git-blog intends to be blogging, simplified. You'll write your posts in your
favorite text editor, with your favorite markup. Then save the post's file,
git add
the post, and then git push origin master
. git-blog, running on
your server, will catch the push and parse the post to your static HTML blog.
Fast, no dynamic code being run on every load, free post versioning (git
revisions), free sections (git branches), freedom of mind.
git-blog will never be featureful, but it will also never be bloated. I doubt
I will ever do anything more than parsing the posts to static HTML on every
git push
.
To prepare a new git-blog, run this task from the cloned git-blog repository, replacing ~/Documents/Blog
(my personal favorite location) the name of the folder where you want your blog to exist locally:
rake create[~/Documents/Blog]
After this is complete, move to that folder (something along the lines of cd ~/Documents/Blog
), and then add any remote repositories to which you wish to push your blog. Most likely, this will include the server hosting your blog to the web. The simplest setup to push to this server is an SSH connection - if you have SSH access to your server/host, you can run this to set up git-blog for pushing:
git remote add blog [email protected]:/path/to/server/blog/folder
This will prepare a remote named 'blog' to which you can push your changes. In addition, if you use GitHub, you can also push your blog there. Create a new repository on GitHub, and then use this to automatically set up that remote for you:
rake github[github_username,github_repo]
Now, you'll want to set up the server to host git-blog - this is fairly simple, about equable to setting up git-blog locally. The only addition, after creating the blog's directory on the server the same as you did locally (rake create[/path/to/server/blog/folder]
, from within the git-blog clone dir on your server), is preparing the post-receive hook. It's really simple - change directory to your new blog's folder on the server, and run this:
rake servable
Once your new blog is prepared, you'll want to write a post. Writing a new post is quite simple - run rake post
, and it will open your favorite $EDITOR
with a post prepared to edit.
You're free to format your blog posts however you want - at the moment there are parsers set up for Markdown, Textile, and Haml - and support for plain text and plain X)HTML. The only restriction when formatting, is that your post's title is on the very first line, formatted plainly in whatever way your parser supports. This title will not appear in the final post, and will instead be sent to the post template.
Once you've finished editing your post, save it, and close the window or exit the editor (whatever is appropriate for your editor of choice) - it will automatically add the new post to the index, and then commit it. You can repeat this process if you want to post more posts before pushing them to the server.
Now just push your beautiful new post(s) to the server:
git push blog
I suggest you run rake deploy
before comitting any new posts / changes to post - if you have a syntax error in one of your posts, the parser may not like it, and it's preferable to catch this before you commit the changes and push them to your blog.
git-blog will automatically re-parse all of your posts, and create an index file for your blog, after you git push
to the server. They're going to end up as simple static HTML, so there's nearly no load on your server when a page is visited - this makes a git-blog inherently faster and cheaper to run than any dynamic blog (such as Wordpress or Expression Engine) could ever be.
Your git-blog's design is all stored in the same repository as your posts - it consists of, simply, two Haml files that are rendered with the posts. One, post.haml
, is the layout framework into which your posts' content will be pushed; and the other, index.haml
, is the framework for the index page of your blog. Customizing the look and feel of your blog is as simple as modifying these two files to your liking, see the defaults for an example.
The git-blog rakefile itself is meant to be very hackable, and if you want to add further functionality - a different parsing system for your favorite markup, or extensions to the existing parsers for your frequently-used markup, or new blog features such as comments, trackbacks, feeds, and so on... it's as simple as fiddling around with git-blog's core. Don't be afraid, it's meant to be broken! If you do end up adding something cool to git-blog, I would very much appreciate it if you told me, I'll gladly link to your github fork from this README for other users to see.
The authoritative source for this project is available at http://github.com/elliottcable/git-blog. You can clone your own copy with the following command:
git clone git://github.com/elliottcable/git-blog.git
If you want to make changes to the codebase, you need to fork your own github repository for said changes. Send a pullrequest to elliottcable when you've got something ready for the master that you think should be integrated into the root source.
Bugs or feature requests can be submitted by forking a repository as previously described, and then using ditz to add an issue.
To run git-blog, you need git (obviously) - on a Macintosh, you can install it using MacPorts as follows:
sudo port install git-core
On a Linux or Windows machine, you're a bit more on your own, as I don't know how to install it on Windows, and I'm assuming a person using a Linux distrib is proficient enough to figure it out. In addition, you need the following gems:
gem install git
gem install haml
(if you wish to create your templates or write your posts in haml)gem install RedCloth
(if you wish to write your posts in Textile)- One of the following Markdown libraries (if you wish to write your posts in Markdown)
**
sudo gem install rdiscount
**sudo gem install rpeg-markdown
**sudo gem install maruku
**sudo gem install BlueCloth
To develop and contribute to git-blog, you also need:
gem install rspec
gem install rake
gem install rcov
gem install technomancy-ditz --source=http://gems.github.com