You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
vitepress/docs/en/guide/routing.md

11 KiB

outline
deep

Routing

File-Based Routing

VitePress uses file-based routing, which means the generated HTML pages are mapped from the directory structure of the source Markdown files. For example, given the following directory structure:

.
├─ guide
│  ├─ getting-started.md
│  └─ index.md
├─ index.md
└─ prologue.md

The generated HTML pages will be:

index.md                  -->  /index.html (accessible as /)
prologue.md               -->  /prologue.html
guide/index.md            -->  /guide/index.html (accessible as /guide/)
guide/getting-started.md  -->  /guide/getting-started.html

The resulting HTML can be hosted on any web server that can serve static files.

Root and Source Directory

There are two important concepts in the file structure of a VitePress project: the project root and the source directory.

Project Root

Project root is where VitePress will try to look for the .vitepress special directory. The .vitepress directory is a reserved location for VitePress' config file, dev server cache, build output, and optional theme customization code.

When you run vitepress dev or vitepress build from the command line, VitePress will use the current working directory as project root. To specify a sub-directory as root, you will need to pass the relative path to the command. For example, if your VitePress project is located in ./docs, you should run vitepress dev docs:

.
├─ docs                    # project root
│  ├─ .vitepress           # config dir
│  ├─ getting-started.md
│  └─ index.md
└─ ...
vitepress dev docs

This is going to result in the following source-to-HTML mapping:

docs/index.md            -->  /index.html (accessible as /)
docs/getting-started.md  -->  /getting-started.html

Source Directory

Source directory is where your Markdown source files live. By default, it is the same as the project root. However, you can configure it via the srcDir config option.

The srcDir option is resolved relative to project root. For example, with srcDir: 'src', your file structure will look like this:

.                          # project root
├─ .vitepress              # config dir
└─ src                     # source dir
   ├─ getting-started.md
   └─ index.md

The resulting source-to-HTML mapping:

src/index.md            -->  /index.html (accessible as /)
src/getting-started.md  -->  /getting-started.html

Linking Between Pages

You can use both absolute and relative paths when linking between pages. Note that although both .md and .html extensions will work, the best practice is to omit file extensions so that VitePress can generate the final URLs based on your config.

<!-- Do -->
[Getting Started](./getting-started)
[Getting Started](../guide/getting-started)

<!-- Don't -->
[Getting Started](./getting-started.md)
[Getting Started](./getting-started.html)

Learn more about linking to assets such images in Asset Handling.

Linking to Non-VitePress Pages

If you want to link to a page in your site that is not generated by VitePress, you'll either need to use the full URL (opens in a new tab) or explicitly specify the target:

Input

[Link to pure.html](/pure.html){target="_self"}

Output

Link to pure.html{target="_self"}

::: tip Note

In Markdown links, the base is automatically prepended to the URL. This means that if you want to link to a page outside of your base, you'd need something like ../../pure.html in the link (resolved relative to the current page by the browser).

Alternatively, you can directly use the anchor tag syntax:

<a href="/pure.html" target="_self">Link to pure.html</a>

:::

Generating Clean URL

::: warning Server Support Required To serve clean URLs with VitePress, server-side support is required. :::

By default, VitePress resolves inbound links to URLs ending with .html. However, some users may prefer "Clean URLs" without the .html extension - for example, example.com/path instead of example.com/path.html.

Some servers or hosting platforms (for example Netlify, Vercel, GitHub Pages) provide the ability to map a URL like /foo to /foo.html if it exists, without a redirect:

If this feature is available to you, you can then also enable VitePress' own cleanUrls config option so that:

  • Inbound links between pages are generated without the .html extension.
  • If current path ends with .html, the router will perform a client-side redirect to the extension-less path.

If, however, you cannot configure your server with such support, you will have to manually resort to the following directory structure:

.
├─ getting-started
│  └─ index.md
├─ installation
│  └─ index.md
└─ index.md

Route Rewrites

You can customize the mapping between the source directory structure and the generated pages. It's useful when you have a complex project structure. For example, let's say you have a monorepo with multiple packages, and would like to place documentations along with the source files like this:

.
└─ packages
   ├─ pkg-a
   │  └─ src
   │     ├─ foo.md
   │     └─ index.md
   └─ pkg-b
      └─ src
         ├─ bar.md
         └─ index.md

And you want the VitePress pages to be generated like this:

packages/pkg-a/src/index.md  -->  /pkg-a/index.html
packages/pkg-a/src/foo.md    -->  /pkg-a/foo.html
packages/pkg-b/src/index.md  -->  /pkg-b/index.html
packages/pkg-b/src/bar.md    -->  /pkg-b/bar.html

You can achieve this by configuring the rewrites option like this:

// .vitepress/config.js
export default {
  rewrites: {
    'packages/pkg-a/src/index.md': 'pkg-a/index.md',
    'packages/pkg-a/src/foo.md': 'pkg-a/foo.md',
    'packages/pkg-b/src/index.md': 'pkg-b/index.md',
    'packages/pkg-b/src/bar.md': 'pkg-b/bar.md'
  }
}

The rewrites option also supports dynamic route parameters. In the above example, it would be verbose to list all the paths if you have many packages. Given that they all have the same file structure, you can simplify the config like this:

export default {
  rewrites: {
    'packages/:pkg/src/:slug*': ':pkg/:slug*'
  }
}

The rewrite paths are compiled using the path-to-regexp package - consult its documentation for more advanced syntax.

rewrites can also be a function that receives the original path and returns the new path:

export default {
  rewrites(id) {
    return id.replace(/^packages\/([^/]+)\/src\//, '$1/')
  }
}

::: warning Relative Links with Rewrites

When rewrites are enabled, relative links should be based on the rewritten paths. For example, in order to create a relative link from packages/pkg-a/src/pkg-a-code.md to packages/pkg-b/src/pkg-b-code.md, you should use:

[Link to PKG B](../pkg-b/pkg-b-code)

:::

Dynamic Routes

You can generate many pages using a single Markdown file and dynamic data. For example, you can create a packages/[pkg].md file that generates a corresponding page for every package in a project. Here, the [pkg] segment is a route parameter that differentiates each page from the others.

Paths Loader File

Since VitePress is a static site generator, the possible page paths must be determined at build time. Therefore, a dynamic route page must be accompanied by a paths loader file. For packages/[pkg].md, we will need packages/[pkg].paths.js (.ts is also supported):

.
└─ packages
   ├─ [pkg].md         # route template
   └─ [pkg].paths.js   # route paths loader

The paths loader should provide an object with a paths method as its default export. The paths method should return an array of objects with a params property. Each of these objects will generate a corresponding page.

Given the following paths array:

// packages/[pkg].paths.js
export default {
  paths() {
    return [
      { params: { pkg: 'foo' }},
      { params: { pkg: 'bar' }}
    ]
  }
}

The generated HTML pages will be:

.
└─ packages
   ├─ foo.html
   └─ bar.html

Multiple Params

A dynamic route can contain multiple params:

File Structure

.
└─ packages
   ├─ [pkg]-[version].md
   └─ [pkg]-[version].paths.js

Paths Loader

export default {
  paths: () => [
    { params: { pkg: 'foo', version: '1.0.0' }},
    { params: { pkg: 'foo', version: '2.0.0' }},
    { params: { pkg: 'bar', version: '1.0.0' }},
    { params: { pkg: 'bar', version: '2.0.0' }}
  ]
}

Output

.
└─ packages
   ├─ foo-1.0.0.html
   ├─ foo-2.0.0.html
   ├─ bar-1.0.0.html
   └─ bar-2.0.0.html

Dynamically Generating Paths

The paths loader module is run in Node.js and only executed during build time. You can dynamically generate the paths array using any data, either local or remote.

Generating paths from local files:

import fs from 'fs'

export default {
  paths() {
    return fs
      .readdirSync('packages')
      .map((pkg) => {
        return { params: { pkg }}
      })
  }
}

Generating paths from remote data:

export default {
  async paths() {
    const pkgs = await (await fetch('https://my-api.com/packages')).json()

    return pkgs.map((pkg) => {
      return {
        params: {
          pkg: pkg.name,
          version: pkg.version
        }
      }
    })
  }
}

Accessing Params in Page

You can use the params to pass additional data to each page. The Markdown route file can access the current page params in Vue expressions via the $params global property:

- package name: {{ $params.pkg }}
- version: {{ $params.version }}

You can also access the current page's params via the useData runtime API. This is available in both Markdown files and Vue components:

<script setup>
import { useData } from 'vitepress'

// params is a Vue ref
const { params } = useData()

console.log(params.value)
</script>

Rendering Raw Content

Params passed to the page will be serialized in the client JavaScript payload, so you should avoid passing heavy data in params, for example raw Markdown or HTML content fetched from a remote CMS.

Instead, you can pass such content to each page using the content property on each path object:

export default {
  async paths() {
    const posts = await (await fetch('https://my-cms.com/blog-posts')).json()

    return posts.map((post) => {
      return {
        params: { id: post.id },
        content: post.content // raw Markdown or HTML
      }
    })
  }
}

Then, use the following special syntax to render the content as part of the Markdown file itself:

<!-- @content -->