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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
5 Command 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
12 ### Homebrew
13
14 You can install using homebrew.
15
16 ```
17 % brew tap rbdr/apps git@git.sr.ht:~rbdr/homebrew-apps
18 % brew install rbdr/apps/blog
19 ```
20
21 ### From Source
22
23 Make sure you have rust and Make installed. Clone the repository, and run:
24
25 ```
26 % make -e profile=release
27 ```
28
29 Then copy the file somewhere in your PATH
30
31 ```
32 % cp ./target/release/blog /usr/local/bin
33 ```
34
35 ## Usage I: Authoring
36
37 ### Add a New Post
38
39 Create a `.gmi` gemini file.
40
41 You can add this to the blog using the following command:
42 ```
43 blog add path/to/blog_post.gmi
44 ```
45
46 This 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.
47
48 ### Updating the Latest post
49
50 If you need to make corrections to the latest post, use:
51
52 ```
53 blog update path/to/blog_post.gmi
54 ```
55
56 This will replace the latest with the contents of the `path` without shifting the existing entries. It will also regenerate files.
57
58 ### Regenerate Static files.
59
60 Adding and updating posts regenerates the blog and archive, but you can always regenerate manually (eg. if you updated your static assets or templates):
61
62 ```
63 blog generate
64 ```
65
66 ## Usage II: Publishing
67
68 Publishing the blog and archive requires `rsync`.
69
70 ### Publishing the Blog
71
72 You can publish to any valid `rsync` target (eg. ruben@coolserver.local:blog)
73
74 ```
75 blog publish <remote_server>
76 ```
77
78 This publishes the static files, including the html index, rss feed and plaintext version of the ephemeral blog.
79
80 ### Publishing the Archive
81
82 You can also publish the archive of posts as a gemlog by passing a valid rsync target
83
84 ```
85 blog publish-archive <remote_server>
86 ```
87
88 This will include *all the posts* in gemtext format.
89
90 ## Usage III: Source Control
91
92 Blog supports saving snapshots of the blog in git, and you can add and remove remotes with the following commands:
93
94 ```
95 blog add-remote <git_url>
96 blog remove-remote
97 ```
98
99 If a remote is present, it will be pulled before adding or updating, and pushed after it finishes. You can manually trigger this by calling
100
101 ```
102 blog sync-up
103 blog sync-down
104 ```
105
106 The blog will always sync down before adding to avoid going out of sync.
107
108 **IF YOU CHANGE ANY FILES MANUALLY, REMEMBER TO SYNC UP, OTHERWISE YOUR CHANGES WILL BE LOST**
109
110 ## Usage IV: Customizing
111
112 The default templates included in blog are very generic and likely not helpful for your use case. However, you can customize this freely:
113
114 ### Using Custom Templates
115
116 You can override the default templates by creating a `templates` directory inside your blog data root (`$XDG_DATA_HOME/blog`).
117
118 For 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:
119
120 ```
121 posts <Array<Post>> // The array of posts
122 has_posts <Boolean> // Whether the posts array has any posts or not
123 posts_length <Integer> // The number of posts in the posts array
124
125 Post
126 +id <String> // The id of the post
127 +created_on <String> // The numerical timestamp when the blog post was added
128 +created_on_utc <String> // The RFC-2822 String of post creation date
129 +title <String> // The title of the post
130 +raw <String> // The raw gemini text of the template
131 +html <String> // The parsed html generated from the gemini
132 +escaped_html <String> // Same as html, but escaped for inclusion in XML
133 ```
134
135 To customize your gemini and gopher archives you can provide an `index.gmi` and `index.gph` files that will be used as templates for the archive. However the data structure is different:
136
137 ```
138 posts <Array<ArchivePost>> // The array of posts
139 archive_length <Integer> // The number of archive posts in the posts array
140
141 Post
142 +id <String> // The id of the post
143 +slug <String> // The slug of the post (used to generate URLs)
144 +title <String> // The title of the post
145 ```
146
147 ### The Template Syntax
148
149 The template is a subset of DoT. You can print values, iterate over arrays, or check conditionals. The template does not allow expressions. You can only reference keys in the structure above.
150
151 You can print values
152
153 ```
154 {{= posts.raw }}
155 ```
156
157 You can iterate over collections. With the format COLLECTION: MEMBER, where MEMBER will become part of the template below, and the template will be repeated for each member of COLLECTION.
158
159 ```
160 {{~ posts: post }}
161 {{= post.html}}
162 {{~}}
163 ```
164
165 Finally, you can do conditionals. To negate a conditional you can prepend !.
166
167 ```
168 {{# !has_posts }}
169 <p> There are no posts </p>
170 {{#}}
171 ```
172
173 => https://olado.github.io/doT/index.html DoT template language.
174
175 ### Using Static Files
176
177 Any 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.
178
179 ## Usage V: Where is Data Stored?
180
181 Blog uses three diretories to store data, all of them using the XDG User
182 Directories.
183
184 => https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/XDG_user_directories XDG User Directories.
185
186 - Configuration is stored in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/blog
187 - Data such as the raw blog, templates, and static files are stored in $XDG_DATA_HOME/blog
188 - Generated "ready to upload" files are stored in $XDG_CACHE_HOME/blog
189
190 All of these can be overridden by environment variables.
191
192 ## Usage VI: Configuration
193
194 You can control the number of posts in the ephemeral blog, and the location of
195 all the data by using environment variables.
196
197 ### Overriding Number of Posts
198
199 Updating the `BLOG_MAX_POSTS` environment variable sets the number of posts
200 that will be kept.
201
202 ### Overriding Configuration Directory
203
204 You can set the `BLOG_CONFIG_DIRECTORY` to any directory you want. This
205 defaults to `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/blog/` and is used to store the blog remote
206 config.
207
208 ### Overriding Data Directory
209
210 Setting `BLOG_DATA_DIRECTORY` will update where the posts, archive, static
211 files, and templates are saved. The default is the `$XDG_DATA_HOME/blog`.
212
213 ### Overriding the location of generated files.
214
215 Setting `BLOG_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY` will update where generated files are placed.
216
217 The default is `$XDG_CACHE_HOME/blog`.
218
219 ## Changelog
220
221 * 6.0.0 Use custom templates, use XDG directories.
222
223 => ./blog_6.0.0.gmi Deprecated documentation for blog 6.0.0
224
225 * 5.0.2 Internal template changes
226 * 5.0.1 Dependency update
227 * 5.0.0 Publish using rsync instead of s3
228 * 4.0.0 Add gemini archive
229 * 3.0.0 Add support for RSS and TXT
230 * 2.0.0 Add support for S3 publishing
231 * 1.0.1 Bugs and dependency fixes
232 * 1.0.0 Initial release