This is the source code of my personal internet site and blog engine. All content is written in Gemini Gemtext format, but the script gemtexter
generates multiple other static output formats from it. You can reach the site(s)...
- Via Gemini/Gemtext: gemini://snonux.de or gemini://buetow.org (You need a Gemini client for this)
- Via "normal" HTML: https://snonux.de or https://buetow.org (Actually it's XHTML Transitional 1.0)
- Via Gemini Webproxy
- Via GitHub Markdown
- Via GitHub Page: https://alt.buetow.org (from Markdown)
Have a look at the content-*
branches of the buetow.org Git project for static content examples.
These are the requirements of the gemtexter
static site generator script:
- GNU Bash 5.x or higher
- ShellCheck installed
- GNU Sed
- GNU Date
- Git
The script is tested on a recent Fedora Linux. For *BSD or macOS, you would need to install GNU Sed, GNU Date, and a newer version of Bash.
So you want such a pretty internet site too?
To get started, clone this repo and run ./gemtexter
. You will be prompted with further instructions.
You will notice soon that all site content is located in ../buetow.org-content/
(you can configure the $BASE_CONTENT_DIR
in gemtexter.conf
). There is one sub-directory per output format, e.g.:
../buetow.org-content/gemtext
../buetow.org-content/html
../buetow.org-content/md
../buetow.org-content/meta
If you don't want to mess with gemtexter.conf
, you can use an alternative config file path in ~/.config/gemtexter.conf
, which takes precedence if it exists. Another way is to set the CONFIG_FILE_PATH
environment variable, e.g.:
export CONFIG_FILE_PATH=~/.config/my-site.geek.conf
./gemtexter --generate
Whereas you only want to edit the content in the gemtext
folder directly. The gemtexter
then will take the Gemtext and update all other formats accordingly. Summary of what is what:
gemtext
: The Gemini Gemtext markup files of the internet site.html
: The XHTML version of it.md
: The Markdown version of it.meta
: Some metadata of all Gemtext blog posts. It's used bygemtexter
internally for Atom feed generation.
You will find the ./header.html.part
and ./footer.html.part
files, they are minimal template files for the HTML generation.
gemtexter
will never touch the ../$BASE_CONTENT_DIR/md/_config.yml
file (if it exists). That's a particular configuration file for GitHub Pages. gemtexter
also will never modify the file ../$BASE_CONTENT_DIR/md/CNAME
, as this is also a file required by GitHub pages for using custom domains.
I personally have for each directory in ../buetow.org-content/
a separate Git repository configured. So whenever something has changed, it will be updated/added/removed to version control. The following will run the generator and commit everything to Git:
USE_GIT=yes ./gemtexter --generate
And the following will additionally perform a git pull
and git push
afterwards;
USE_GIT=yes GIT_PUSH=yes ./gemtexter --generate
You could add the USE_GIT
and GIT_PUSH
options to the gemtexter.conf
config file too.
All that needs to be done is to create a new file in ./gemtext/gemfeed/YYYY-MM-DD-article-title-dash-separated.gmi
, whereas YYYY-MM-DD
defines the publishing date of the blog post.
A subsequent ./gemtexter --generate
will then detect the new post and link it from $BASE_CONTENT_DIR/gemtext/gemfeed/index.gmi
, link it from the main index $BASE_CONTENT_DIR/gemtext/index.gmi
, and also add it to the Atom feed at $BASE_CONTENT_DIR/gemtext/gemfeed/atom.xml
. The first level 1 Gemtext title (e.g. # Title
) will be the displayed link name. YYYY-MM-DD
will be the publishing date. Various other settings, such as Author, come from the gemtexter.conf
configuration file.
Once all of that is done, the gemtexter
script will convert the new post (plus all the indices and the Atom feed) to the other formats, too (e.g. HTML, Markdown).
You can also have a look at $BASE_CONTENT_DIR/meta/gemfeed
. There is a metafile for each blog post stored. These metafiles are required for the generation of the Atom feed. You can edit these metafiles manually and run ./gemtexter --generate
or ./gemtexter --feed
again if you want to change some of the Atom feed content.
After running ./gemtexter --generate
, you will have all static files ready to be published. But before you do that, you could preview the content with firefox ../buetow.org-content/html/index.html
or glow ../buetow.org-content/md/index.md
(you get the idea).
Have also a look at the generated atom.xml
files. They make sense (at least) for Gemtext and HTML.
It is up to you to set up a Gemini server for the Gemtext, a Webserver for the HTML or a GitHub page for the Markdown format (or both).
I might or might not implement those:
- Automatic ToC generation.
- Templating of .gmi files (e.g. insert %%TOC%% to Gemtext files as well). Could also template common .gmi page headers and footers.
- Automatic sitemap generation.
- More output formats. Gopher? Groff? Plain text? PDF via Pandoc? .sh with interactive menus?