Ember meta tags
npm install ember-cli-meta-tagsAn Ember CLI add-on to easily set tags
(link, meta, script, noscript, etc.) in the document head.
Many social networks, sharing platforms, and search engines extract
data from tags within a page's head tag. With this add-on,
you can have those meta tags populated when entering individual Ember
routes. This allows you to keep all logic within your client side
application without needing a sophisticated web server to populate tags
correctly.
This add-on is perfect for combining with a prerendering
server side solution such as prerender.io
or with
Ember FastBoot (FastBoot compatibility requires ember-cli-meta-tags v2+ and Ember 2.7+).
- Ember.js v3.24 or above
- Ember CLI v3.24 or above
- Node.js v14 or above
```
ember install ember-cli-meta-tags
Version 7+ requires Node.js 14+, Ember 3.24+ and ember-cli-head 2+
RouteMetaMixin was removed and metaToHeadTags function was introduced to partially keep original behaviour.
BEFORE
`javascript
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import RouteMetaMixin from 'ember-cli-meta-tags/mixins/route-meta';
export default Route.extend(RouteMetaMixin, {
meta() {
return {
property: {
'og:type': 'Root',
},
};
},
});
`
AFTER
`javascript
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { metaToHeadTags } from 'ember-cli-meta-tags';
export default class extends Route {
headTags() {
return metaToHeadTags({
property: {
'og:type': 'Root',
},
});
}
}
`
Version 5.0 of this addon depends on ember-cli-head 0.4.0, which adds the requirement that the is added once in an application-wide template (usually app/templates/application.hbs). For more info, see the ember-cli-head 0.4 upgrade note.
Version 4.0+ of this addon is designed to work with FastBoot >= 1.0.0-rc1. If you use
an order version of fastboot stick with 3.X.
Version 2.0+ of this addon is built upon
ember-cli-head and as a
result it will work automatically out of the box with Ember FastBoot
if you are running a version of Ember >= 2.7.
#### Using with other ember-cli-head addons
If you are using another addon that makes use of ember-cli-headember-cli-head
(such as
ember-page-title), or
are directly using in your app you will need toapp/templates/head.hbs
create a custom file and includeember-cli-meta-tag's component:
`hbs`
In order to dynamically add head tags from your routes all you need to
do is provide a headTags property on the route. This property can
either be an array of tags, or a function which when invoked with the
route's context returns an array of tags. The head tags service will
automatically collect all head tags from the currently active routes
after transition.
#### Data structure
To define a head tag you will use the following structure:
`javascript`
{
// html element type (meta, link, etc.)
type: 'meta',
// unique id for nesting (see below)
tagId: 'meta-description-tag',
// key value attributes for the element
attrs: {
name: 'description',
content: model.get('description')
},
// optional element content
content: 'Element content here'
}
#### Nesting
This library supports pulling tag definitions from nested routes
without creating duplicate tags. Deeper nested routes will override
parent route tags. In order to support this you need to provide a
unique tagId property on your tag definition. Only one tag with atagId
given will ever be rendered in the head.
##### Head Tags object
You can also define the tags by providing an object as the value for
the meta property on the route. This can either be in-lined in your
route definition, or set as a property on the route prior to
the didTransition event.
###### Example: static headTags property on the route
`javascript
// app/routes/some-page.js
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class extends Route {
headTags = [
{
type: 'meta',
tagId: 'meta-og-name',
attrs: {
property: 'og:name',
content: 'Ice-T',
},
},
{
type: 'link',
tagId: 'canonical-link',
attrs: {
rel: 'canonical',
content: 'http://mydomain.org/',
},
},
];
}
`
###### Example: Setting the headTags property in afterModel
`javascript
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class extends Route {
afterModel(model) {
this.setHeadTags(model);
}
setHeadTags(model) {
let headTags = [
{
type: 'meta',
tagId: 'meta-description-tag',
attrs: {
name: 'description',
content: model.get('description'),
},
},
];
this.headTags = headTags;
}
}
`
##### headTags function
You can provide the headTags by implementing a headTags method on the route
that returns the appropriate head tags.
`javascript
// app/routes/some-page.js
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class extends Route {
headTags() {
// here we are pulling meta data from the model for this route
let model = this.modelFor(this.routeName);
return [
{
type: 'meta',
tagId: 'meta-description-tag',
attrs: {
name: 'description',
content: model.description,
},
},
];
}
}
`
When you visit '/some-page' the document head tag will be updated as
follows:
`html`
These tags will automatically be cleared when transitioning away from
this route.
If you want to update the head tags for a route outside of a full
transition (perhaps due to a controller query parameter change)
you can directly call collectHeadTags on the head-tags service and
all of the headTags in the current route hierarchy will be re-built.
##### Example
`javascript
// app/routes/some-page.js
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class extends Route {
headTags() {
let controller = this.controllerFor(this.routeName);
// value of head tags updates with value of era on this
// route's controller
return [{
type: 'meta',
tagId: 'meta-title',
attrs: {
property: 'title',
content: controller.era
}
}]
}
}
// app/controller/some-page.js
import Controller from '@ember/controller';
export default class extends Controller {
@service headTagsService;
queryParameters = {
era: 'e'
};
// this observer runs whenever the era query parameter updates
// which by default does not trigger a full route transition
// so we need to notify the service to rebuild tags
@observer('era') eraObserver() {
this.headTagsService.collectHeadTags();
}
}
``
See the Contributing guide for details.
This project is licensed under the MIT License.