安装这些依赖项。

npm install sanity next-sanity --save

将 Sanity 集成到 Next.js 项目中

要将 Sanity 集成到 Next.js 中,我们需要项目名称和项目 ID。我们可以从 Sanity 仪表板中获取该信息。

前往 sanity.io/manage 你会看到那里的所有项目。

点击项目标题即可查看详细信息。

Build a Modern Blog with Next.js & Sanity: A Step-by-Step Guide

你会看到类似这样的内容:

Build a Modern Blog with Next.js & Sanity: A Step-by-Step Guide

继续复制项目名称和 ProjectID 并将其添加到您的 .env 文件

NEXT_PUBLIC_SANITY_PROJECT_TITLE = "";
NEXT_PUBLIC_SANITY_PROJECT_ID = "";

现在在项目文件夹的根目录下创建配置文件。并将其命名为sanity.config.ts

import { defineConfig } from "sanity";
import {structureTool} from "sanity/structure";
import schemas from "@/sanity/schemas";

const config = defineConfig({
  projectId: process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_SANITY_PROJECT_ID as string,
  title: process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_SANITY_PROJECT_TITLE as string,
  dataset: "production",
  apiVersion: "2023-06-18",
  basePath: "/admin",
  plugins: [structureTool()],
  schema: { types: schemas },
});

export default config;

以下是配置文件中内容的快速概述:

首先导入需要的函数和文件。然后定义配置。该配置有很多选项:

projectId:这是您之前创建的 Sanity 项目 ID。

标题:您的 Sanity 项目标题。

数据集: 为 Studio 定义数据集。

basePath: Studio 的路径。我们使用 /admin 路由来访问 Studio。您可以选择任何您想要的路线。

架构:这些是内容的架构。架构定义文档的外观以及它包含的字段。我们将为帖子和作者、类别等提供架构。

我们还没有架构,我们稍后会创建它。

设置工作室

要建立工作室,我们首先需要一条路线。导航到 src/app,然后创建一个路由组并将其命名为 studio。 我们正在对其进行分组,以将站点与 studio 路由分开。

Inside the studio create an admin folder and inside that add a catch-all route.

└── (studio)
    ├── admin
        └── [[...index]]
            └── page.tsx

Include this code in the admin route. We are getting the sanity.config we created earlier and NextStudio from sanity Studio to initialize the Studio.

"use client";

import config from "../../../../../sanity.config";
import { NextStudio } from "next-sanity/studio";

export default function AdminPage() {
  return <NextStudio config={config} />;
}

We are almost done setting up the studio.
Lastly, we need to write the schemas for the content. After that, we can take a look into the studio.

Create The Schema

A Schema defines the structure of a document in the Studio. We define schema with properties.

Some of the properties are required and some are not.

The common properties are:

name: Name of the Schema. We will use this name to fetch the data.

title: Human readable title for the Schema. It will be visible in the Studio.

type: A valid document type.

fields: An array of all the properties of the document. If it’s a post schema the fields will have properties like Title, slug, body, meta description, etc. These properties will show up as input fields on the Studio.

Since we are building a blog we will have multiple Schemas such as:

  • Post
  • Author
  • Category

To learn more about Sanity Schema Visit the documentation.

Post Schema

Create a folder named sanity inside the src directory.

Inside that create another folder named schemas and create index.ts and post.ts file

Here’s what the post Schema looks like.

const post = {
  name: "post",
  title: "Post",
  type: "document",
  fields: [
    {
      name: "title",
      title: "Title",
      type: "string",
      validation: (Rule: any) => Rule.required(),
    },
    {
      name: "metadata",
      title: "Metadata",
      type: "string",
      validation: (Rule: any) => Rule.required(),
    },
    {
      name: "slug",
      title: "Slug",
      type: "slug",
      options: {
        source: "title",
        unique: true,
        slugify: (input: any) => {
          return input
            .toLowerCase()
            .replace(/\s+/g, "-")
            .replace(/[^\w-]+/g, "");
        },
      },
      validation: (Rule: any) =>
        Rule.required().custom((fields: any) => {
          if (
            fields?.current !== fields?.current?.toLowerCase() ||
            fields?.current.split(" ").includes("")
          ) {
            return "Slug must be lowercase and not be included space";
          }
          return true;
        }),
    },
    {
      name: "tags",
      title: "Tags",
      type: "array",
      validation: (Rule: any) => Rule.required(),
      of: [
        {
          type: "string",
          validation: (Rule: any) =>
            Rule.custom((fields: any) => {
              if (
                fields !== fields.toLowerCase() ||
                fields.split(" ").includes("")
              ) {
                return "Tags must be lowercase and not be included space";
              }
              return true;
            }),
        },
      ],
    },
    {
      name: "author",
      title: "Author",
      type: "reference",
      to: { type: "author" },
      validation: (Rule: any) => Rule.required(),
    },
    {
      name: "mainImage",
      title: "Main image",
      type: "image",
      options: {
        hotspot: true,
      },
      // validation: (Rule: any) => Rule.required(),
    },
    {
      name: "publishedAt",
      title: "Published at",
      type: "datetime",
      validation: (Rule: any) => Rule.required(),
    },
    {
      name: "body",
      title: "Body",
      type: "blockContent",
      validation: (Rule: any) => Rule.required(),
    },
  ],

  preview: {
    select: {
      title: "title",
      author: "author.name",
      media: "mainImage",
    },
    prepare(selection: any) {
      const { author } = selection;
      return Object.assign({}, selection, {
        subtitle: author && `by ${author}`,
      });
    },
  },
};
export default post;

Copy the schema over to the post.ts file.

To save time we are not going to see the other schemas, you can get them from the repository.

Load the schemas

Open up the index.ts file and add this code snippet.

import author from "./author";
import blockContent from "./blockContent";
import category from "./category";
import post from "./post";

const schemas = [post, author, category, blockContent];

export default schemas;

We are importing all the schema in this file and creating an array to load the schema on the studio.

Now you can add posts from the studio.

To create a new post, go to localhost:3000/admin you will see all the schemas there. Go ahead and create a few posts.

Build a Modern Blog with Next.js & Sanity: A Step-by-Step Guide

Query the content with GROQ

We integrated the Studio and created a few posts. Now we need a way to fetch those posts and render them on the home page.

We will use GROQ to do exactly that. GROQ is a query language designed to query large schema-less JSON data collection. With GROQ expressive filtering we can fetch data the way we want to use it. It can join and fetch from multiple documents.

To start using GROQ we need to create the config file and the queries.

Go ahead and create these files inside the sanity folder.

└── sanity
    ├── config
    │   └── client-config.ts
    ├── sanity-query.ts
    ├── sanity-utils.ts

Paste this code into the client-config.ts file.

import { ClientPerspective } from "next-sanity";

const config = {
    projectId: process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_SANITY_PROJECT_ID as string,
    dataset: "production",
    apiVersion: "2023-03-09",
    useCdn: false,
    token: process.env.SANITY_API_KEY as string,
    perspective: 'published' as ClientPerspective,
};

export default config;

This is the config for fetching the data with the GROQ query.

Here’s a quick break-down of the config options:

apiVersion: It’s the Sanity API version. You can use the current date.

useCDN: Used to disable edge cache. We are setting it to false as we will integrate webhook. It will deliver updated data.

token: Sanity API key. Required for webhook integration. (We will integrate webhook in the next section)

perspective: To determine the document status. If it’s set to published it will only query the published documents otherwise it will fetch all the document drafts and published.

Now we will write the queries. We are going to keep the Queries and the Fetch functions in separate files.

Here are the queries, copy these into the sanity-query.ts file.

import { groq } from "next-sanity";
const postData = `{
  title,
  metadata,
  slug,
  tags,
  author->{
    _id,
    name,
    slug,
    image,
    bio
  },
  mainImage,
  publishedAt,
  body
}`;

export const postQuery = groq`*[_type == "post"] ${postData}`;

export const postQueryBySlug = groq`*[_type == "post" && slug.current == $slug][0] ${postData}`;

export const postQueryByTag = groq`*[_type == "post" && $slug in tags[]->slug.current] ${postData}`;

export const postQueryByAuthor = groq`*[_type == "post" && author->slug.current == $slug] ${postData}`;

export const postQueryByCategory = groq`*[_type == "post" && category->slug.current == $slug] ${postData}`;

At the top, is the postData object, which defines all the properties we want to fetch.

Then the actual queries. Each query has the query first then the postData object.

These queries are self-descriptive, but for clarity here’s a quick explanation for the postQueryBySlug:

_type: The name of the document.

slug.current: Checking the slug of each of the documents if it matches with $slug (We will pass $slug with the fetch function).

postData: Filtering out the data we want to get i.e. the title, mainImage, and description.

We will use these queries to fetch the data from Sanity Studio.

Copy these codes into the sanity-utils.ts file.

import ImageUrlBuilder from "@sanity/image-url";
import { createClient, type QueryParams } from "next-sanity";
import clientConfig from "./config/client-config";
import { postQuery, postQueryBySlug } from "./sanity-query";
import { Blog } from "@/types/blog";

export const client = createClient(clientConfig);
export function imageBuilder(source: string) {
  return ImageUrlBuilder(clientConfig).image(source);
}

export async function sanityFetch<QueryResponse>({
  query,
  qParams,
  tags,
}: {
  query: string,
  qParams: QueryParams,
  tags: string[],
}): Promise<QueryResponse> {
  return (
    client.fetch <
    QueryResponse >
    (query,
    qParams,
    {
      cache: "force-cache",
      next: { tags },
    })
  );
}

export const getPosts = async () => {
  const data: Blog[] = await sanityFetch({
    query: postQuery,
    qParams: {},
    tags: ["post", "author", "category"],
  });
  return data;
};

export const getPostBySlug = async (slug: string) => {
  const data: Blog = await sanityFetch({
    query: postQueryBySlug,
    qParams: { slug },
    tags: ["post", "author", "category"],
  });

  return data;
};

Here’s a quick overview of what’s going on here:

client: creating a Sanity client with the config we created earlier. It will be used to fetch the data with GROQ.

imageBuilder: To use the post image. The images are provided from sanity cdn and it requires all these configs.

sanityFetch: It’s the function to fetch data with cache. ( We could just use fetch too but we are configuring this now so that we can just add the webhook and we are good to go. )

Create the type for the post

Since we are using typescript we need to write the Type for the post. You can see we are using Blog type on the query functions.

Create a blog.ts file inside the types folder and copy this type:

import { PortableTextBlock } from "sanity";

export type Author = {
  name: string,
  image: string,
  bio?: string,
  slug: {
    current: string,
  },
  _id?: number | string,
  _ref?: number | string,
};

export type Blog = {
  _id: number,
  title: string,
  slug: any,
  metadata: string,
  body: PortableTextBlock[],
  mainImage: any,
  author: Author,
  tags: string[],
  publishedAt: string,
};

All the types are normal, the PortableTextBlock is from sanity. It defines the type of the post body.

All the setup is done!

Let’s fetch the posts and render them on our Next.js project.

Render the content on the Next.js project

First, we will fetch all the posts and create the blog page. Then we will fetch the post by slug for the single post page.

Post Archive

Create the Blog component app/components/Blog/index.ts and add this code.

import { Blog } from "@/types/blog";
import Link from "next/link";
import React from "react";

const BlogItem = ({ blog }: { blog: Blog }) => {
  return (
    <Link
      href={`/blog/${blog.slug.current}`}
      className="block p-5 bg-white rounded-lg border border-gray-200 shadow-md hover:bg-gray-100 my-8"
    >
      <article>
        <h3 className="mb-1 text-2xl font-bold tracking-tight text-gray-700">
          {blog.title}
        </h3>
        <p className="mb-3 font-normal text-sm text-gray-600">
          {new Date(blog.publishedAt).toDateString()}
        </p>

        <p className="mb-3 font-normal text-gray-600">
          {blog.metadata.slice(0, 140)}...
        </p>
      </article>
    </Link>
  );
};

export default BlogItem;

Remove all the styles and code from globals.css (keep the tailwind utils) file and page.tsx file

Now add this to the page.tsx file inside (site)

import { getPosts } from "@/sanity/sanity-utils";
import BlogItem from "@/components/Blog";

export default async function Home() {
  const posts = await getPosts();

  return (
    <div className="py-5">
      {posts?.length > 0 ? (
        posts.map((post: any) => <BlogItem key={post._id} blog={post} />)
      ) : (
        <p>No posts found</p>
      )}
    </div>
  );
}

First import the getPosts function and BlogItem. Inside the Home component fetch the posts and render them.

We need a navbar to navigate between pages.

To save time I already created the Header file and loaded it inside the layout.tsx file.

Check out the source code and copy the Header component from there.

import Header from "@/components/Header";

export default function RootLayout({
  children,
}: Readonly<{
  children: React.ReactNode,
}>) {
  return (
    <>
      <Header />
      <main className="max-w-[1000px] mx-auto px-10 md:px-24">{children}</main>
    </>
  );
}

This is how it looks:

Build a Modern Blog with Next.js & Sanity: A Step-by-Step Guide

Single post

Now we need to create a single post page so that we can read the post.

Create the single post page inside blog/[slug]/page.tsx and paste this code snippet.

import React from "react";
import { getPostBySlug } from "@/sanity/sanity-utils";
import RenderBodyContent from "@/components/Blog/RenderBodyContent";

const SingleBlogPage = async ({ params }: { params: any }) => {
  const post = await getPostBySlug(params.slug);

  return (
    <article className="my-10">
      <div className="mb-5">
        <h1 className="text-3xl py-2">{post.title}</h1>
        <p className="pb-1">
          <span className="font-medium">Published:</span>
          {new Date(post.publishedAt).toDateString()}
          <span className="font-medium pl-2">by </span>
          {post.author.name}
        </p>

        <p>{post.metadata}</p>
      </div>

      <article className="prose lg:prose-xl">
        <RenderBodyContent post={post} />
      </article>
    </article>
  );
};

export default SingleBlogPage;

First import getPostBySlug and RenderBodyContent (we will create it in a while).

Fetch the post by slug and render the post with RenderBodyContent.

Render body content

It’s a custom component to render the post body.
Create RenderBodyContent.tsx file inside the components/Blog folder*.*

import config from "@/sanity/config/client-config";
import { Blog } from "@/types/blog";
import { PortableText } from "@portabletext/react";
import { getImageDimensions } from "@sanity/asset-utils";
import urlBuilder from "@sanity/image-url";
import Image from "next/image";

// lazy-loaded image component
const ImageComponent = ({ value, isInline }: any) => {
  const { width, height } = getImageDimensions(value);
  return (
    <div className="my-10 overflow-hidden rounded-[15px]">
      <Image
        src={
          urlBuilder(config)
            .image(value)
            .fit("max")
            .auto("format")
            .url() as string
        }
        width={width}
        height={height}
        alt={value.alt || "blog image"}
        loading="lazy"
        style={{
          display: isInline ? "inline-block" : "block",
          aspectRatio: width / height,
        }}
      />
    </div>
  );
};

const components = {
  types: {
    image: ImageComponent,
  },
};

const RenderBodyContent = ({ post }: { post: Blog }) => {
  return (
    <>
      <PortableText value={post?.body as any} components={components} />
    </>
  );
};

export default RenderBodyContent;

This component will handle special types differently. We are only handling Images here.

You can include code blocks, embeds, and many more. You can find more information on Sanity plugins on Sanity.

Here’s what it looks like.

Build a Modern Blog with Next.js & Sanity: A Step-by-Step Guide

To make the post look like this install the tailwind/typography plugin and load that inside the tailwind.config.ts file.

npm install @tailwindcss/typography

Webhook Integration

We will integrate Sanity webhook to fetch the data on time. Otherwise, you will have to deploy the site every time you write a post.

We already added revalidation on the fetch functions. Right now we need to generate the Keys and create the Webhook endpoint.

Generate the API key

Go to sanity.io/manage and navigate to API→Tokens then click on the Add API token button.

Build a Modern Blog with Next.js & Sanity: A Step-by-Step Guide

Give your API a name then choose Editor and save.

Build a Modern Blog with Next.js & Sanity: A Step-by-Step Guide

You will get an API key and save it on the env file

SANITY_API_KEY = "YOUR_API_KEY";

Create the Webhook endpoint

First, create the webhook endpoint app/api/revalidate/route.ts and add this code snippet.

import { revalidateTag } from "next/cache";
import { type NextRequest, NextResponse } from "next/server";
import { parseBody } from "next-sanity/webhook";

export async function POST(req: NextRequest) {
  try {
    const { body, isValidSignature } = await parseBody<{
      _type: string;
      slug?: string | undefined;
    }>(req, process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_SANITY_HOOK_SECRET);

    if (!isValidSignature) {
      return new Response("Invalid Signature", { status: 401 });
    }

    if (!body?._type) {
      return new Response("Bad Request", { status: 400 });
    }

    revalidateTag(body._type);
    return NextResponse.json({
      status: 200,
      revalidated: true,
      now: Date.now(),
      body,
    });
  } catch (error: any) {
    console.error(error);
    return new Response(error.message, { status: 500 });
  }
}

We are using tag-based revalidation in this webhook.

This endpoint will be called by the webhook every time you create, delete, or update a document from Sanity Studio.

Generate the Webhook Secret

Navigate to sanity.io/manage API→Webhooks. Click on the Create Webhook button.

Build a Modern Blog with Next.js & Sanity: A Step-by-Step Guide

You will get a modal with a form. Fill in the form with the following pieces of information:

Name: Name of the Webhook

Description: Short description of what the webhook does (This is an optional field).

URL: Set the URL to https://YOUR_SITE_URL/api/revalidate

Dataset: Choose your desired dataset or leave the default value.

Trigger on: Set the hook to trigger on "Create", "Update", and "Delete".

Filter: Leave this field blank.

Projections: Set the projections to {_type, "slug": slug.current}
Status:
Check the enable webhook box.

HTTP Method: POST.

Leave HTTP headers, API version, and Draft as default.

Secret: Give your webhook a unique secret and copy it.

Hit save to create your webhook.

Save your webhook in the .env file under this variable name.

SANITY_HOOK_SECRET=YOUR_SECRET

Testing the webhook: Go ahead and change the content of an Article and publish it. After that hard reload your website you should see the changes in real time.

Note: You can test webhook from the live site or you can choose tools like ngrok to expose the localhost URL and use that to test it.

Conclusion

That’s it you built a blog with Sanity CMS. Congrats! ?

Even though this guide looks so long, it’s just the beginning. Sanity has more features and options, you can build cool things.
It’s impossible to cover everything in a single article.

I will suggest you to checkout these resources to learn more and improve your blog

  • Sanity docs
  • Code highlighter
  • Sanity Plugins

  • Source Code

Connect With Me

I hope you enjoyed the post, if you want to stay conntected with me checkout my socials.
Would love to talk to you!

Twitter/x

Github

LinkedIn

Happy Coding.

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