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high level bits repository

Introduction

This is the repository of the blog that can be found at highlevelbits.com. The blog runs on a static site generator called nanoc. You can have a look in the Gemfile to find out what dependencies we have.

To get started

# get the repo
git clone [email protected]:highlevelbits/blog.git
cd highlevelbits/blog

# set up the gh-pages branch
git clone [email protected]:highlevelbits/blog.git output
cd output
git checkout gh-pages
cd ..

# install some gems
bundle install

# generate the site
nanoc

# start a local server
nanoc view

# publish the site
git push

Travis picks up upon push and runs the publish script. (As described in a post.) If this is not working it is possible to publish locally also. Just find the appropriate script in the root folder. Iterate the final 3 whenever content as changed.

File structure

Content can be found in the content directory structure. Directly in the content root lies a couple of pages that are shown at the top level. Most important is the start page (index.haml) and the archive (archive.haml). They are written in HAML. Folders named with years have all the posts sorted in sub folders for months. They correspond to the post url.

In the folder layouts are - meh - layouts. There are two layouts now. One for the overall look and one specific for posts.

In lib are some common code that is used to generate content. Functionality for tagging, feeds and the archive got helper methods here. Here more functionality can be added as need arises.

The output folder is where nanoc put the generated content. It should be a clone of the repository with the gh-pages branch checked out for the publishing to work. (Todo: push hook somewhere that publishes automatically so we don't need this weird branch setup.)

Finally in the root folder itself are a couple of files that configures nanoc. Rules decides how content are to be compiled and on what URLs they will appear. config.yaml is the nanoc configuration. publish.sh is a script that publishes the site. Gemfile contains the dependencies needed to run the thing.

File type support

Currently content can be written in markdown, erb or haml. Check (or change) the Rules file for the most up to date definitions. To add support for another markup engine should be as easy as adding a when to the case in the Rules compile part and adding the corresponding gem to the Gemfile. (Also - run bundle install.)

Posts

All files that are articles have to have a nanoc header. Here is an example for posts:

---
title: "Back in Javaland"
kind: article
created_at: 2014-03-05 07:00:00
author: fredrik
tags: java
---

The title makes it on to lists of posts.

The kind decides how to process it in the Rules file - this typically affect what layout to use. At the moment there are article, tag and default behaviour. Here we could add other types for special parts of the site.

The date decides where in the post list an entry will appear and is also shown in the post header.

Author is author.

Tags are a comma separated list of tags. They are listed on each post and also got their own page. Tags with only one article are not shown.

Contribute

If you find errors in our content or want to contribute an article you can clone the repo and send us a pull request.