= Serious Serious is a blog engine inspired by other filesystem-based engines like jekyll (http://jekyllrb.com/) and toto (http://cloudhead.io/toto), but is based upon Sinatra and rack and thus can be hosted very easily (and for free) on heroku (http://heroku.com). The articles are stored in plain text files with an opinionated naming scheme which is used for getting the date and permalink of your article: articles/2010-02-14-will-you-be-my-valentine.txt The actual content of the article is lazy-loaded only when accessed, so things don't get messy when a lot of articles has to be maintained. Articles consist of a YAML front, an optional summary and the body, so a basic article looks something like this: title: My shiny article author: Christoph Olszowka Some nice summary. ~ ## Some content. You can use markdown in your articles, and also <%= "erb" %> <% highlight do %> puts 'it will also syntax-highlight your codes' <% end %> There are quite a few assumptions made by this format: You have to specify your title in yaml format upfront. You can also specify an author for this article. If you don't, it will fall-back to the default one (see configuration). Then two newlines must follow to seperate the yaml from the actual content. After this, you can type your blog post. If you want a summary, add in the summary/body delimiter "~", so Serious knows what you want. Serious makes use of StupidFormatter (http://github.com/colszowka/stupid_formatter) for formatting your articles, so you get ERb, Markdown and Coderay syntax highlighting for free and can customize the processing chain to your liking, add custom ERb helpers and so on. See the documentation of stupid_formatter (http://rdoc.info/projects/colszowka/stupid_formatter) to learn how to customize the formatting. == Getting started Install the gem: sudo gem install serious Since a basic template and css are provided inside the gem, all you've got to do is set up a directory for your new blog, create an articles folder, a config.ru and (for heroku), a .gems file. The directory structure would be something like: serious_blog/ - articles - articles/2010-02-14-will-you-be-my-valentine.txt - config.ru - .gems The config.ru is pretty straight-forward if you want to stick to the defaults: require 'serious' Serious.set :title, "My Sweet Little Blog" Serious.set :author, "Christoph Olszowka" Serious.set :url, 'http://mysweetlittleblog.heroku.com' run Serious The .gems file if you want to host on heroku: stupid_formatter --version '>= 0.2.0' serious --version '>= 0.1.3' Note that sinatra is not included in the gemfile since heroku has it installed by default, but serious will install it as a gem dependency on other systems as well. Assuming you've got the heroku gem installed and set up and you've set up git for your blog with git init, you can now do: heroku create mysweetlittleblog git push heroku master Point your browser to the url, and bang, you're ready! You might also want to test your blog locally. Use thin (sudo gem install thin) with: thin -R config.ru start Go to localhost:3000 and enjoy. == Configuration Inside your config.ru, you can customize the settings for your Serious site. === Custom view templates or public folder ==== Changing the path to the public folder Say you want to stick with the default view templates, but are willing to customize the css to make things prettier. You can do so. Get the provided css from lib/serious/site/public and point Serious to your new public folder, which assumingly lies in the current working directory (which is where your config.ru file is) Serious.set :public, File.join(Dir.getwd, 'public') Serious will now serve the public directory from your custom location, but still get the views provided with the gem. ==== Changing the path to the views Accordingly, if you want to stick with the default css, but want to customize the templates (would anyone want to do this?), specify the views path and get the provided ones from the gem as a starting point. Serious.set :views, File.join(Dir.getwd, 'views') ==== Setting the root The most likely case though will surely be that you want to move both public and views into your site. Again, just copy over the provided assets from the gems lib/serious/site/ folder into your own site and modify them to your liking. You'll have to specify a new root for your site, set to the current working directory, where your config.ru resides: Serious.set :root, Dir.getwd Note that you do not have to specify the views and public folders separately, they'll be hosted from the roots views and public subdirectory. === Setting the articles path You want your articles hosted from your home directory or fancy a different folder name? Use the :article property, which defaults to the articles subdirectory of the current working dir (a.k.a. where your config.ru sits) Serious.set :articles, '/home/youruser/myblogposts' === The title The title is used for your atom feed, the site name and so on. It defaults to 'Serious' and you can specify it with: Serious.set :title, "My Sweet Little Blog" === The author If you don't want to specify the author for each article separately in the YAML front matter, you can define the blog author, which will be used as a fall-back when no custom article author is given in the YAML. It defaults to 'unknown' Serious.set :author, "Christoph Olszowka" === The url Well, your site has to know where it lives to provide proper links in your atom feed. Configure this with the url setting, which defaults to 'http://localhost:3000' Serious.set :url, 'http://localhost:3000' === Displayed items You can specify how many items you want displayed across your site: ==== Amount of feed items To customize the amount of items in your atom feed (living under /atom.xml), set the items_in_feed property to an integer. This defaults to 25. Serious.set :items_in_feed, 50 ==== Amount of items with summary on index On your index page, the most recent items will be displayed including the summary (or the whole post if you did not use the summary/body delimiter). This defaults to 3 items, but can be customized: Serious.set :items_on_index, 5 ==== Amount of archive items on index Below the items with summaries on your main page, there's also a list of 'archived' items, which only includes the title and date. This defaults to 10 items, but can be customized as well: Serious.set :archived_on_index, 10 === Cache timeout All pages served are automatically getting a Cache-Control header, so they get cached in your visitor's browsers as well as in Varnish on Heroku (http://docs.heroku.com/http-caching) (or some similar tool when you host yourself). The timeout is set to 300 seconds by default, but can be customized with: Serious.set :cache_timeout, 300 === Article formatting You can define the formatting chain for StupidFormatter with: StupidFormatter.chain = [StupidFormatter::RDiscount] You'll surely want to read the documentation of StupidFormatter (http://github.com/colszowka/stupid_formatter) to learn how to add your own formatters or erb helpers. == TODO * static pages * make summary delim configurable * make caching better * valid xhtml in demo setup * generator for basic app? * rake tasks for generating new posts and validating existing * disqus (optional) * google analytics (optional) * allow for choice between erb/haml templates == Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * Make your feature addition or bug fix. * Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull) * Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches. == Copyright Copyright (c) 2010 Christoph Olszowka. See LICENSE for details.