IMPORTANT: You MUST be running Ghost 1.0.0 or later.
PLEASE create an issue if you have any problems.
Cloudinary has some "advanced configuration options" for Pro users and etc.. that this module does not currently handle. If you would like support for these options added, please create an issue or submit a PR!
In Ghost's root directory
Run npm install ghost-cloudinary-store
(note the lack of --save
)
Install into the Ghost sources folder
2.1. Make the storage folder if it doesn't already exist mkdir versions/$GHOST_VERSION/core/server/adapters/storage/
2.2. Copy ghost-cloudinary-store
from node_modules
to versions/$GHOST_VERSION/core/server/adapters/storage
cp -r node_modules/ghost-cloudinary-store versions/$GHOST_VERSION/core/server/adapters/storage
3.1. Make the storage folder if it doesn't already exist mkdir /$CONTENT_FOLDER/content/adapters/storage/
3.2. Copy ghost-cloudinary-store
from node_modules
to $CONTENT_FOLDER/content/adapters/storage/
cp -r node_modules/ghost-cloudinary-store $CONTENT_FOLDER/content/adapters/storage/
Note: The master
branch reflects what is published on NPM
Navigate to Ghost's base folder and create a directory called versions/$GHOST_VERSION/core/server/adapters/storage
Navigate into this new storage
directory and run git clone https://github.com/mmornati/ghost-cloudinary-store.git ghost-cloudinary-store
Navigate into ghost-cloudinary-store
and run npm install
Follow the instructions below for editing config.js
You have two options for configuring Ghost to work with your Cloudinary account:
cloud_name
, api_key
, and api_secret
.CLOUDINARY_URL
environment variable.In Ghost's config.production.json
(the file where you set your URL, mail settings, etc..) as follows:
Note: These values can be obtained from your Cloudinary management console.
"storage": {
"active": "ghost-cloudinary-store",
"ghost-cloudinary-store": {
"cloud_name": "yourCloudName",
"api_key": "yourApiKey",
"api_secret": "yourApiSecret"
}
}
Further reading available here.
CLOUDINARY_URL
environment variableIn Ghost's config.production.json
(the file where you set your URL, mail settings, etc..) as follows:
"storage": {
"active": "ghost-cloudinary-store"
}
Then set the CLOUDINARY_URL
environment variable, available from your Cloudinary management console.
It will look something like CLOUDINARY_URL=cloudinary://874837483274837:a676b67565c6767a6767d6767f676fe1@sample
.
Further reading available here.
If you don't know what an environment variable is, read this.
You can find the documentation of what you can configure, directly on the Cloudinary website: http://cloudinary.com/documentation/image_transformations
"storage": {
"active": "ghost-cloudinary-store",
"ghost-cloudinary-store": {
"cloud_name": "yourCloudName",
"api_key": "yourApiKey",
"api_secret": "yourApiSecret",
"configuration": {
"image": {
"quality": "auto:good",
"secure": "true"
},
"file": {
"use_filename": "true",
"unique_filename": "false",
"phash": "true",
"overwrite": "false",
"invalidate": "true",
"folder": "blog-images",
"tags": ["blog"]
}
}
}
}
NOTE: The cloud_name, api_key and api_secret environment variables are not needed if you use the CLOUDINARY_URL environment variable.
A configuration.sample.json
file can be found into the project source to help you configure the plugin.
The file part into the configuration json is used to define the filename to use. By default, without any configuration, cloudinary will select a random name for the uploaded image. This can't allow you to block the same image to be uploaded plenty of times. Anytime you will upload the image it gets a new name. Configuring this part you can, for example, force Cloudinary to use the name you are providing (it is up to you to be sure about the unicity of the name).
You can find more information about and the list of possible parameters directly on the official Cloudinary documentation: http://cloudinary.com/documentation/image_upload_api_reference#upload