Keystone helps you build faster and scale further than any other CMS or App Framework. Describe your schema, and get a powerful GraphQL API & beautiful Management UI for your content and data.
No boilerplate or bootstrapping – just elegant APIs to help you ship the code that matters without sacrificing the flexibility or power of a bespoke back-end.
see ADDLANG.md
- Add Lang
- Contents
- Usage & Documentation
- Enjoying Keystone?
- Version control
- Code of Conduct
- Security
- License
Keystone 6 is published to npm under the @keystone-6/*
namespace.
You can find our extended documentation on our website, but some quick links that might be helpful:
- Read Why Keystone to learn about our vision and what's in the box.
- Getting Started walks you through first steps with the
create-keystone-app
CLI. - Our Examples contain a growing collection of projects you can run locally to learn more about a Keystone feature.
- An API Reference contains the details on Keystone's foundational building blocks.
- Some Guides offer practical walkthroughs on how to build with those blocks.
💡 While our
API Reference
is generally complete, we are are still working hard on increasing the fidelity of ourguides
andexamples
. If you have an example you'd like see, please open a GitHub discussion!
Our @keystone-6/*
packages are written for the Node Maintenance and Active LTS versions of Node; and our continuous integration seamlessly tracks that.
You may have success with Node versions that are Pending or End-of-Life, but you may have problems too.
The Keystone 5 codebase is now in maintenance mode and lives at keystonejs/keystone-5. For more information read Keystone 5 and beyond.
- Star this repo 🌟 ☝️
- Follow Keystone on Twitter
- Join the conversation in Keystone community Slack.
For a birds-eye view of what the Keystone project is working towards, check out our Roadmap.
Share your thoughts and feature requests on Slack (preferred) or Twitter. Bugfixes and issues always welcome.
We do our best to follow SemVer version control within Keystone. This means package versions have 3 numbers. A change in the first number indicates a breaking change, the second number indicates backward compatible feature and the third number indicates a bug fix.
You can find changelogs either by browsing our repository, or by using our interactive changelog explorer.
A quick note on dependency management: Keystone is organised into a number of small packages within a monorepo. When packages in the same repository depend on each other, new versions might not be compatible with older versions. If two or more packages are updated, it can result in breaking changes, even though collectively they appear to be non-breaking.
We do our best to catch this but recommend updating Keystone packages together to avoid any potential conflict. This is especially important to be aware of if you use automated dependency management tools like Greenkeeper.
KeystoneJS adheres to the Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct.
For vulnerability reporting, please refer to our security policy.
Copyright (c) 2022 Thinkmill Labs Pty Ltd. Licensed under the MIT License.