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wordpress-export-to-markdown

A script that converts a WordPress export XML file into Markdown files suitable for a static site generator (Gatsby, Hugo, Jekyll, etc.).

Each post is saved as a separate Markdown file with appropriate frontmatter. Images are also downloaded and saved. Embedded content from YouTube, Twitter, CodePen, etc. is carefully preserved.

wordpress-export-to-markdown running in a terminal

Quick Start

You'll need:

It is recommended that you drop your WordPress export file into the same directory that you run this script from so it's easy to find.

You can run this script immediately in your terminal with npx:

npx wordpress-export-to-markdown

Or you can clone and run (this makes repeated runs faster and allows you to tinker with the code). After cloning this repo, open your terminal to the package's directory and run:

npm install && node index.js

Either way you run it, the script will start the wizard. Answer the questions and off you go!

Command Line

The wizard makes it easy to configure your options, but you can also do so via the command line if you want. For example, the following will give you Jekyll-style output in terms of folder structure and filenames.

Using npx:

npx wordpress-export-to-markdown --post-folders=false --prefix-date=true

Using a locally cloned repo:

node index.js --post-folders=false --prefix-date=true

The wizard will still ask you about any options not specifed on the command line. To skip the wizard entirely and use default values for unspecified options, add --wizard=false.

Options

Use wizard?

  • Argument: --wizard
  • Type: boolean
  • Default: true

Enable to have the script prompt you for each option. Disable to skip the wizard and use default values for any options not specified via the command line.

Path to WordPress export file?

  • Argument: --input
  • Type: file (as a path string)
  • Default: export.xml

The path to the WordPress export file that you want to parse. It is recommended that you drop your WordPress export file into the same directory that you run this script from so it's easy to find.

Path to output folder?

  • Argument: --output
  • Type: folder (as a path string)
  • Default: output

The path to the output directory where Markdown and image files will be saved. If it does not exist, it will be created for you.

Create year folders?

  • Argument: --year-folders
  • Type: boolean
  • Default: false

Whether or not to organize output files into folders by year.

Create month folders?

  • Argument: --month-folders
  • Type: boolean
  • Default: false

Whether or not to organize output files into folders by month. You'll probably want to combine this with --year-folders to organize files by year then month.

Create a folder for each post?

  • Argument: --post-folders
  • Type: boolean
  • Default: true

Whether or not to save files and images into post folders.

If true, the post slug is used for the folder name and the post's Markdown file is named index.md. Each post folder will have its own /images folder.

/first-post
    /images
        potato.png
    index.md
/second-post
    /images
        carrot.jpg
        celery.jpg
    index.md

If false, the post slug is used to name the post's Markdown file. These files will be side-by-side and images will go into a shared /images folder.

/images
    carrot.jpg
    celery.jpg
    potato.png
first-post.md
second-post.md

Either way, this can be combined with with --year-folders and --month-folders, in which case the above output will be organized under the appropriate year and month folders.

Prefix post folders/files with date?

  • Argument: --prefix-date
  • Type: boolean
  • Default: false

Whether or not to prepend the post date to the post slug when naming a post's folder or file.

If --post-folders is true, this affects the folder.

/2019-10-14-first-post
    index.md
/2019-10-23-second-post
    index.md

If --post-folders is false, this affects the file.

2019-10-14-first-post.md
2019-10-23-second-post.md

Save images attached to posts?

  • Argument: --save-attached-images
  • Type: boolean
  • Default: true

Whether or not to download and save images attached to posts. Generally speaking, these are images that were uploaded by using Add Media or Set Featured Image when editing a post in WordPress. Images are saved into /images.

Save images scraped from post body content?

  • Argument: --save-scraped-images
  • Type: boolean
  • Default: true

Whether or not to download and save images scraped from <img> tags in post body content. Images are saved into /images. The <img> tags are updated to point to where the images are saved.

Include custom post types and pages?

  • Argument: --include-other-types
  • Type: boolean
  • Default: false

Some WordPress sites make use of a "page" post type and/or custom post types. Set this to true to include these post types in the results. Posts will be organized into post type folders.

Advanced Settings

You can edit settings.js to tweak advanced settings. This includes things like throttling image downloads or customizing the date format in frontmatter.

You'll need to run the script locally (not using npx) to make use of advanced settings.

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Converts a WordPress export XML file into Markdown files.

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