Netlify CMS is a React application, using Redux for state management with immutable data structures (immutable.js).

The core abstractions for content editing are collections, entries, and widgets.

Each collection represents a collection of entries. This can either be a collection of similar entries with the same structure, or a set of entries where each has its own structure.

The structure of an entry is defined as a series of fields, each with a name, a label, and a widget.

The widget determines the UI widget that the content editor will use when editing this field of an entry, as well as how the content of the field is presented in the editing preview.

Entries are loaded and persisted through a backend that will typically represent a git repository.

State shape / reducers

Auth: Keeps track of the logged state and the current user.

Config: Holds the environment configuration (backend type, available collections and fields).

Collections: List of available collections, their fields and metadata information.

Entries: Entries for each field.

EntryDraft: Reused for each entry that is edited or created. It holds the entry’s temporary data until it’s persisted on the backend.

Selectors

Selectors are functions defined within reducers used to compute derived data from the Redux store. The available selectors are:

selectEntry: Selects a single entry, given the collection and a slug.

selectEntries: Selects all entries for a given collection.

getAsset: Selects a single AssetProxy object for the given path.

Value Objects

AssetProxy: AssetProxy is a Value Object that holds information regarding an asset file (for example, an image), whether it’s persisted online or held locally in cache.

For a file persisted online, the AssetProxy only keeps information about its URI. For local files, the AssetProxy will keep a reference to the actual File object while generating the expected final URIs and on-demand blobs for local preview.

The AssetProxy object can be used directly inside a media tag (such as <img>), as it will always return something that can be used by the media tag to render correctly (either the URI for the online file or a single-use blob).

Components structure and Workflows

Components are separated into two main categories: Container components and Presentational components.

Entry Editing

For either updating an existing entry or creating a new one, the EntryEditor is used and the flow is the same:

Widget components implementation

The control component receives one (1) callback as a prop: onChange.

Both control and preview widgets receive a getAsset selector via props. Displaying the media (or its URI) for the user should always be done via getAsset, as it returns an AssetProxy that can return the correct value for both medias already persisted on the server and cached media not yet uploaded.

The actual persistence of the content and medias inserted into the control component is delegated to the backend implementation. The backend will be called with the updated values and a list of assetProxy objects for each field of the entry, and should return a promise that can resolve into the persisted entry object and the list of the persisted media URIs.

Editorial Workflow implementation

Instead of adding logic to CollectionPage and EntryPage, the Editorial Workflow is implemented as Higher Order Components, adding UI and dispatching additional actions.

Furthermore, all editorial workflow state is managed in Redux - there’s an actions/editorialWorkflow.js file and a reducers/editorialWorkflow.js file.

About metadata

Netlify CMS embraces the idea of Git-as-backend for storing metadata. The first time it runs with the editorial_workflow setup, it creates a new ref called meta/_netlify_cms, pointing to an empty, orphan tree.

Actual data are stored in individual json files committed to this tree.