gatsby-starter-blog
gotrue
Our great sponsors
gatsby-starter-blog | gotrue | |
---|---|---|
15 | 22 | |
3,506 | 3,713 | |
0.1% | 1.1% | |
6.5 | 3.6 | |
2 months ago | 4 months ago | |
JavaScript | Go | |
BSD Zero Clause License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
gatsby-starter-blog
-
An Introduction to Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE)
Thanks! I used a gatsby starter template. It was quite simple to get one up and running. Here's the link to the repo: https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby-starter-blog/
-
React SEO: manage sitemaps
Here is the teleport to (commit)[https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby-starter-blog/commit/b0d1f7c7dd0b0362925c3998090f77889ca63eca] for devs too busy to read:
-
Gatsby SEO: Manage robot text file in different environments
robot txt FAQ
-
Moving my personal website from Gatsby to Next.js
If you're interested in that check out the official Gatsby Starter Blog. You'll get fantastic static site generation with perfect search engine optimization: properly set meta tags and microdata, a sitemap, and RSS feed. These are things that are very doable in other frameworks too, but you'll likely have to do a bit more work to get them to Gatsby's starting point.
-
Migrating Gatsby Remark blog to MDX
As a starting point, we'll use Gatsby starter blog to quickly set up our blog. Let's turn this regular Markdown blog to use MDX.
-
Make your own blog site with GatsbyJS
siteMetadata: { title: `Simran's Blog`, author: { name: `Simran Makhija`, summary: `who lives and studies Computer Science in Indore, India.`, }, description: `My blog for sharing all things tech and community, built with GatsbyJS as a part of #100DaysOfCode`, siteUrl: `https://gatsbystarterblogsource.gatsbyjs.io/`, social: { twitter: `justdev_sim`, }, },
-
A Web Developer's Guide to Making Your First Personal Website and Blog
gatsby new my-tutorial-site https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby-starter-blog
-
Serverless Subscription Management with Fauna, Paddle, Gatsby and Netlify
Next we will spin up a Gatsby instance using their default Gatsby Starter Blog starter. To do this, just go to the folder you want to install in and run:
-
Adding Support for Multiple Authors in Gatsby
Please note that this article won't walk you through an example from start to finish but rather explain the concepts behind it. Feel free to clone gatsby-starter-blog and try it yourself after reading this blog post.
-
Adding a Draft Feature to Gatsby
If you want to follow the example along, you can install the default blog starter by running gatsby new my-blog https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby-starter-blog with gatsby-cli.
gotrue
-
Supabase Auth: Identity Linking, Hooks, and HaveIBeenPwned integration
If you’ve been following us from the start, you will know that Supabase Auth started by forking Netlify’s GoTrue server. A lot has changed since then and we’ve diverged from the upstream repository. At this stage it makes sense to rename the project to something else (cues drumroll) — Auth.
-
FATA[0000] Error 1130: Host '172.17.0.1' is not allowed to connect to this MySQL server
I am testing gotrue netlift module https://github.com/netlify/gotrue
- Netlify Gotrue – SWT based API for managing users and issuing SWT tokens
-
gotrxx VS gotrue - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 11 Mar 2023
I guess since it's a deviation of it
- GoTrue is a small open-source API written in Golang
-
Ask HN: Ok to only allow Google/Apple/FB login for mobile app?
To answer point 1: Maybe to start out, but in the long run, having only social logins may cause your app to lose a segment of the market (I don't know how much). If you're fine with that, then by all means only support social logins.
However, I strongly suggest having it (or some way for someone not to use a social provider) if you want to have as many users a possible.
Personally, I don't have a google account, I'm wary to use my Apple account for non-Apple sites, and I don't have facebook, instagram, new gen z hotness app, etc... And I can confidently say I am not alone in choosing to use apps which don't require a social login.
At the end of the day though, password auth isn't a non-trivial problem. It is a solved problem of which there are numerous articles/papers and many libraries for most languages/frameworks. For example, the Phoenix framework for Elixir has a built in command which scaffolds auth, and it works really well (I have used it in a personal project): https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix/mix_phx_gen_auth.html. For JS, you can use something like passport: https://www.passportjs.org/packages/passport-local/. If you want a separate service entirely (even though it would be more complex to have a separate service to start out), there is GoTrue: https://github.com/netlify/gotrue. These are just a few suggestions of tech I have come across. There is so much more out there, I encourage you to research options to see what may be a best fit.
If you're worried about password auth, maybe give one time passwords a try. They don't require any password reset flow, and are generally secure when implemented correctly. As an example, I don't have a password for my craigslist account. Every time I want to login, I can choose to get a magic link/otp which gets exchanged for a session. In practice (and this is my personal opinion), I prefer magic links. They are one time, hard to guess (again dependent on implementation), can be time limited, and most likely won't be intercepted in transit (though it could be in a rare circumstance).
To answer point 2: yes.
If your app is to order things (I use things in a general term) it sounds like eCommerce. And if you're in eCommerce, you better have a way for a user to track what they have ordered and how much they have paid for it at a minimum. Otherwise, your site may come across as a scam, even though it uses Stripe. Sketchy sites can use Stripe to get your money (albeit, it'll be a one time payment).
In conclusion, auth for your application seems crucial. Email/password auth is still relevant for applications. While not necessary for an MVP, there is a segment of the market you will lose if you don't have an email/password option, or even an email/OTP/magic link option (I don't know how much, really going off an educated guess).
Best of wishes in building your app! I genuinely hope it is successful and safe for people to leverage :)
-
I got tired of fussing with auth, so I built a thing for building OAuth login in under 60 seconds.
Use a self-hostable auth microservice like gotrue or authelia, ORY's suite of products, etc.
- what should I do about authentication in golang?
-
actix-session 0.6.0 is out - an almost complete rewrite!
Any examples for implementation like https://github.com/netlify/gotrue for Actix-web?
What are some alternatives?
my-tutorial-site - Demo for a personal website tutorial series using Gatsby.
supabase - The open source Firebase alternative.
Eleventy-Starter-Boilerplate - 🚀 Eleventy Starter is production-ready with SEO-friendly for quickly starting a blog. ⚡ Built with Eleventy, ESLint, Prettier, Webpack 5, PostCSS, Tailwind CSS 2 and Netlify CMS (optional).
postgrest - REST API for any Postgres database
leerob.io - ✨ My portfolio built with Next.js, Tailwind, and Vercel.
authelia - The Single Sign-On Multi-Factor portal for web apps
codesandbox-client - An online IDE for rapid web development
hasura_gotrue - This is a slightly extended version of Netlify's GoTrue. It includes a `docker-compose.yaml` file to deploy it together with Hasura. This set up uses two databases, PostgreSQL for Hasura and MariaDB for GoTrue. Have fun!
gatsby-starter-blog - blog starter with SEO optimisation changes
nextjs-supabase-auth - Sample project for setting up Supabase Auth in Next.js
blog
supabase-auth-react