-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 4
fast static site generator; powers https://anirudh.fi
License
icyphox/go-vite
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
vite ---- A fast (this time, actually) and minimal static site generator. INSTALLING go install git.icyphox.sh/vite@latest USAGE usage: vite [options] A simple and minimal static site generator. options: init PATH create vite project at PATH build builds the current project new PATH create a new markdown post serve [HOST:PORT] serves the 'build' directory CONFIG The configuration is unmarshalled from a config.yaml file, into the below struct: type ConfigYaml struct { Title string `yaml:"title"` Desc string `yaml:"description"` DefaultTemplate string `yaml:"-"` Author struct { Name string `yaml:"name"` Email string `yaml:"email"` } `yaml:"author"` URL string `yaml:"url"` PreBuild []string `yaml:"preBuild"` PostBuild []string `yaml:"postBuild"` } Example config: https://git.icyphox.sh/site/tree/config.yaml SYNTAX HIGHLIGHTING vite uses chroma (https://github.com/alecthomas/chroma) for syntax highlighting. Note that CSS is not provided, and will have to be included by the user in the templates. A sample style can be generated by running: go run contrib/style.go > syntax.css TEMPLATING Non-index templates have access to the below objects: • Cfg: object of ConfigYaml • Meta: map[string]string of the page's frontmatter metadata • Body: Contains the HTML Index templates have access to everything above, and an Extra object, which is a slice of types.Post containing Body and Meta. This is useful for iterating through to generate an index page. Example: https://git.icyphox.sh/site/tree/templates/index.html Templates are written as standard Go templates (ref: https://godocs.io/text/template), and can be loaded recursively. Consider the below template structure: templates/ |-- blog.html |-- index.html |-- project/ |-- index.html `-- project.html The templates under project/ are referenced as project/index.html. This deserves mention because Go templates don't recurse into subdirectories by default (template.ParseGlob uses filepath.Glob, and doesn't support deep-matching, i.e. **). vite also supports templating generic YAML files. Take for instance, pages/reading.yaml (https://git.icyphox.sh/site/blob/master/pages/reading.yaml): meta: template: reading.html title: reading subtitle: Tracking my reading. description: I use this page to track my reading. books: - 2024: - name: Dune Messiah link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dune_Messiah author: Frank Herbert status: now reading - 2023: - name: Dune link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dune_(novel) author: Frank Herbert status: finished vite will look for a 'meta' key in the YAML file, and use the 'template' specified to render the page. The rest of the YAML file is available to you in the template as a map[string]interface{} called Yaml. More templating examples can be found at: https://git.icyphox.sh/site/tree/templates FEEDS Atom feeds are generated for all directories under pages/. So pages/foo will have a Atom feed at build/foo/feed.xml. FILE TREE . |-- build/ |-- config.yaml |-- pages/ |-- static/ |-- templates/ The entire static/ directory gets copied over to build/, and can be used to reference static assets -- css, images, etc. pages/ supports only nesting one directory deep; for example: pages/blog/*.md will render, but pages/blog/foo/*.md will not. BUGS Or rather, (undocumented) features. There's probably a couple. If you are actually using this, feel free to reach out and I can try to help.
Releases
No releases published
Packages 0
No packages published