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GitHub - BennyHallett/obelisk: Static Site Generator written in Elixir.

Static Site Generator written in Elixir. Contribute to BennyHallett/obelisk development by creating an account on GitHub.

Visit SiteGitHub - BennyHallett/obelisk: Static Site Generator written in Elixir.

GitHub - BennyHallett/obelisk: Static Site Generator written in Elixir.

Static Site Generator written in Elixir. Contribute to BennyHallett/obelisk development by creating an account on GitHub.

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obelisk

Static Site Generator written in Elixir.

Build Status Package

Goals

  • Fast. Static websites can take a long time to generate when they start to grow large. obelisk should take advantage of Elixir's processes to increase this speed.
  • Simple, Obvious. It should be very straight forward to add new content and modify the way that your site works.
  • Templatable. It should be possible to store templates in github repos and reference them directly, allowing modification of the look and feel of a site instantaneously with no manual installation.

Creating a new obelisk project

To create a new obelisk project, we use mix

$ mix new blog

We then modify our dependencies within mix.exs to include obelisk, as well as the Erlang library yamerl.

defp deps do
  [{ :obelisk, "~> 0.10.0" },
   { :yamerl, github: "yakaz/yamerl"}]
end

Next we need to download obelisk and compile it

$ mix deps.get
$ mix deps.compile

Now for the fun stuff, we can initialize our obelisk project

$ mix obelisk init

We can build our obelisk project now. It will look pretty basic without modifications to the layout (explained below), and some content.

$ mix obelisk build

Once our project is built, we can check it out by starting the server.

$ mix obelisk server

Now browse to http://localhost:4000

Structure

Now that we've got our project, you will notice that an obelisk project is set out with the following structure

/
/site.yml
/themes/
/themes/default/
/themes/default/assets/
/themes/default/assets/css/
/themes/default/assets/js/
/themes/default/assets/img/
/themes/default/layout
/posts/
/drafts/
/pages/

Creating a new post

Obelisk expects blog post content to be located in the /posts directory, with filenames using the format YYYY-mm-dd-post-title.markdown. Any file matching this pattern will be processed and built into the /build directory.

You can use the post command to quickly create a new post with todays date, although creating the file manually will also work.

$ mix obelisk post "New obelisk feature"

Creating a draft

Just like the post above us, we can create a draft. Drafts are intended to hold works in progress, and won't be compiled into the /build directory when running the build command.

Again, the draft command can be used to quickly create a new draft, although creating the file manually will also work.

$ mix obelisk draft "Still working on this"

Creating a page

Pages are non-temporal content, such as an about page, which are built in the same way as posts, but not included in the site's RSS feed. These files can have any name, and need not start with a date stamp. For example ./pages/about-me.markdown is a fine filename to use.

Currently there is no command to create a page, however creating a file under ./pages will work.

Front matter

Like other static site generators, posts should include front matter at the top of each file.

---
title: My brand new blog post
img: relative/path/to/bobby.png
author: Bobby Tables
twitter: littlebobbytables
---

Post content goes here

Now within the post.eex template, which we'll talk about a bit further down, we can access these value like this:

<div class="author">
  <a href="http://twitter.com/#{@frontmatter.twitter}">
    <img src="#{@frontmatter.img}" />
    <%= @frontmatter.author %>
  </a>
</div>

Themes

Since Obelisk v0.9.0, you are now able to customize your site with various themes. These themes are stored in the /themes/ directory, each in their own individual directory.

After the init task is run, you will have access to the default theme, in:

/themes/default/

You can have multiple themes under the themes directory. The theme which is used at build time is determined by the theme setting in ./site.yml

---
...
theme: default
...

Local Themes

Local themes are those that you have created yourself and not yet shared with the world. A new theme can be created by making a new directory under /themes and including the required files and directories

/themes/<themename>/
/themes/<themename>/assets/
/themes/<themename>/assets/css/
/themes/<themename>/assets/js/
/themes/<themename>/assets/img/
/themes/<themename>/layout

Enable the theme by selecting it in site.yml as shown above.

Github Themes

If your theme is hosted on Github you can have Obelisk automatically include that theme for you without having to manually include it in your /themes directory.

In your site.yml, use the user/repo form common to Github repositories and Obelisk will do the rest when you run $ mix obelisk build

---
theme: "github_user/obelisk_theme"
...

Note: You'll need a native git client installed to clone the repository. It will also need to be publicly accessible.

Themes in other Git repositories

If your theme is in a Git repository, but not hosted on Github, never fear. Obelisk will still handle your theme. Just include the full url to your theme repository and Obelisk will work similarly to the way it does for Github repositories.

---
theme: "http://example.com/user/repo.git"
...

Note: You'll need a native git client installed to clone the repository. It will also need to be publicly accessible.

The asset "pipeline"

The asset "pipeline" is extremely simple at this stage. Anything under your /themes/$THEME/assets directory is copied to /build/assets when the mix obelisk build task is run.

Layouts

Everything under the /themes/$THEME/layout directory is used to build up your site. You have the option of using either the standard Elixir templating library, Eex, or haml.

Both templating libraries are available out of the box, with no configuration required. They can also be both used within the same project.

Which renderer to use is decided based on the extension of the template file:

  • eex will use the eex renderer
  • html.eex will use the eex renderer
  • haml will use the haml renderer
  • html.haml will use the haml renderer

post.eex (or similar) is the template which wraps blog post content. The @content variable is used within this template to specify the location that the converted markdown content is injected.

page.eex (or similar) is the template which wraps page content. The @content variable is used within this template to specify the location that the converted markdown content is injected.

index.eex (or similar) is the template which wraps your index page, which for now is intented to hold the list of blog posts. This template provides 3 variables. Similar to the post template, the index template provides @content, which is the list of blog posts (at this stage as html links). The other two variables, @next and @prev provide links to move between index pages. Each index page contains 10 blog posts, ordered from newest to oldest. The pages are created with the following pattern:

index.html
index2.html
...
index8.html

layout.eex (or similar) is the template which wraps every page. This is the template that should include your <html>, <head> and <body> tags. This template provides 3 variables also. Again, the @content variable is provided, which specifies where to inject the content from whichever page is being built. Additionally, the @css and @js variables are provided, which include the html markdown for all of the files (not folders) directly under /build/assets/css and /build/assets/js respectively. These files are written to the page in alphabetical order, so if a particual order is required (i.e reset.css first), then the current solution is to rename the files to match the order in which they should be imported:

/assets/css/0-reset.css
/assets/css/1-layout.css
/assets/css/2-style.css

Elixir Resources

are all listed below.

Resources

listed to get explored on!!

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