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- snkt
- Installation
- Quick Start
- Command Line Options
- Configuration
- Posts
- Templates
- Advanced Configuration Options
- Work in Progress Features
- Example configurations, sites, themes
- Rebuild and deployment recipes
- TODO
- Feedback
snkt
snkt
is a static site generator focused on simplicity and efficiency.
snkt
does a few things, but strives to do them coherently.
snkt
generates my personal web site of ~2000 articles in under a second. It should be fast enough to completely regenerate even very large sites in near real-time if needed.
Why
Every 5-10 years I throw out the software for my site and rewrite it.
This time it's in Go. Maybe you'll find it useful. It's 10x faster than the old version in Python.
Status
It powers trenchant.org but is under active development and pieces may change. See TODO for future / in progress work.
Installation
The only dependency for building is go
.
Install Go for your platform.
Download and build snkt
with something like
$ go get adammathes.com/snkt
This will download dependencies, build snkt
and place it in your $GOPATH/bin (by default, ~/go/bin/).
snkt
is a self-contained binary, you can move it anywhere.
Quick Start
Creating a Site
Use the "-init" option to create the skeleton for a new site -
$ snkt -i myblog
This will create:
txt
directory for postshtml
directory for HTML outputtmpl
directory for templatesbase
HTML structure wrapperarchive
lists all postspost
single post pagehome
home page with recent postsrss
RSS 2.0
config.yml
configuration file
First Post
A one line plaint text file is a valid post.
user@host:~/myblog$ echo "hello world" >> txt/hi
Build the site
$ snkt -b
Output should now be in the html
directory and look like
html
hi/index.html
hello world postindex.html
archive.html
rss.xml
Viewing the Results
snkt
includes a simple web server to view the results with
$ snkt -p
Visiting http://localhost:8000 in a web browser should now show the site and the first post.
You can now copy this HTML anywhere and you're set.
Command Line Options
Usage of snkt:
-b, --build
generates site from input files and templates
-c, --config configuration
configuration file (default "config.yml")
-h, --help
print usage information
-i, --init directory
initialize new site at directory
-s, --serve
serve site via integrated HTTP server
-v, --verbose
log operations during build to STDOUT
-w, --watch
watch configured input text dir, rebuild on changes
Examples
$ snkt -c site.yaml -b
$ snkt --config=myconfig.yml -v -w
Configuration
Per site configuration is via a YAML file.
For most purposes, it should just be a listing of attribute : value
Configuration options --
name | value | default |
---|---|---|
input_dir |
absolute path of directory for text input files | |
output_dir |
absolute path of directory for html output files | |
tmpl_dir |
absolute path of directory for template files | |
site_title |
string for the site's title | |
site_url |
absolute URL for the site | |
filters |
list of search/replace regex's to run on posts | |
permalink_fmt |
format string for permalinks | /%F/ |
post_file_fmt |
format string for post filenames | /%F/index.html |
show_future |
include posts with dates in the future | false |
preview_server |
host:port to spawn the preview server | localhost:8000 |
preview_dir |
root directory of preview server | output_dir |
Posts
Post inputs are stored as plain text files. (I have only tested UTF-8 and ASCII.)
Posts have an optional metadata preamble, and a markdown formatted body. The preamble is just a series of name value pairings separated by a colon (:) character.
Minimal complete and valid post --
this is a totally valid post
Post with a preamble --
title: also a valid post
date: 2017-02-08
valid: totes
This post will have an explicitly set title (ooh! fancy!)
instead of inferred from the filename.
It will also have an explicitly set date instead of inferring
it from the file creation/modification time.
`totes` will be stored in the post's `meta` map under `valid.`
You don't have to worry about that right now. Honest.
Templates
Templates use the standard library Go text/template.
Entities in the templates --
Site
Title string
URL string
Posts array of posts
See site/site.go for more.
Post
// Metadata
Meta map[string]string
SourceFile string
Title string
Permalink string
Time time.Time
Year int
Month time.Month
Day int
InFuture bool
// Content text -- raw, unprocessed, unfiltered markdown
Text string
// Content text -- processed into HTML via markdown and other filters
Content string
// Content with sources and references resolved to absolute URLs
AbsoluteContent string
// Post following chronologically (later)
Next *Post
// Post preceding chronologically (earlier)
Prev *Post
// Precomputed dates as strings
Date string
RssDate string
home
Displays recent posts and rendered to index.html
in the output_dir
.
- {{.Site}} Site
- {{.Posts}} Posts all posts on site in reverse chronological order
post
Each individual post uses this template
- {{.Site}} Site
- {{.Post}} Post the individual post
archive
Lists all posts, showing only titles and links. Rendered to archive.html
- {{.Site}} Site
- {{.Posts}} Posts all posts, reverse chronological order
rss
Displays recent posts as RSS 2.0 XML. Rendered to rss.xml
- {{.Site}} Site
- {{.Posts}} Posts all posts, reverse chronological order
Advanced Configuration Options
Permalink and filename formatter
Permalinks (URLs for individual posts) can be customized.
String | Value | Example |
---|---|---|
%Y | Year | 2017 |
%M | Month | 04 |
%D | Day | 14 |
%F | Filename | foo |
%T | Title | bar |
Filename
is a cleaned version of the post's original filename with the extension removed. Filenames and titles will be "cleaned" of characters unsuitable for links, with whitespace replaced by -
.
Filters
Arbitrary regular expressions can be executed on each post to create domain-specific and site-specific modifications.
Here are the real world examples of regular expressions that filter each post on my personal site -
filters:
- s: <photo id="(.+)">
r: <div class="photo"><img src="/img/$1" /></div>
- s: <segue />
r: <p class="segue">· · ·</p>
- s: <youtube id="(.+)">
r: <p class="video"><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=$1"><img src="/img/$1.jpg" /></a></p>
- s: "amazon:(.+)"
r: "http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/$1/decommodify-20/"
Work in Progress Features
These features are working but less documented and potentially still in progress and subject to change.
Paged Archives
If a template named paged
is present then paged archives (15 posts per page) are created at output_dir/page/%d.html
Template variables are the same as the archive
template, but with .NextPage
and .PrevPage
as integers of the next and previous page.
See archive/paged.go for details.
Tags
There is preliminary support for tag style metadata per post.
Add a "tags" field to your post preamble. Tags should be comma separated.
tags: TagOne, tag two, a third tag, fourth
Tags will be normalized to lowercase, with spaces replaced with underscores. So the above would have tagged a post with --
tagone tag_two a_third_tag fourth
Tags are accessible in each post via the Tags
field.
To create pages by tag, create a template named tags
.
This creates a file at OUTPUT_DIR/tag/tag_name/index.html for each tag.
It will have access to the same variables as an archive
template with the additional .Tag
for the tag name.
Binary Files as Posts
Preliminary support to treat binary files as standalone posts.
Drop image files with "jpg" or other image extensions into the "txt" dir.
- post's ContentType will be set to "image"
- text fields will be empty strings
- metadata will be populated as it can via exif (maybe)
Video and audio files have preliminary support too -- see post/post.go
Example configurations, sites, themes
not done
Rebuild and deployment recipes
also not done
TODO
- sample sites/templates
- proper man pages for docs
Feedback
Pull requests and issues are welcomed at https://github.com/adammathes/snkt