Node Interface
The “node” is the center of Gatsby’s data system. All data that’s added to Gatsby is modeled using nodes.
Node data structure
The basic node data structure is as follows:
parent
A key reserved for plugins who wish to extend other nodes.
contentDigest
A digest “Hash”, or short digital summary, of the content of this node (for example, md5sum
).
The digest should be unique to the content of this node since it’s used for caching. If the content changes, this digest should also change. There’s a helper function called createContentDigest to create an md5
digest.
mediaType
Optional media type to indicate to transformer plugins this node has data they can further process.
type
A globally unique node type chosen by the plugin owner.
owner
The plugin which created this node. This field is added by gatsby itself (and not the plugin).
fieldOwners
Stores which plugins created which fields. This field is added by gatsby itself (and not the plugin).
content
Optional field exposing the raw content for this node that transformer plugins can take and further process.
description
Text description of the node.
Source plugins
New nodes are added to Gatsby by “source” plugins. A common one that many Gatsby sites use is the Filesystem source plugin which turns files on disk into File nodes.
Other source plugins pull data from external APIs such as the Drupal and Hacker News
Transformer plugins
Transformer plugins can also create nodes by transforming source nodes into new types of nodes. It is very common when building Gatsby sites to install both source plugin(s) and transformer plugins.
Nodes created by transformer plugins are set as “children” of their “parent” nodes.
- The
Remark (Markdown library) transformer plugin
looks for new nodes that are created with a
mediaType
oftext/markdown
and then transforms these nodes intoMarkdownRemark
nodes with anhtml
field. - The YAML transformer plugin looks for
new nodes with a media type of
text/yaml
(e.g. a.yaml
file) and creates new YAML child node(s) by parsing the YAML source into JavaScript objects.
GraphQL
Gatsby automatically infers the structure of your site’s nodes and creates a GraphQL schema which you can then query from your site’s components.
Node Creation
To learn more about how nodes are created and linked together, check out the Node Creation documentation in the “Behind the Scenes” section.