To deploy your site to production, you'll need to connect Tina to a hosted backend. This doc will walk you through the steps to get your site from running locally to running for production.
tina/tina-lock.json
).Go to app.tina.io and create a new project. You'll be asked to connect your Github account and select the repository you want to connect to TinaCloud.
The next step is to connect your site. Once connected, your project's editors will be able to save content directly to its GitHub repository, entirely from within your site.
npx @tinacms/cli init backend
This will
.env
file with the necessary environment variables to connect to TinaCloud.In the your tina/config file, make sure the clientId
and token
are passed to the config.
// tina/config.ts//...export default defineConfig({//...token: process.env.TINA_TOKEN, // This should match the value in your .env fileclientId: process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_TINA_CLIENT_ID // This should match the value in your .env filebranch,schema: {collections: [//...// See https://tina.io/docs/schema/ for more info about "collections"]}})
Note: If you're loading your schema config values from a local environment file, Tina's build process will only pickup .env
files (not .env.local
or .env.development
)
This is may have already been setup in the init process but you should ensure that the branch is being passed to the config.
Typically you'll want to use the branch that you're deploying with your site. This will vary depending on your host, but most will provide an environment variable of some sort that you can use.
// tina/config.ts//...+ const branch =+ process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_TINA_BRANCH ||+ process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_VERCEL_GIT_COMMIT_REF ||+ process.env.HEAD ||+ ''export default defineConfig({//...token: '<Your Read Only Token>' // generated on app.tina.io,clientId: '<Your Client ID>', // generated on app.tina.iobranch,schema: {collections: [//...// See https://tina.io/docs/schema/ for more info about "collections"]}})
NEXT_PUBLIC_VERCEL_GIT_COMMIT_REF
is Vercel's system environment variable that represents the branch that has made the deployment commit.HEAD
is the equivalent system environment variable used by Netlify.
Your fully configured tina/config.{js,ts}
should look something like this:
import { defineConfig } from 'tinacms'const branch =process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_TINA_BRANCH ||process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_VERCEL_GIT_COMMIT_REF ||process.env.HEADexport default defineConfig({token: '<Your Read Only Token>' // generated on app.tina.ioclientId: '<Your Client ID>', // generated on app.tina.iobranch,schema: {// ...},})
The apiURL is configured to use the local Content API in development (to query your local files), and the hosted content API (with auth) in production.
The next step is to update your deployment configuration, so the TinaCMS admin gets built alongside your site. This allows your editors to enter the CMS through <your-site>/admin
(or your-site/admin/index.html
).
In general, you'll want to make sure that your build command is running tinacms build
before your site's build command. This will build the TinaCMS admin alongside your site. You'll also want to make sure that your Tina NEXT_PUBLIC_TINA_CLIENT_ID
and TINA_TOKEN
are setup as environment variables on your host.
We have docs for some popular deployment options:
Product
Resources
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