🗣 Easy text-to-speech for your Gatsby site, powered by Amazon Polly.
Check out the
▶️ LIVE DEMO!
Also check out the example project repository!
npm install --save gatsby-mdx-tts
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In order to use this plugin you need an AWS account. You can use the text-to-speech service (AWS Polly) for free for the first 12 months (up to a couple million words to be precise).
Attention: If you exceed the limits or use it after your initial free tier, using this plugin will generate costs in your AWS account! Read how you can save money by using an external cache.
-
As this is a plugin for gatsby-plugin-mdx it will only work if you have that plugin installed and configured properly as well.
To include the plugin just add it to your gatsby-plugin-mdx
configuration in the gatsbyRemarkPlugin
section. In case you have multiple gatsbyRemarkPlugins
configured is very important that you put the gatsby-mdx-tts
plugin to first position!
Also, you need to include a couple of mandatory configurations:
// In your gatsby-config.js
plugins: [
{
resolve: `gatsby-plugin-mdx`,
options: {
gatsbyRemarkPlugins: [
{
resolve: "gatsby-mdx-tts",
options: {
awsRegion: "us-east-1",
defaultVoiceId: "Justin",
},
},
],
},
},
],
The plugin requires your AWS credentials in order to generate the text-to-speech files.
Important: For security reasons it is not a good idea to keep access keys with administrator permissions on your local machine, without at least using MFA authentication. Even better is to restrict the AWS user's permissions to AmazonPollyReadOnlyAccess
, which is all this plugin needs.
There are various ways to provide your AWS credentials to the plugin. For example:
- Create a shared credentials file and add a profile for your AWS user that will use AWS Polly. You can either configure it as your default profile or use the
awsProfile
plugin option orAWS_PROFILE
environment variable to pass the custom profile name to the plugin.
// In your gatsby-config.js
{
resolve: "gatsby-mdx-tts",
options: {
awsProfile: "gatsby-mdx-tts",
},
},
- Use environment variables
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
andAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
to directly configure your user's access key (e.g. to build in a CI environment).
Option | Required | Example |
---|---|---|
awsRegion |
Yes | "us-east-1" |
defaultVoiceId |
Yes | "Justin" |
awsProfile |
No | "gatsby-mdx-tts" |
defaultSsmlTags |
No | "<prosody rate='70%'>$SPEECH_OUTPUT_TEXT</prosody>" |
defaultLexiconNames |
No | ["LexA", "LexB"] |
ignoredCharactersRegex |
No | /·/ |
speechOutputComponentNames |
No | ["CustomComponent"] |
skipRegeneratingIfExistingInPublicFolder |
No | true |
- For an overview of all supported SSML tags check out the supported SSML tags list in the AWS docs.
- The surrounding
<speak>
tag is added automatically. - The variable
$SPEECH_OUTPUT_TEXT
will be replaced with the speech output text.
If your text contains special characters that should not be vocalized (e.g. fear·ful
should be just read as fearful
) you can use the ignoredCharactersRegex
to define the characters to be ignored.
You might also want those words not to be split up during word marking. Therefore also check out Ignore word splitting characters.
If you want to use your own component to handle the generated speech output you can specify its name using the speechOutputComponentNames
option. The plugin will then use this instead of SpeechOutput
to extract the text to be used for TTS generation. It is also possible to define multiple component names. Like that you can customize the way speech output is handled. Find more information about this in the customization chapter.
Regenerating all the files for every cache invalidation can quickly get costly. To avoid regenerating files that are already existing in the public folder, activate this flag. Be aware that this will lead to outdated files if you change the MDX files!
After configuring the plugin you can now add the <SpeechOutput></SpeechOutput>
component to your MDX files. The surrounded content will then be playable. You can add multiple speech output blocks to your content, but make sure the id
is always set to an unique value over all occurrences. Also, it is important that there is an empty line between the SpeechOutput
tags and the content to get it working.
import SpeechOutput from "gatsby-mdx-tts/SpeechOutput.js"
This text will be outside the speech output.
<SpeechOutput id="inside">
But this text will be playable. Please consider that:
- The play button is added automatically.
- The words in this text are marked one by one during text output.
</SpeechOutput>
To define speech output parameters for individual <SpeechOutput>
components you can pass them as props. This will override the eventually configured default parameters.
Prop | Required | Example |
---|---|---|
id |
Yes | "my-individual-speech-output" |
lexiconNames |
No | ['LexA', 'LexB'] |
ssmlTags |
No | "<prosody rate='70%'>$SPEECH_OUTPUT_TEXT</prosody>" |
voiceId |
No | "Hans" |
<SpeechOutput voiceId="Hans" ssmlTags="<prosody rate='70%'>\$SPEECH_OUTPUT_TEXT</prosody>" id="my-individual-speech-output" lexiconNames={['LexA', 'LexB']}>
As you can see the order of the props does not matter. However, it is important to pass the props in the correct types (e.g. do not pass the lexiconNames
as a string but as an array).
To customize the play button you can use the optional SpeechOutput
component prop customPlayButton
. Just pass in your custom play button component.
If you choose to use a custom play button component, make sure it uses the PlayButtonProps
exported from this plugin.
You can replace the whole speech output handling by using your own React component instead of the default SpeechOutput
component. Like that, the TTS files are still generated during build phase but you can then do whatever you want with those files inside your component at runtime. To do so, use the speechOutputComponentNames
configuration option (see About speechOutputComponentNames
).
If you choose to use your own component, make sure it uses the SpeechOutputProps
exported from this plugin.
In case you would like to manage playing sounds by yourself you can pass an optional hook to the useCustomSoundHook
prop of the SpeechOutput
component. It has to follow the UseSoundHookSignature
type as exported from UseSound.ts
(which is the default sound hook).
You might use characters that split a word into two, e.g. fear·ful
. Those word parts are now marked individually by default. To avoid this, you can define the characters to ignore with the ignoredWordSplittingCharactersRegex
prop.
Probably you also don't want this character to be vocalized during speech output. Therefore make sure you also configure the ignoredCharactersRegex
in the plugin options.
To be able to react to certain events you can register the following event listeners:
When a speech output is played the spoken words are highlighted in the text simultaneously. The onWordMarked
listener is called as soon as a new word is highlighted and delivers the currently highlighted word as a string. When no word is highlighted (anymore) the string is empty.
Every time the internal Gatsby cache is cleared and your TTS files are regenerated AWS will bill you for it after exceeding the free tier. This can get quite expensive, especially for large projects.
To prevent this from happening too often you can use external caches. Here is a list of plugins you can use for this purpose:
- https://github.com/axe312ger/gatsby-plugin-netlify-cache
- https://github.com/axe312ger/gatsby-plugin-sftp-cache
Contributions are more than welcome! I would love to see text-to-speech becoming a thing in the already very accessible Gatsby ecosystem. If you agree with this and would like to join me on this mission it would be awesome to get in touch! 😊
Please feel free to create, comment and of course solve some of the issues. To get started you can also go for the easier issues marked with the good first issue
label if you like.
The MIT License
The gatsby-mdx-tts library is maintained and sponsored by the Swiss web and mobile app development company Florian Gyger Software.
If this library saved you some time and money please consider sponsoring me, so I can build more libraries for free and actively maintain them for you. Thank you 🙏
A big thank you goes to the current sponsors of this library:
Andrin Meier |