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Quick Tip #007—Fetch GitHub Stargazers Count (and More) at Build Time

Older iterations of this website used a third party JavaScript widget to show the number of GitHub Stars the project currently had. You can see it in action on the versioned docs for 0.7.1 (scroll to the bottom).

This was in fact the only <script> tag on the entire 11ty.io web site and it was from a third party. Naturally, it needed to be annihilated.

Let’s change up our architecture to ruthlessly eliminate this client-side JavaScript.

Get the Stargazers Count from the GitHub API #

Read more at the GitHub API documentation.

This is a bit different from our client-side implementation because this data is only as updated as often as your build runs. This is implemented using a global JavaScript data file at _data/github.js.

Filename _data/github.js
const fetch = require("node-fetch");

module.exports = async function() {
console.log( "Fetching new github stargazers count…" );

// GitHub API: https://developer.github.com/v3/repos/#get
return fetch("https://api.github.com/repos/11ty/eleventy")
.then(res => res.json()) // node-fetch option to transform to json
.then(json => {
// prune the data to return only what we want
return {
stargazers: json.stargazers_count
};
});
};

Now in your templates you can output the stargazers count with:

Syntax Liquid, Nunjucks
{{ github.stargazers }} GitHub Stars

which outputs

1515 GitHub Stars

Bonus: I created a humanReadableNum filter) using the human-readable-numbers package to format the number.

More Examples #

You can look in the footer of this page to see examples of this in use on this very web site. I used it for:

These all use the recommended caching mechanism described in the next section.

Recommended: Cache the Data to the File System #

If I’m working on my site locally, I probably don’t want every Eleventy run to hit this external API call. I’d hit my rate limit pretty quickly (on GitHub, 60 per hour). Instead, let’s use an npm package called flat-cache to save our results locally to the file system and only run it once per day.

Highlights: #

Filename _data/github.js
const fetch = require("node-fetch");
const flatcache = require("flat-cache");
const path = require("path");

function getCacheKey() {
let date = new Date();
return `${date.getUTCFullYear()}-${date.getUTCMonth() + 1}-${date.getUTCDate()}`;
}

module.exports = async function() {
let cache = flatcache.load("github-stargazers", path.resolve("./_datacache"));
let key = getCacheKey();
let cachedData = cache.getKey(key);
if(!cachedData) {
console.log( "Fetching new github stargazers count…" );

// GitHub API: https://developer.github.com/v3/repos/#get
let newData = await fetch("https://api.github.com/repos/11ty/eleventy")
.then(res => res.json())
.then(json => {
return {
stargazers: json.stargazers_count
};
});

cache.setKey(key, newData);
cache.save();
return newData;
}

return cachedData;
};

If you want to fetch data more frequently than once per day, modify getCacheKey to return more a specific date. Add an hour to the key to run every hour, for example:

function getCacheKey() {
let date = new Date();
return `${date.getUTCFullYear()}-${date.getUTCMonth() + 1}-${date.getUTCDate()} ${date.getUTCHours()}`;
}
Take note that if you’re using this on a Netlify build, it will not maintain updates to the cache (as it resets the cache to the files that are checked into git) and will likely re-run every time.

Update Counts Daily #

If you want to update these counts automatically every day, read Quick Tip #008—Trigger a Netlify Build Every Day with IFTTT.