Static site generator Eleventy uses a special data field date
with predefined values Created
, Last Modified
, git Created
, git Last Modified
to sort collections and show post date.
But there are two problems here:
- it is not possible to use several fields at the same time, for example, for the creation date and for the modification date,
- the date is calculated for one file, but you can have a whole folder for an article with pictures, fonts and other resources. Their update should also be considered as a modification of the article.
This plugin solves this problems.
npm install @web-alchemy/eleventy-plugin-content-dates
const { eleventyPluginContentDates } = require('@web-alchemy/eleventy-plugin-content-dates');
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(eleventyPluginContentDates);
}
By default, dates are calculated for a file with the path data.page.inputPath
. But you can change the path to the entity for which you need to calculate dates, for example, for a folder. Sometimes you need to calculate dates for folders, as they may contain other resources, for example, pictures. You can use the getContentFolderPath
function from the plugin or write your own.
const { eleventyPluginContentDates, getContentFolderPath } = require('@web-alchemy/eleventy-plugin-content-dates');
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(eleventyPluginContentDates, {
// this is default
getContentPath: (data) => {
return data.page.inputPath;
}
// you can compute dates for folders using library function `getContentFolderPath`
getContentPath: getContentFolderPath
// or write your own logic for getting path
getContentPath: async (data) => {
// `data` - is Eleventy data
// function can be async
}
});
}
By default, library uses are async functions from modules node:fs
and node:child_process
. You can use sync version of this functions;
const { eleventyPluginContentDates, MODE } = require('@web-alchemy/eleventy-plugin-content-dates');
module.exports = function(eleventyConfig) {
eleventyConfig.addPlugin(eleventyPluginContentDates, {
mode: MODE.SYNC
});
}
The plugin uses specials values for date fields:
Date. FS. Created
- the date of creation file received from the file systemDate. FS. Last Modified
- the date of modification file received from the file systemDate. Git. Created
- the date of creation file received from the gitDate. Git. Last Modified
- the date of modification file received from the git
Using in frontmatter:
---
createdAt: 'Date. Git. Created'
updatedAt: 'Date. Git. Last Modified'
---
<time datetime="{{ createdAt.toISOString()}}">
{{ createdAt.toLocaleDateString() }}
</time>
<time datetime="{{ updatedAt.toISOString()}}">
{{ updatedAt.toLocaleDateString() }}
</time>
Using in 11tydata
-files:
const { TIMESTAMPS } = require('@web-alchemy/eleventy-plugin-content-dates');
module.exports = {
createdAtWithFS: TIMESTAMPS.FS_CREATED,
updatedAtWithFS: TIMESTAMPS.FS_LAST_MODIFIED,
createdAtWithGit: TIMESTAMPS.GIT_CREATED,
updatedAtWithGit: TIMESTAMPS.GIT_LAST_MODIFIED,
}
You can use @web-alchemy/eleventy-plugin-content-dates
as a library without registering the plugin:
// index.11tydata.js
const path = require('node:path');
const { TIMESTAMPS, MODE, computeDate } = require('@web-alchemy/eleventy-plugin-content-dates');
module.exports = {
eleventyComputed: {
yourCustomDateField: async function(data) {
return await computeDate({
strategy: TIMESTAMPS.GIT_LAST_MODIFIED,
mode: MODE.ASYNC,
contentPath: path.dirname(data.page.inputPath),
})
},
yourAnotherCustomDateField: function(data) {
return computeDate({
strategy: TIMESTAMPS.FS_CREATED,
mode: MODE.SYNC,
contentPath: data.page.inputPath,
})
},
}
}
Many CI/CD tools, such as Github Actions Checkout, by default does a shallow clone and dates may be incorrect.
Solutions:
- Make deep clone with
fetch-depth: '0'
:This is also helpful, if you use git creation dates. But with this method, all branches and tags are pulled out, not just the history of one branch.- name: Checkout uses: actions/checkout@v4 with: fetch-depth: '0'
- Write your own git commands. Just example:
- name: Checkout run: | git clone --depth 1 <REPO> . git fetch --unshallow