npm create astro@latest -- --template blog
🧑🚀 Seasoned astronaut? Delete this file. Have fun!
Features:
- ✅ Minimal styling (make it your own!)
- ✅ 100/100 Lighthouse performance
- ✅ SEO-friendly with canonical URLs and OpenGraph data
- ✅ Sitemap support
- ✅ RSS Feed support
- ✅ Markdown & MDX support
Inside of your Astro project, you'll see the following folders and files:
├── public/
├── src/
│ ├── components/
│ ├── content/
│ ├── layouts/
│ └── pages/
├── astro.config.mjs
├── README.md
├── package.json
└── tsconfig.json
Astro looks for .astro
or .md
files in the src/pages/
directory. Each page is exposed as a route based on its file name.
There's nothing special about src/components/
, but that's where we like to put any Astro/React/Vue/Svelte/Preact components.
The src/content/
directory contains "collections" of related Markdown and MDX documents. Use getCollection()
to retrieve posts from src/content/blog/
, and type-check your frontmatter using an optional schema. See Astro's Content Collections docs to learn more.
Any static assets, like images, can be placed in the public/
directory.
Make sure you have git lfs (brew install git-lfs
) installed before cloning. If you get errors when building you might be working with LFS references instead of downloaded images. Install git-lfs and re-clone the repo.
All commands are run from the root of the project, from a terminal:
Command | Action |
---|---|
npm install |
Installs dependencies |
npm run dev |
Starts local dev server at localhost:4321 |
npm run build |
Build your production site to ./dist/ |
npm run preview |
Preview your build locally, before deploying |
npm run astro ... |
Run CLI commands like astro add , astro check |
npm run astro -- --help |
Get help using the Astro CLI |
Check out our documentation or jump into our Discord server.
This theme is based off of the lovely Bear Blog.
If you're a Val Town employee, working on a super secret blog post, here's how to develop on this repo in secret. Please only do this when really necessary, we prefer most blog posts to be developed in public.
git lfs install
- Create a new branch off the main of this public blog repo
git checkout -b super-secret-branch
- Add the private fork as a remote:
git remote add private https://github.com/val-town/private-blog.git
- Push the new branch to the private fork:
git push private super-secret-branch
- Develop in secret on the private fork
- When you're ready to publish, create a public remote on the private repo:
git remote add public https://github.com/val-town/val-town-blog.git
- Push the branch to the public repo:
git push public super-secret-branch
- Open a PR from the public repo to the main branch of the public blog repo