@astrojs/sitemap
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This Astro integration generates a sitemap based on your pages when you build your Astro project.
Why Astro Sitemap
Section titled Why Astro SitemapA Sitemap is an XML file that outlines all of the pages, videos, and files on your site. Search engines like Google read this file to crawl your site more efficiently. See Google’s own advice on sitemaps to learn more.
A sitemap file is recommended for large multi-page sites. If you don’t use a sitemap, most search engines will still be able to list your site’s pages, but a sitemap is a great way to ensure that your site is as search engine friendly as possible.
With Astro Sitemap, you don’t have to worry about creating this XML file yourself: the Astro Sitemap integration will crawl your statically-generated routes and create the sitemap file, including dynamic routes like [...slug]
or src/pages/[lang]/[version]/info.astro
generated by getStaticPaths()
.
This integration cannot generate sitemap entries for dynamic routes in SSR mode.
Installation
Section titled InstallationQuick Install
Section titled Quick InstallThe astro add
command-line tool automates the installation for you. Run one of the following commands in a new terminal window. (If you aren’t sure which package manager you’re using, run the first command.) Then, follow the prompts, and type “y” in the terminal (meaning “yes”) for each one.
If you run into any issues, feel free to report them to us on GitHub and try the manual installation steps below.
Manual Install
Section titled Manual InstallFirst, install the @astrojs/sitemap
package using your package manager. If you’re using npm or aren’t sure, run this in the terminal:
Then, apply this integration to your astro.config.*
file using the integrations
property:
Usage
Section titled Usage@astrojs/sitemap
requires a deployment / site URL for generation. Add your site’s URL under your astro.config.*
using the site
property. This must begin with http:
or https:
.
Note that unlike other configuration options, site
is set in the root defineConfig
object, rather than inside the sitemap()
call.
Now, build your site for production via the astro build
command. You will find both sitemap-index.xml
and sitemap-0.xml
in the dist/
folder (or your custom output directory if set).
If you forget to add a site
, you’ll get a friendly warning when you build, and the sitemap-index.xml
file won’t be generated.
After verifying that the sitemaps are built, you can add them to your site’s <head>
and the robots.txt
file for crawlers to pick up.
Example of generated files for a two-page website
Section titled Example of generated files for a two-page websiteConfiguration
Section titled ConfigurationTo configure this integration, pass an object to the sitemap()
function call in astro.config.mjs
.
filter
Section titled filterAll pages are included in your sitemap by default. By adding a custom filter
function, you can filter included pages by URL.
The function will be called for every page on your site. The page
function parameter is the full URL of the page currently under considering, including your site
domain. Return true
to include the page in your sitemap, and false
to leave it out.
To filter multiple pages, add arguments with target URLs.
customPages
Section titled customPagesIn some cases, a page might be part of your deployed site but not part of your Astro project. If you’d like to include a page in your sitemap that isn’t created by Astro, you can use this option.
entryLimit
Section titled entryLimitThe maximum number entries per sitemap file. The default value is 45000. A sitemap index and multiple sitemaps are created if you have more entries. See this explanation of splitting up a large sitemap.
changefreq, lastmod, and priority
Section titled changefreq, lastmod, and priorityThese options correspond to the <changefreq>
, <lastmod>
, and <priority>
tags in the Sitemap XML specification.
Note that changefreq
and priority
are ignored by Google.
Due to limitations of Astro’s Integration API, this integration can’t analyze a given page’s source code. This configuration option can set changefreq
, lastmod
and priority
on a site-wide basis; see the next option serialize for how you can set these values on a per-page basis.
serialize
Section titled serializeA function called for each sitemap entry just before writing to a disk. This function can be asynchronous.
It receives as its parameter a SitemapItem
object that can have these properties:
url
(absolute page URL). This is the only property that is guaranteed to be onSitemapItem
.changefreq
lastmod
(ISO formatted date,String
type)priority
links
.
This links
property contains a LinkItem
list of alternate pages including a parent page.
The LinkItem
type has two fields: url
(the fully-qualified URL for the version of this page for the specified language) and lang
(a supported language code targeted by this version of the page).
The serialize
function should return SitemapItem
, touched or not.
The example below shows the ability to add sitemap specific properties individually.
To localize a sitemap, pass an object to this i18n
option.
This object has two required properties:
defaultLocale
:String
. Its value must exist as one oflocales
keys.locales
:Record<String, String>
, key/value - pairs. The key is used to look for a locale part in a page path. The value is a language attribute, only English alphabet and hyphen allowed.
Read more about language attributes.
The resulting sitemap looks like this:
Examples
Section titled Examples- The official Astro website uses Astro Sitemap to generate its sitemap.
- Browse projects with Astro Sitemap on GitHub for more examples!
Troubleshooting
Section titled TroubleshootingFor help, check out the #support
channel on Discord. Our friendly Support Squad members are here to help!
You can also check our Astro Integration Documentation for more on integrations.
Contributing
Section titled ContributingThis package is maintained by Astro’s Core team. You’re welcome to submit an issue or PR!
Changelog
Section titled ChangelogSee CHANGELOG.md for a history of changes to this integration.