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generate-sitemap

cicirello/generate-sitemap - Generate XML sitemaps for static websites in GitHub Actions

Check out all of our GitHub Actions: https://actions.cicirello.org/

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The generate-sitemap GitHub action generates a sitemap for a website hosted on GitHub Pages, and has the following features:

  • Support for both xml and txt sitemaps (you choose using one of the action's inputs).
  • When generating an xml sitemap, it uses the last commit date of each file to generate the <lastmod> tag in the sitemap entry. If the file was created during that workflow run, but not yet committed, then it instead uses the current date (however, we recommend if possible committing newly created files first).
  • Supports URLs for html and pdf files in the sitemap, and has inputs to control the included file types (defaults include both html and pdf files in the sitemap).
  • Now also supports including URLs for a user specified list of additional file extensions in the sitemap.
  • Checks content of html files for <meta name="robots" content="noindex"> directives, excluding any that do from the sitemap.
  • Parses a robots.txt, if present at the root of the website, excluding any URLs from the sitemap that match Disallow: rules for User-agent: *.
  • Enables specifying a list of directories and/or specific files to exclude from the sitemap.
  • Sorts the sitemap entries in a consistent order, such that the URLs are first sorted by depth in the directory structure (i.e., pages at the website root appear first, etc), and then pages at the same depth are sorted alphabetically.
  • It assumes that for files with the name index.html that the preferred URL for the page ends with the enclosing directory, leaving out the index.html. For example, instead of https://WEBSITE/PATH/index.html, the sitemap will contain https://WEBSITE/PATH/ in such a case.
  • Provides option to exclude .html extension from URLs listed in sitemap.

The generate-sitemap GitHub action is designed to be used in combination with other GitHub Actions. For example, it does not commit and push the generated sitemap. See the Examples for examples of combining with other actions in your workflow.

The generate-sitemap action is for GitHub Pages sites, such that the repository contains the html, etc of the site itself, regardless of whether or not the html was generated by a static site generator or written by hand. For example, I use it for multiple Java project documentation sites, where most of the site is generated by javadoc. I also use it with my personal website, which is generated with a custom static site generator. As long as the repository for the GitHub Pages site contains the site as served (e.g., html files, pdf files, etc), the generate-sitemap action is applicable.

The generate-sitemap action is not for GitHub Pages Jekyll sites (unless you generate the site locally and push the html output instead of the markdown, but why would you do that?). In the case of a GitHub Pages Jekyll site, the repository contains markdown, and not the html that is generated from the markdown. The generate-sitemap action does not support that use-case. If you are looking to generate a sitemap for a Jekyll website, there is a Jekyll plugin for that.

Table of Contents

The remainder of the documentation is organized into the following sections:

Requirements

This action relies on actions/checkout@v2 with fetch-depth: 0. Setting the fetch-depth to 0 for the checkout action ensures that the generate-sitemap action will have access to the commit history, which is used for generating the <lastmod> tags in the sitemap.xml file. If you instead use the default when applying the checkout action, the <lastmod> tags will be incorrect. So be sure to include the following as a step in your workflow:

    steps:
    - name: Checkout the repo
      uses: actions/checkout@v4
      with:
        fetch-depth: 0 

Inputs

path-to-root

The path to the root of the website relative to the root of the repository. Default . is appropriate in most cases, such as whenever the root of your Pages site is the root of the repository itself. If you are using this for a GitHub Pages site in the docs directory, such as for a documentation website, then just pass docs for this input.

base-url-path

This is the url to your website. You must specify this for your sitemap to be meaningful. It defaults to https://web.address.of.your.nifty.website/ for demonstration purposes.

include-html

This flag determines whether html files are included in your sitemap (files with an extension of either .html or .htm). Default: true.

include-pdf

This flag determines whether pdf files are included in your sitemap. Default: true.

additional-extensions

If you want to include URLs to other document types, you can use the additional-extensions input to specify a list (separated by spaces) of file extensions. For example, Google (and other search engines) index a variety of other file types, including docx, doc, source code for various common programming languages, etc. Here is an example:

    - name: Generate the sitemap
      uses: cicirello/generate-sitemap@v1
      with:
        additional-extensions: doc docx ppt pptx

exclude-paths

The action will automatically exclude any files or directories based on a robots.txt file, if present. But if you have additional directories or individual files that you wish to exclude from the sitemap that are not otherwise blocked, you can use the exclude-paths input to specify a list of them, separated by any whitespace characters. For example, if you wish to exclude the directory /exclude-these as well as the individual file /nositemap.html, you can use the following:

    - name: Generate the sitemap
      uses: cicirello/generate-sitemap@v1
      with:
        exclude-paths: /exclude-these /nositemap.html

If you have many such cases to exclude, your workflow may be easier to read if you use a YAML multi-line string, with the following:

    - name: Generate the sitemap
      uses: cicirello/generate-sitemap@v1
      with:
        exclude-paths: >
          /exclude-these 
          /nositemap.html

sitemap-format

Use this to specify the sitemap format. Default: xml. The sitemap.xml generated by the default will contain lastmod dates that are generated using the last commit dates of each file. Setting this input to anything other than xml will generate a plain text sitemap.txt simply listing the urls.

drop-html-extension

The drop-html-extension input provides the option to exclude .html extension from URLs listed in the sitemap. The default is drop-html-extension: false. If you want to use this option, just pass drop-html-extension: true to the action in your workflow. GitHub Pages automatically serves the corresponding html file if URL has no file extension. For example, if a user of your site browses to the URL, https://WEBSITE/PATH/filename (with no extension), GitHub Pages automatically serves https://WEBSITE/PATH/filename.html if it exists. The default behavior of the generate-sitemap action includes the .html extension for pages where the filename has the .html extension. If you prefer to exclude the .html extension from the URLs in your sitemap, then pass drop-html-extension: true to the action in your workflow. Note that you should also ensure that any canonical links that you list within the html files corresponds to your choice here.

date-only

The date-only input controls whether XML sitemaps include the full date and time in lastmod, or only the date. The default is date-only: false, which includes the full date and time in the lastmod fields. If you only want the date in the lastmod, then use date-only: true.

Outputs

sitemap-path

The generated sitemap is placed in the root of the website. This output is the path to the generated sitemap file relative to the root of the repository. If you didn't use the path-to-root input, then this output should simply be the name of the sitemap file (sitemap.xml or sitemap.txt).

url-count

This output provides the number of URLs in the sitemap.

excluded-count

This output provides the number of URLs excluded from the sitemap due to either <meta name="robots" content="noindex"> within html files, or due to exclusion from directives in a robots.txt file.

Examples

Basic Action Syntax

You can run the action with a step in your workflow like this:

    - name: Generate the sitemap
      uses: cicirello/generate-sitemap@v1
      with:
        base-url-path: https://THE.URL.TO.YOUR.PAGE/

In the above example, the major release version was used, which ensures that you'll be using the latest patch level release, including any bug fixes, etc. If you prefer, you can also use a specific version such as with:

    - name: Generate the sitemap
      uses: cicirello/[email protected]
      with:
        base-url-path: https://THE.URL.TO.YOUR.PAGE/

Example 1: Minimal Example

In this example workflow, we use all of the default inputs except for the base-url-path input. The result will be a sitemap.xml file in the root of the repository. After completion, it then simply echos the outputs.

name: Generate xml sitemap

on:
  push:
    branches: [ main ]

jobs:
  sitemap_job:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    name: Generate a sitemap

    steps:
    - name: Checkout the repo
      uses: actions/checkout@v4
      with:
        fetch-depth: 0 

    - name: Generate the sitemap
      id: sitemap
      uses: cicirello/generate-sitemap@v1
      with:
        base-url-path: https://THE.URL.TO.YOUR.PAGE/

    - name: Output stats
      run: |
        echo "sitemap-path = ${{ steps.sitemap.outputs.sitemap-path }}"
        echo "url-count = ${{ steps.sitemap.outputs.url-count }}"
        echo "excluded-count = ${{ steps.sitemap.outputs.excluded-count }}"

Example 2: Webpage for API Docs

This example workflow illustrates how you might use this to generate a sitemap for a Pages site in the docs directory of the repository. It also demonstrates excluding pdf files, and configuring a plain text sitemap.

name: Generate API sitemap

on:
  push:
    branches: [ main ]

jobs:
  sitemap_job:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    name: Generate a sitemap

    steps:
    - name: Checkout the repo
      uses: actions/checkout@v4
      with:
        fetch-depth: 0 

    - name: Generate the sitemap
      id: sitemap
      uses: cicirello/generate-sitemap@v1
      with:
        base-url-path: https://THE.URL.TO.YOUR.PAGE/
        path-to-root: docs
        include-pdf: false
        sitemap-format: txt

    - name: Output stats
      run: |
        echo "sitemap-path = ${{ steps.sitemap.outputs.sitemap-path }}"
        echo "url-count = ${{ steps.sitemap.outputs.url-count }}"
        echo "excluded-count = ${{ steps.sitemap.outputs.excluded-count }}"

Example 3: Including Additional Indexable File Types

In this example workflow, we add various additional types to the sitemap using the additional-extensions input. Note that this also include html files and pdf files since the workflow is using the default values for include-html and include-pdf, which both default to true.

name: Generate xml sitemap

on:
  push:
    branches: [ main ]

jobs:
  sitemap_job:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    name: Generate a sitemap

    steps:
    - name: Checkout the repo
      uses: actions/checkout@v4
      with:
        fetch-depth: 0 

    - name: Generate the sitemap
      id: sitemap
      uses: cicirello/generate-sitemap@v1
      with:
        base-url-path: https://THE.URL.TO.YOUR.PAGE/
        additional-extensions: doc docx ppt pptx xls xlsx

    - name: Output stats
      run: |
        echo "sitemap-path = ${{ steps.sitemap.outputs.sitemap-path }}"
        echo "url-count = ${{ steps.sitemap.outputs.url-count }}"
        echo "excluded-count = ${{ steps.sitemap.outputs.excluded-count }}"

Example 4: Combining With Other Actions

Presumably you want to do something with your sitemap once it is generated. In this example workflow, we combine it with the action peter-evans/create-pull-request. First, the cicirello/generate-sitemap action generates the sitemap. And then the peter-evans/create-pull-request monitors for changes, and if the sitemap changed will create a pull request.

name: Generate xml sitemap

on:
  push:
    branches: [ main ]

jobs:
  sitemap_job:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    name: Generate a sitemap

    steps:
    - name: Checkout the repo
      uses: actions/checkout@v4
      with:
        fetch-depth: 0 

    - name: Generate the sitemap
      id: sitemap
      uses: cicirello/generate-sitemap@v1
      with:
        base-url-path: https://THE.URL.TO.YOUR.PAGE/

    - name: Create Pull Request
      uses: peter-evans/create-pull-request@v3
      with:
        title: "Automated sitemap update"
        body: > 
          Sitemap updated by the [generate-sitemap](https://github.com/cicirello/generate-sitemap) 
          GitHub action. Automated pull-request generated by the 
          [create-pull-request](https://github.com/peter-evans/create-pull-request) GitHub action.

Real Examples From Projects Using the Action

Personal Website

This first real example is from the personal website of the developer. One of the workflows, sitemap-generation.yml, is strictly for generating the sitemap. It runs on pushes of either *.html or *.pdf files to the staging branch of this repository. After generating the sitemap, it uses peter-evans/create-pull-request to generate a pull request. You can also replace that step with a commit and push instead. You can find the resulting sitemap here: sitemap.xml.

Documentation Website for a Java Library

This next example is for the documentation website of the Chips-n-Salsa library. The docs.yml workflow runs on push and pull-requests of either *.java files. It uses Maven to run javadoc (e.g., with mvn javadoc:javadoc). It then copies the generated javadoc documentation to the docs directory, from which the API website is served. This is followed by another GitHub Action, cicirello/javadoc-cleanup, which makes a few edits to the javadoc generated website to improve mobile browsing.

Next, it commits any changes (without pushing yet) produced by javadoc and/or javadoc-cleanup. After performing those commits, it now runs the generate-sitemap action to generate the sitemap. It does this after committing the site changes so that the lastmod dates will be accurate. Finally, it uses peter-evans/create-pull-request to generate a pull request. You can also replace that step with a commit and push instead.

You can find the resulting sitemap here: sitemap.xml.

Built With

The generate-sitemap action uses the following:

Blog Posts

Here is a selection of blog posts about generate-sitemap on DEV.to:

Support the Project

You can support the project in a number of ways:

  • Starring: If you find the generate-sitemap action useful, consider starring the repository.
  • Sharing with Others: Consider sharing it with others who you feel might find it useful.
  • Reporting Issues: If you find a bug or have a suggestion for a new feature, please report it via the Issue tracker.
  • Contributing Code: If there is an open issue that you think you can help with, submit a pull request.
  • Sponsoring: You can also consider becoming a sponsor.

License

The scripts and documentation for this GitHub action is released under the MIT License.