A shiny replacement for http://freenode.net.
You'll need our node.js dependencies:
$ sudo npm install -g myth svgo
Then, assuming a Python 3.4 (or later) installation:
$ python3 -m venv env
$ . env/bin/activate
$ pip install -r requirements.txt
$ cms7
If everything went well, you should see a lot of log output, and out/
will
have the website in it.
Because we generate the site statically, you'll need to re-run cms7
each
time you change something. If your editor likes compile commands that can run
from any directory, you can also use cms7 -c /path/to/config.yml
.
- Whenever possible, one commit per feature.
- If feature/pull-request branches have only one developer, please regularly rebase them onto master until they are merged in.
- Don't merge branches with meaningless commit messages; always squash them instead.
- Wait for discussion of big changes. Your branches will still be here tomorrow.
Helpful tip for those merging PRs: you can browse the tree a merge would
result in by navigating to
https://github.com/freenode/web-7.0/tree/pull/XYZ/merge
, where XYZ
is the
pull request number.
You can also go to https://freenode.net/web-7.0/BRANCHNAME/
to see a
build of any particular branch. This also works for internal pull requests
(they are named pull-X
).
The site is generated from
Markdown sources and
Jinja2 templates, found in content/
and
templates/
respectively. The Travis build deploys to GitHub Pages
automatically on every push.
Various modules convert the sources to a useful output structure. Eventually cms7 will document this process, but for now:
-
content/pages/
contains plain pages which are rendered inout/
usingpage.html
. -
content/news/
contains blog/news posts which are rendered inout/news/
usingarticle.html
. -
content/kb/
contains KB categories: each directorycontent/kb/X/
has the entries for categoryX
. These are rendered inout/kb/answers/
withkb.html
.Indexes of these entries are rendered in
out/kb/
withkb_index.html
, according to a list inconfig/kb.yml
.
cms7 uses the markdown metadata extension, and recognises some special keys:
title
sets the page titleslug
overrides the target URL:pages/hello
withslug: banana
would becomeout/banana.html
template
overrides the template with which to render this Markdown file
Blog-specific:
author
date
Everything that ends up in the final output has a name that identifies it to the rest of the website. If a file is derived directly from an input file, generally its name is derived from the name of the input.
- Markdown files like
content/pages/hello.md
are named their own name relative to the content directory, minus their extension:pages/hello
. - static resources like
static/img/cat.jpg
are named their own name relative to the repository root:static/img/cat.jpg
. - Templates that are rendered from nothing (e.g. to make the index page) are named whatever the config file says to name them.
- KB indexes are named
kb/index/X
, where X is the name of the index inconfig/kb.yml
.
cms7 can generate a relative URL to anything with a name from any page. This should always be preferred over manually writing links. To generate a relative link from a Markdown document, just link to a name:
[A page about frogs](pages/frog)
To do the same from a template, call url_for
:
<a href="{{ url_for('pages/frog') }}">A page about frogs</a>