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blurt 1.0 readme ================ A very minimalist blogging tool by Matthijs de Jonge (rhmtts@gmail.com). Written in 2005, no longer in use. But it works. REQUIREMENTS: ============= blurt is a CGI script written in Perl. To use it, you need to have access to a web server where you can run Perl CGI scripts. blurt was written for Unix. It'll probably work without any problems on servers running Linux, FreeBSD and MacOS X. It might work on Windows but I haven't tried. INSTALL: ======== Change some settings in the index.cgi file. Specifically, you'll want to set the number of posts you want to show on one page ($NumPosts), the directory where blurt resides on your web server (eg /home/users/yourname/blurt) and the URL to your blog (eg. http://www.example.com/blurt). NOTE: if the URL to your blog isn't simply http://www.example.com (without an extra directory), you need to uncomment the line that reads "our $BlogPath = $BasePath."/index.cgi" and you need to comment out the line below it that reads "our $BlogPath = $BasePath. "comment out" means to add a # sign to the beginning of the line. "uncomment" means to remove the # sign at the beginning of the line NOTE: if the path to Perl on your web server isn't /usr/bin/perl (it usually is) you'll need to change the line at the top of the blurt index.cgi file that reads #!/usr/bin/perl USE: ==== Simply upload text files to the posts directory. The first line in your text file is used as the post title. The date the file was last modified (the last time it was uploaded, say) is used as the post date. Posts get sorted by post date in reverse order. Using $PrevLink and $NextLink (see the section on variables below) you can navigate to older posts. If you create subdirectories in the posts directory, these are assumed to be categories. For example you can have a subdirectory posts/musings where you store all your personal musings and a subdirectory posts/stories where you store short stories. Once you have a setup like that, you can do: http://www.yourserver/musings and get a blog of only your musings and http://www.yourserver/stories to get a blog containing only your short stories blurt also allows you to browse your posts by date. You simply do this by appending the year, the month number and the day to the URL (month and day numbers need to be two digits, with a leading zero if necessary). It's not necessary to supply a month and a day. For example: http://www.yourserver/stories/2005 will show all short stories you've uploaded in 2005 http://www.yourserver/2005/04 will show all posts you've made in April 2005 http://www.yourserver/2005/08/12 will show all posts in all categories that were uploaded on August 12th 2005. Finally, you can surf directly to a given post. If, for example, you have a short story story.txt which you've stored in the stories subdirectory, you do: http://www.yourserver/stories/story.html (yes, that's story.html because we want to show story.txt in html flavor). No matter which URL you use to get at a given post or group of posts, there'll always be a $PrevLink and a $NextLink available which automatically figure out what the next and previous pages will be given the restrictions (category or date) in the URL. If you request an individual post, blurt will provide links to the previous and next posts within the same category as the requested post. TEMPLATES: ========== By default your blurt blog looks incredibly ugly. That's because you haven't edited your templates yet. Find them in the templates subdirectory. For every "flavor" you'll have installed, there's a file head.flavor that holds everything that goes before your posts, a file foot.flavor that holds everything that goes after it and a file story.flavor that holds the markup of an individual post. By default, blurt only comes with two flavors: HTML and RSS. If you install additional plugins, additional flavors may become available. If you install the Comments plugin, for example, you'll have to add template files for the "comments" flavor (head.comments, foot.comments and story.comments). VARIABLES: ========== The dynamic content of your blog (such as your post data) gets added to your templates by adding variables. For example, to display a post title in the html flavor, you add $Title to your story.html file. Here's a list of all variables available in a stock blurt install (if you install any plugins, additional variables will become availabe): $PageNum: the number of the current page $PrevLink: the url of the previous page $NextLink: the url of the next page These variables are available in story templates for individual posts: $Title : the title of your post $PostContent : the content of your post $PostYear : the year your post was made $PostMonth : the month your post was made $PostDay : the day your post was made $PostID : the "ID" of your post: basically the filename. useful for generating anchors $PostPath : the path to your post (category/postfile) There's also some variables with have to do with the inner workings of blurt. In principle, these are available in your templates, but really there isn't any good reason to use them there. They're primarily useful if you're developing your own plugins. $NumPosts : the number of posts shown on one page $BaseDir : the directory on your server where blurt is installed, eg. /home/users/yourname/blurt $BasePath : the url to your blog $BlogPath : the url to your blurt index.cgi. Will be identical to $BasePath if you've installed blurt in te server root $LogLevel : this variable is used for debugging purposes $TemplatesDir : the directory on your server where templates are kept $PluginsDir : the directory on your server where plugins are kept $DefaultFlavor : the default flavor if none is specified. it's html $DefaultHeader : the content-type string blurt sends out. $Output : this variable holds all the text and html blurt sends out to the client $QueryVars : a reference to a hash that holds the query variables we've been sent. $RequestURI : the request URI. $Flavor : the current flavor PLUGINS: ======== By itself, blurt doesn't do very much besides show posts in various interesting ways. To make it do more, you'll need to install plugins. These are .pm files that go in the plugins subdirectory of your blurt install. Plugins add extra variables to your templates. They can also provide additional template flavors. Installing them is dead simple. Read the Readme that came with the plugin and do what it says. At the very least you'll have to upload a .pm file to the plugins directory. If the plugin you need doesn't exist, you can write it yourself if you know some Perl. Just take a look at an existing plugin to figure out how it's done - it's not difficult at all. If you've written a plugin, send me an email (matthijs@rommelhok.com) and I'll include a link to it on the blurt site. LICENSE: ======== blurt 1.0 is public domain software. that means you can do with it whatever you want: install it, modify it, sell it, whatever. I really don't care.
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An incredibly light weight blogging engine that uses the file system for storage. Written in Perl, uses CGI.
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