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npm (tag) npm

static-sitemap-cli

CLI to generate XML sitemaps for static sites from local filesystem.

Quick and easy CLI to generate XML or TXT sitemaps by searching your local filesystem for .html files. Automatically exclude files containing the noindex meta. Can also be used as a Node module.

NOTE: This is the V2 branch. If you're looking for the older version, see the V1 branch. V2 contains breaking changes. Find out what changed on the releases page.

Install

$ npm i -g static-sitemap-cli

Usage

$ sscli -b https://example.com -r public

This trawls the public/ directory for files matching **/*.html, then parses each file for the noindex robots meta tag - excluding that file if the tag exists - and finally generates both sitemap.xml and sitemap.txt into the public/ root.

See below for more usage examples.

Options

Usage: sscli [options]

CLI to generate XML sitemaps for static sites from local filesystem

Options:
  -b, --base <url>                       base URL (required)
  -r, --root <dir>                       root working directory (default: ".")
  -m, --match <glob...>                  globs to match (default: ["**/*.html"])
  -i, --ignore <glob...>                 globs to ignore (default: ["404.html"])
  -c, --changefreq <glob,changefreq...>  comma-separated glob-changefreq pairs
  -p, --priority <glob,priority...>      comma-separated glob-priority pairs
  --no-robots                            do not parse html files for noindex meta
  --concurrent <max>                     concurrent number of html parsing ops (default: 32)
  --no-clean                             do not use clean URLs
  --slash                                add trailing slash to all URLs
  -f, --format <format>                  sitemap format (choices: "xml", "txt", "both", default: "both")
  -o, --stdout                           output sitemap to stdout instead
  -v, --verbose                          be more verbose
  -V, --version                          output the version number
  -h, --help                             display help for command

HTML parsing

By default, all matched .html files are piped through a fast HTML parser to detect if the noindex meta tag is set - typically in the form of <meta name="robots" content="noindex" /> - in which case that file is excluded from the generated sitemap. To disable this behaviour, pass option --no-robots.

For better performance, file reads are streamed in 1kb chunks, and parsing stops immediately when either the noindex meta, or the </head> closing tag, is detected (the <body> is not parsed). This operation is performed concurrently with an async pool limit of 32. The limit can be tweaked using the --concurrent option.

Clean URLs

Hides the .html file extension in sitemaps like so:

./rootDir/index.html -> https://example.com/
./rootDor/foo/index.html -> https://example.com/foo
./rootDor/foo/bar.html -> https://example.com/foo/bar

Enabled by default; pass option --no-clean to disable.

Trailing slashes

Adds a trailing slash to all URLs like so:

./rootDir/index.html -> https://example.com/
./rootDir/foo/index.html -> https://example.com/foo/
./rootDir/foo/bar.html -> https://example.com/foo/bar/

Disabled by default; pass option --slash to enable.

NOTE: Cannot be used together with --no-clean. Also, trailing slashes are always added to root domains.

Match or ignore files

The -m and -i flags allow multiple entries. By default, they are set to the ["**/*.html"] and ["404.html"] respectively. Change the glob patterns to suit your use-case like so:

$ sscli ... -m '**/*.{html,jpg,png}' -i '404.html' 'ignore/**' 'this/other/specific/file.html'

Glob-[*] pairs

The -c and -p flags allow multiple entries and accept glob-* pairs as input. A glob-* pair is a comma-separated pair of <glob>,<value>. For example, a glob-changefreq pair may look like this:

$ sscli ... -c '**,weekly' 'events/**,daily'

Latter entries override the former. In the above example, paths matching events/** have a daily changefreq, while the rest are set to weekly.

Using a config file

Options can be passed through the sscli property in package.json, or through a .ssclirc JSON file, or through other standard conventions.

Examples

Dry-run sitemap entries

$ sscli -b https://x.com -f txt -o

Generate XML sitemap to another path

$ sscli -b https://x.com -r dist -f xml -o > www/sm.xml

Get subset of a directory

$ sscli -b https://x.com/foo -r dist/foo -f xml -o > dist/sitemap.xml

Generate TXT sitemap for image assets

$ sscli -b https://x.com -r dist -m '**/*.{jpg,jpeg,gif,png,bmp,webp,svg}' -f txt

Programmatic Use

static-sitemap-cli can also be used as a Node module.

import {
  generateUrls,
  generateXmlSitemap,
  generateTxtSitemap
} from 'static-sitemap-cli'

const options = {
  base: 'https://x.com',
  root: 'path/to/root',
  match: ['**/*html'],
  ignore: ['404.html'],
  changefreq: [],
  priority: [],
  robots: true,
  concurrent: 32,
  clean: true,
  slash: false
}

generateUrls(options).then((urls) => {
  const xmlString = generateXmlSitemap(urls)
  const txtString = generateTxtSitemap(urls)
  ...
})

Using the XML sitemap generator by itself:

import { generateXmlSitemap } from 'static-sitemap-cli'

const urls = [
  { loc: 'https://x.com/', lastmod: '2022-02-22' },
  { loc: 'https://x.com/about', lastmod: '2022-02-22' },
  ...
]

const xml = generateXmlSitemap(urls)

Development

Standard Github contribution workflow applies.

Tests

Test specs are at test/spec.js. To run the tests:

$ npm run test

License

ISC

Changelog

Changes are logged in the releases page.