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Route Data

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When Starlight renders a page in your documentation, it first creates a route data object to represent what is on that page. This guide explains how route data is generated, how to use it, and how you can customize it to modify Starlight’s default behavior.

See the “Route Data Reference” for a full list of the available properties.

What is route data?

Starlight route data is an object containing all the information required to render a single page. It includes information for the current page as well as data generated from your Starlight configuration.

Using route data

All of Starlight’s components use route data to decide what to render for each page. For example, the siteTitle string is used to display the site title and the sidebar array is used to render the global sidebar navigation.

You can access this data from the Astro.locals.starlightRoute global in Astro components:

example.astro
---
const { siteTitle } = Astro.locals.starlightRoute;
---
<p>The title of this site is “{siteTitle}</p>

This can be useful for example when building component overrides to customize what you display.

Customizing route data

Starlight’s route data works out of the box and does not require any configuration. However, for advanced use cases, you may want to customize route data for some or all pages to modify how your site displays.

This is a similar concept to component overrides, but instead of modifying how Starlight renders your data, you modify the data Starlight renders.

When to customize route data

Customizing route data can be useful when you want to modify how Starlight processes your data in a way not possible with existing configuration options.

For example, you may want to filter sidebar items or customize titles for specific pages. Changes like this do not require modifying Starlight’s default components, only the data passed to those components.

How to customize route data

You can customize route data using a special form of “middleware”. This is a function that is called every time Starlight renders a page and can modify values in the route data object.

  1. Create a new file exporting an onRequest function using Starlight’s defineRouteMiddleware() utility:

    src/routeData.ts
    import { defineRouteMiddleware } from '@astrojs/starlight/route-data';
    export const onRequest = defineRouteMiddleware(() => {});
  2. Tell Starlight where your route data middleware file is located in astro.config.mjs:

    astro.config.mjs
    import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
    import starlight from '@astrojs/starlight';
    export default defineConfig({
    integrations: [
    starlight({
    title: 'My delightful docs site',
    routeMiddleware: './src/routeData.ts',
    }),
    ],
    });
  3. Update your onRequest function to modify route data.

    The first argument your middleware will receive is Astro’s context object. This contains full information about the current page render, including the current URL and locals.

    In this example, we are going to make our docs more exciting by adding an exclamation mark to the end of every page’s title.

    src/routeData.ts
    import { defineRouteMiddleware } from '@astrojs/starlight/route-data';
    export const onRequest = defineRouteMiddleware((context) => {
    // Get the content collection entry for this page.
    const { entry } = context.locals.starlightRoute;
    // Update the title to add an exclamation mark.
    entry.data.title = entry.data.title + '!';
    });

Multiple route middleware

Starlight also supports providing multiple middleware. Set routeMiddleware to an array of paths to add more than one middleware handler:

astro.config.mjs
import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';
import starlight from '@astrojs/starlight';
export default defineConfig({
integrations: [
starlight({
title: 'My site with multiple middleware',
routeMiddleware: ['./src/middleware-one.ts', './src/middleware-two.ts'],
}),
],
});

Waiting for later route middleware

To wait for middleware later in the stack to run before executing your code, you can await the next() callback passed as the second argument to your middleware function. This can be useful to wait for a plugin’s middleware to run before making changes for example.

src/routeData.ts
import { defineRouteMiddleware } from '@astrojs/starlight/route-data';
export const onRequest = defineRouteMiddleware(async (context, next) => {
// Wait for later middleware to run.
await next();
// Modify route data.
const { entry } = context.locals.starlightRoute;
entry.data.title = entry.data.title + '!';
});