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1--- title: /blog.html
2--- description: Blog is a command-line tool to author and manage a semi-ephemeralâ„¢ blog with a gemini archive.
3## Blog
4
5Command line tool to author and manage a semi-ephemeralâ„¢ blog with a gemini archive.
6
7=> https://git.r.bdr.sh/rbdr/blog view source @ git.r.bdr.sh
8=> https://git.sr.ht/~rbdr/blog source mirror @ sourcehut
9
10## Install
11
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12At the moment only installation from source is available. Clone this repository and run:
13
14```
15pnpm install -g .
16```
17
18This will add the `blog` command to your shell.
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19
20## Usage I: Authoring
21
22### Add a New Post
23
24Create a `.gmi` gemini file.
25
26You can add this to the blog using the following command:
27```
28blog --add path/to/blog_post.gmi
29```
30
31This it will shift all posts and remove the oldest one if the limit of posts is reached (defualts to 3). This will also regenerate the static files.
32
33### Updating the Latest post
34
35If you need to make corrections to the latest post, use:
36
37```
38blog --update path/to/blog_post.gmi
39```
40
41This will replace the latest with the contents of the `path` without shifting the existing entries. It will also regenerate files.
42
43### Regenerate Static files.
44
45Adding and updating posts regenerates the blog and archive, but you can always regenerate manually (eg. if you updated your static assets or templates):
46
47```
48blog --generate
49```
50
51## Usage II: Publishing
52
53Publishing the blog and archive requires `rsync`.
54
55### Publishing the Blog
56
57You can publish to any valid `rsync` target (eg. ruben@coolserver.local:blog)
58
59```
60blog --publish <remote_server>
61```
62
63This publishes the static files, including the html index, rss feed and plaintext version of the ephemeral blog.
64
65### Publishing the Archive
66
67You can also publish the archive of posts as a gemlog by passing a valid rsync target
68
69```
70blog --publish-archive <remote_server>
71```
72
73This will include *all the posts* in gemtext format.
74
75## Usage III: Source Control
76
77Blog supports saving snapshots of the blog in git, and you can add and remove remotes with the following commands:
78
79```
80blog --add-remote <git_url>
81blog --remove-remote
82```
83
84If a remote is present, it will be pulled before adding or updating, and pushed after it finishes. You can manually trigger this by calling
85
86```
87blog --sync-up
88blog --sync-down
89```
90
91The blog will always sync down before adding to avoid going out of sync.
92
93**IF YOU CHANGE ANY FILES MANUALLY, REMEMBER TO SYNC UP, OTHERWISE YOUR CHANGES WILL BE LOST**
94
95## Usage IV: Customizing
96
97The default templates included in blog are very generic and likely not helpful for your use case. However, you can customize this freely:
98
99### Using Custom Templates
100
101You can override the default templates by creating a `templates` directory inside your blog data root (`$XDG_DATA_HOME/blog`).
102
103For the ephemeral blog you can create `feed.xml`, `index.html`, and `index.txt` inside of `templates`. These files are then parsed with [dot][dot] and passed the following variables:
104
105```
106it.posts <Array<Post>>
107
108Post
109 +id <String> // The numerical timestamp when the blog post was added.
110 +createdOn <String> // The UTC String of post creation date. (only feed.xml)
111 +title <String> // The title of the post. (only feed.xml)
112 +raw <String> // The raw gemini text of the template.
113 +html <String> // The parsed html generated from the gemini.
114```
115
116To customize your gemini archive you can provide an `index.gmi` file that will be used as a template for the archive. However the data structure is different, as it's just the gemini URL strings:
117
118```
119it.posts <Array<String>>
120```
121
122### Using Static Files
123
124Any files inside the `static` directory of your blog data root (`$XDG_DATA_HOME/blog`) will be copied as is. This is useful for any images, javascript files or stylesheets that you use in your posts or templates.
125
126## Usage V: Where is Data Stored?
127
128Blog uses three diretories to store data, all of them using the XDG User
129Directories.
130
131=> https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/XDG_user_directories XDG User Directories.
132
133- Configuration is stored in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/blog
134- Data such as the raw blog, templates, and static files are stored in $XDG_DATA_HOME/blog
135- Generated "ready to upload" files are stored in $XDG_CACHE_HOME/blog
136
137All of these can be overridden by environment variables.
138
139## Usage VI: Configuration
140
141You can control the number of posts in the ephemeral blog, and the location of
142all the data by using environment variables.
143
144### Overriding Number of Posts
145
146Updating the `BLOG_MAX_POSTS` environment variable sets the number of posts
147that will be kept.
148
149### Overriding Configuration Directory
150
151You can set the `BLOG_CONFIG_DIRECTORY` to any directory you want. This
152defaults to `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/blog/` and is used to store the blog remote
153config.
154
155### Overriding Data Directory
156
157Setting `BLOG_DATA_DIRECTORY` will update where the posts, archive, static
158files, and templates are saved. The default is the `$XDG_DATA_HOME/blog`.
159
160### Overriding the location of generated files.
161
162Setting `BLOG_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY` will update where generated files are placed.
163
164The default is `$XDG_CACHE_HOME/blog`.
165
166## Changelog
167
168* 6.0.0 Use custom templates, use XDG directories.
169* 5.0.2 Internal template changes
170* 5.0.1 Dependency update
171* 5.0.0 Publish using rsync instead of s3
172* 4.0.0 Add gemini archive
173* 3.0.0 Add support for RSS and TXT
174* 2.0.0 Add support for S3 publishing
175* 1.0.1 Bugs and dependency fixes
176* 1.0.0 Initial release