Update README.md

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Carlos Fenollosa 2014-01-10 10:51:48 +01:00
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@ -9,51 +9,80 @@ I created it because I wanted a very, very simple way to post entries to a blog
You can read [the initial blog post](http://mmb.pcb.ub.es/~carlesfe/blog/creating-a-simple-blog-system-with-a-500-line-bash-script.html) for more information and as a demo, as my site has been 100% generated using bashblog.
Features
--------
- Everything stored in a single 700-line bash script! Just download and start writing.
- GNU/Linux, BSD and OSX compatible out of the box (no need for GNU `coreutils` on a Mac)
- Simple creation and edition of the posts with your favorite text editor
- Support for Markdown, Disqus comments, Twitter, RSS, Feedburner, Google Analytics
Usage
-----
You only need SSH access to a server which allows its users to run shell scripts.
You will need SSH access to a server which allows its users to run shell scripts. More advanced users could
mount a server folder via `ftpfs` and run this script locally, however, it can be quite slow.
Copy bb.sh into a public folder of yours and run it:
Copy bb.sh into a public folder of yours (for example, `public_html/blog`) and run it:
./bb.sh
This will show the available commands. If the file is not executable, you can either `chmod +x bb.sh`
or run it with `bash bb.sh`
**Before creating a blog post, edit `bb.sh` and modify the variables in the `global_variables()` function or create a `.config` file with your configutation values**
**Before creating your first post, you may want to configure the blog settings (title, author name, etc).
Read the Configuration section below for more information**
To create your first post, make sure `$EDITOR` is set, and then just do:
To create your first post, just run:
./bb.sh post
When you're done, access the public URL for that folder and you should see the index
file and a new page for that post!
Features
--------
- Simple creation and edition of the posts with your favorite text editor
- **NEW** Markdown support via a third-party library (e.g.
Configuration
-------------
Configuration is not required for a test drive, but if you plan on running your blog with bashblog, you will
want to change the default titles, author names, etc, to match your own.
There are two ways to configure the blog strings:
- Edit `bb.sh` and modify the variables in the `global_variables()` function
- Create a `.config` file with your configuration values (useful if you don't want to touch the script). You can find
the `global_variables()` function on the script
The software will load the values in the script first, then overwrite them with the values in the `.config` file.
This means that you don't need to define all variables in the config file, only those which you need to override
from the defaults.
Please note that bashblog uses the `$EDITOR` environment value to open the text editor.
Detailed features
-----------------
- A simple but nice and readable design, with nothing but the blog posts
- **NEW on 2.0** Markdown support via a third-party library (e.g.
[Markdown.pl](http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/)). Use
it via `./bb.sh post -m`. The third party library must support an invokation
like `markdown_bin in.html > out.md` as the code calls it that way.
- Post preview
- Save posts as drafts and resume later
- Transformation of every post to its own html page, using the title as the URL
- Generation of an index.html file with the latest 10 posts
- Generation of an RSS file! Blog's magic is the RSS file, isn't it...?
- Generation of a page with all posts, to solve the index.html pagination problem
- Rebuilding the index files without the need to create a new entry
- By default, comments are delegated to Twitter. Can be configured for Disqus
- Google Analytics support
- Feedburner support
- Auto-generated CSS support
- Save posts as drafts and resume editing later
- HTML page for each post, using its title as the URL
- Configurable number of posts on the front page
- Automatic generation of an RSS file, feedburner support
- Additional page containing an index of all posts
- Rebuild all files while keeping the original data
- Comments delegated to Twitter, with additional Disqus support
- Google Analytics code support
- Contains its own CSS so that everything is reasonably styled by default
- Headers, footers, and in general everything that a well-structured html file needs
- xhtml validation, CSS validation, RSS validation by the w3c
- Backup of the site every time you post
- Everything contained in a single 700-line bash script!
- A simple but nice and readable design, with nothing but the blog posts
Read the CHANGELOG section of the script header for more updates